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Nigeria’s Governance BAUs: No Probe, No Audit, No Accountability, No Transparency, and Free Rascality

Introduction

The tragedy of Nigerian governance is not that the system is broken; it is that it works precisely as intended. To the casual observer, the persistent failure of Nigeria's public institutions to deliver basic infrastructure, security, and economic stability looks like a chronic administrative malfunction. It is the result of a highly efficient, deeply entrenched ecosystem designed for elite survival and resource extraction.

At the heart of this ecosystem lie the structural Business-As-Usual (BAU) parameters that define political life across all three tiers of government: No Probe, No Audit, No Accountability, No Transparency, and Free Rascality. These are not accidental lapses in oversight. They are the systemic prerequisites of Nigerian governance: the unwritten rules of engagement required to sustain a political economy built on rent-seeking, patronage, and impunity. It is this foundational architecture that serves as the ultimate bane of the nation, directly manufacturing corruption, structural underdevelopment, mass poverty, and generational retrogression.

The Anatomy of the Five BAUs

To understand why Nigeria retrogresses while peer nations advance, one must analyse these five BAUs not as moral failures, but as functional pillars of statecraft.

No Probe & No Audit

These functions act as the systemic immune system against consequence. In standard democracies, regular forensic auditing and independent legislative probes are the primary mechanisms of state hygiene. In Nigeria, they are either actively starved of funds, legally castrated, or weaponized as tools of political blackmail rather than paths to prosecution.

No Accountability & No Transparency

These two BAUs create the operational fog necessary for state capture. When budgets are treated as classified information and public procurement processes are shrouded in bureaucratic secrecy, public wealth is easily converted into private political capital.

Free Rascality

This is the crowning characteristic of the system: the uninhibited, exhibitionist display of institutional lawlessness and executive impunity, where state actors operate with the explicit understanding that they are entirely above the laws they swear to uphold.

The Tripartite Machinery of Opacity

This framework operates seamlessly across the three levels of government: federal, state, and local with each tier exhibiting a specialized manifestation of these prerequisites.

I. The Federal Level: Macro-Opacity and Institutionalized Impunity

At the centre, the BAUs are preserved through grand bureaucratic inertia. The federal government maintains an illusion of oversight through agencies like the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) or the National Assembly's public accounts committees. However, this is largely political theatre. The Auditor-General’s annual reports, which consistently document billions of naira in unvouched expenditures and missing revenues across federal ministries, departments, and agencies (MDAs) are routinely ignored by the legislature.

Transparency is deliberately suffocated through opaque crude-for-product swaps, un-metered oil theft, and the wrapping of massive, un-audited expenditures under the elastic banner of "Security Votes." Free Rascality manifests as the routine disregard for court orders by federal actors and a political culture where public officials can preside over massive systemic leakages, only to peacefully retire into the Senate or secure lucrative ministerial appointments.

II. The State Level: Imperial Governors and Executive Capture

At the sub-national level, the BAUs intensify as thirty-six state governors operate as absolute monarchs within their domains. State Houses of Assembly, which ought to serve as checks on executive power, have been completely captured. They function as rubber stamps, financially dependent on the very governors they are meant to oversee.

Consequently, the concept of a state-level audit is functionally non-existent; any state auditor attempting genuine forensic scrutiny faces immediate dismissal or the complete starvation of office funding. State budgets are frequently shielded from public view, allowing governors unchecked rascality in the inflation of contract awards, land allocations, and the accumulation of massive commercial debts that indenture future generations. Because the governors control both the local machinery of violence and the distribution of patronage, their rascality is entirely cost-free.

III. The Local Level: The Joint Account and Administrative Decapitation

The local government areas (LGAs), originally designed to be the tier closest to the people, represent the most tragic casualty of these prerequisites. The local level is characterized by complete administrative decapitation, engineered primarily through the structural rascality of the State-Local Joint Government Account. State governors routinely intercept federal allocations meant for LGAs, releasing only a fraction to cover basic salary bills.

Because there is zero transparency or audit capacity at this grassroots level, local government chairmen, frequently handpicked via rigged state independent electoral commissions rather than credible elections answer only to their state governors, not to the electorate. The local government has been reduced to a ghost tier of administration, stripped of its constitutional mandate to provide primary healthcare, rural roads, and basic sanitation.

The Five Cores of the Business-As-Usuals  

Flowchart showing how “The Five Cores of the BAU” — no probe, no audit, no accountability, no transparency, and free rascality — operate across federal, state, and local government levels, leading to infrastructure decay, poverty, and chronic insecurity.
                     

The Human Cost

The direct consequence of these governance BAUs is the manufacturing of human misery on a systemic scale. When No Probe and No Audit ensure that contracts can be paid for in full and completely abandoned with impunity, national infrastructure predictably decays. The collapse of the national electricity grid, the death traps that double as federal highways, and the dysfunctional public school system are not failures of capacity; they are the physical manifestations of un-audited wealth diversion.

Furthermore, the complete erasure of accountability and transparency at the local government level ensures that the rural masses, who make up the bulk of Nigeria's surging population are entirely insulated from the dividends of governance. Driven by systemic neglect and economic hopelessness, millions are pushed into the waiting arms of regional insurgencies, banditry, and organized crime. The rise of insecurity across the federation is the natural, inevitable byproduct of a governance model that prioritizes the "Free Rascality" of the political class over the survival of its citizens.

The Parasitic Loop of Governance

In this closed ecosystem, corruption is not an anomaly; it is the currency of political survival. A political actor who practices transparency or demands accountability actively threatens the livelihoods of their peers, making themselves an existential liability to the system. Therefore, the system aggressively selects for, protects, and promotes those who adhere to the five BAUs.

Breaking the Cycle

Nigeria’s developmental retrogression will never be cured by cosmetic reforms, the creation of superficial anti-graft committees, or the mere rotation of political actors. If the five BAUs remain the systemic prerequisites for acquiring and retaining political power, the output of the machine will always be poverty, corruption, and instability.

To reverse this trajectory, the unwritten rules of Nigerian governance must be forcefully rewritten. This requires a fundamental dismantling of the structures that enable impunity. True financial autonomy must be secured for local governments, stripped entirely from the predatory grip of state governors. Independent, automated, and publicly accessible auditing frameworks must be institutionalized across all MDAs, ensuring that every kobo of public expenditure is trackable in real time.

Most importantly, the culture of "Free Rascality" must be met with the rigid enforcement of constitutional consequences. Until the cost of political lawlessness outweighs its benefits, Nigeria will remain shackled by its own governance design: a nation rich in potential, but structurally engineered for poverty.


Comments

Anonymous said…
The article presents a compelling argument that Nigeria's governance crisis is not merely a failure of leadership but a systemic design sustained by five entrenched practices: no probe, no audit, no accountability, no transparency, and what the author terms "free rascality." Its central message is that corruption and underdevelopment are not accidental outcomes but predictable consequences of weak institutions and impunity.

My summary execution here is that meaningful national transformation cannot come from changing political actors alone. It requires building institutions that are stronger than individuals and enforcing the rule of law without fear or favour. Until public office becomes a position of service rather than personal privilege, Nigeria will continue to struggle with the same governance challenges. The article is a timely reminder that sustainable development begins with transparency, accountability, and responsible leadership.

— Ogbuke's Cubicles' Den

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