A Mansion To
Match “The Personality” Of Our Homeless Vice President By Ogaga Ifowodo
Posted: December 26, 2012 - 02:44
You wish to Allah the
Merciful that what you heard about the request for an additional N9 billion for
the construction of a brand new mansion for the Vice President is not true,
that you had just woken up from a nightmare when you heard lying voices in the
dark seeking to “heat up” your head and “the polity” (apologies to President
Jonathan’s spokesmen). Alas, it is true. When N7.5 billion was originally
approved, in 2009, for the construction of the same house, you had dismissed,
with a holy oath, the father of lies who had been whispering such damnable
falsehood in your ear. You were as incredulous as Adeyemi Smart, a senator,
would be three years later when Adamu Ismail, executive secretary of the
Federal Capital Development Authority defended the act of naked plunder before
the FCT senate committee, and you screamed at the fleeing Satan: “Is this house
to be built on earth or in heaven? Will the sand, cement, iron rods, tiles,
doors and every other material needed for it be made of gold? Will the builders
and labourers be paid in gold weights? Tuffia! Get thee behind me, Satan,” you
railed and went about your business.
Yet it was true then
as it is now. Ismail did not once mention “gold” as he explained the scope of
Project VP’s Mansion. The additional N9 billion, a 120 percent increase to the
original approved sum, is needed to “build a banquet hall, protocol guest
house, two other guest houses and civil infrastructure, as well as to purchase
furniture and install security gadgets.” Apparently, there had been an
unforgivable, even criminal, neglect in the original plan and design of the
mansion. But it goes without saying that without these additional amenities,
the resultant edifice would be unfit for purpose and an insult to the office
and person of the vice president. Which is why Ismail was quick to inform the
senate that the “additional scope to be done on the project” (sic) was “because
of the personality of Mr Vice President.”
Got it? A mansion
befitting of the Vice President’s personality. Got the bit about civil
infrastructure too? According to Ismail, the Bureau of Public Procurement
“approved over N6 billion” after vetting the request but that “would not be
enough,” given that “there are some other adjustments needed to be done,” the
details of which he would disclose at a later date and time. But why trouble
him to justify what every fool knows? Take only one befitting amenity, the
banquet hall, which is to gulp N2.2 billion. As General Obasanjo, who should
know, told us, high public service is an invitation to “come and chop.” Where
is the best place to chop? A banquet hall, of course! And what should the
tables, chairs, chinaware, cutlery and the very walls of the hall itself be
made of if the chopping is to be worth its salt (pun intended)? Why, gold! As
for the food, let’s just say that it is not what every Mukoro, Musa or Moriamo,
with no personality, eats in a Mama-Put or buka far from banquet halls.
There was one almost
plausible justification for Project VP’s Mansion. Since 1999 when the
great new epoch of democracy dawned on us, the vice president has been, to our
shame, homeless. Former Vice President Atiku Abubakar squatted in the official
residence of the Chief Justice throughout his tenure. Jonathan endured the
added indignity of being relocated to Akinola Aguda House, the Presidential
guest house, before blind luck elevated him to Aso Rock. This unflattering image
of a wandering, homeless vice president of the oil-crazed Giant of Africa is
what the government seeks to erase quickly before we become the laughing-stock
of the world. Thankfully, we have petro-dollars to burn. What was it former
military dictator General Yakubu Gowon is reputed to have said at the beginning
of our oil-induced madness — that money is not our problem but how to spend it?
We have long solved that problem, with the cement armada that followed that
utterance, appropriately enough, as a proof. So, let us build a N16 billion
mansion to match the personality of our vice president. And let us remember to
furnish it with furniture “bought from heaven,” as the bewildered Senator
Adeyemi wondered aloud.
Only that after this,
we must never again hear of government officials going to Germany, anywhere
outside the borders of this rich country, for medical treatment. The president
and all political office holders must be prohibited from sending their children
to school abroad while they remain in office. A country that can lavish so many
billions on its vice president’s house is clearly not a beggar nation.
Therefore, Jonathan must not attempt the inhuman act of levying another
expropriation tax on citizens reeling from the monstrous blows of endemic
joblessness and poverty by way of a further withdrawal of the bogus, so-called
subsidy on refined oil products. For just think what N16 billion could do
to transform one of our teaching hospitals, making it unnecessary for Mrs
Jonathan to enrich Germany with the loads of hard currency she frittered away
during her recent “vacation?” Or what that sum could do to rehabilitate primary
schools across the country even if at a mere N500 million per state? Just
think!
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