Mixed
reactions greet health ministers’ exit
By RAZAQ BAMIDELE
Thursday, March 27, 2008
Mixed reactions on Wednesday greeted the resignation from
office of the Health Minister, Professor Adenike Grange, and
the Minister of State, Arch. Gabriel Aduku over the scandal
surrounding the N300 million unspent 2007 budget.
Setting the ball of reactions rolling, the 79-year-old Afenifere
chieftain, Chief Ayo Adebanjo, described the minister as a
clean person working for a bunch of dirty people.
His words: “I know she has reputation to protect. She
was not expected to be with the PDP people because they are
dirty. Who is clean in the PDP? They are corrupt people managing
the affairs of this country. It is unfortunate.
“It is not a surprise that this is happening under the
PDP and that is why we say decent people should steer clear
of them. Professor Grange does not belong to them. One should
scrutinize any group very well before accepting to work with
its members.
“She was dealing with dirty people. I learnt when the
booty was brought to her, she did not understand it so she
returned it.”
Also reacting, former Information Minister, Chief Alex Akinyele,
saluted Grange’s courage, describing her as a trail
blazer.
He said: “Professor Grange is a trail blazer. She was
the second woman to resign after former Minister of Finance,
Dr Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala when they could not stand the scandalous
corruption going on.
“I salute the woman’s courage. The scandal happened
under her leadership and she did not get herself involved
in the sharing of the loot. It appears women are now being
more cautious than men in the war against corruption.
“It does not mean that people are not learning any lesson
from the anti-graft war. It is natural that a human being
does not change overnight.
“But our advice to President Umaru Musa Yar’Adua
is that he should show anybody caught the way to the EFCC.”
The President of Campaign for Democracy, (CD), Dr Joe Okei-Odumakin,
said the resignation was belated, adding that the former minister
should have resigned long ago.
“The minister’s resignation was belated. The issue
had been on for some time and one had expected her to have
resigned long time ago to protect her integrity.
“The problem could have been overcome if the minister
had been a bit careful, but woman or no woman, our organization
preaches zero tolerance to corruption.
“This development coupled with that of Ettegate should
not, however, be used as yardstick to measure the women generally;
afterall the minister was about the only woman among those
affected.
The chairman of the Coalition Against Corrupt Leaders (CACOL),
Mr Debo Adeniran, in his own comments, described the development
as good riddance to bad rubbish.
He said: “We have already designed a placard that reads:
Good riddance to bad rubbish. Whatever the case, whether Grange
resigned or was sacked, the bottomline is that we are making
progress in the war against corruption.
“And mark you, this N300 million scandal blew open because
there was disagreement among the supposed beneficiaries. Some
ministries are also culpable because such habit had been in
the system during the military regime and eight years of the
past administration.
“The joy of it is that there is the awareness that if
you are caught, you go to jail. So, we are making progress.”
Malachi Ugamadu, the Secretary General of the Committee for
the Defence of Human rights (CDHR), described Grange as most
vulnerable among the ministers.
“She has no political platform or any political lineage.
She came straight from the class- room,” he said, adding:
“It is unfortunate, she went to dine with the devil
with a very short spoon, hence, it is easy for them to use
her as scapegoat.”
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