By Sufuyan Ojeifo
Nigeria is living through a season when outrage is easier to manufacture than truth. A few screenshots, a cluster of unverified figures, and a sprinkling of anonymous sources are now enough to ignite a digital firestorm dressed up as public accountability. It is in this murky space, where allegation is too often mistaken for adjudication, that a torrent of claims has been hurled at the Bureau of Public Procurement, its Director-General, Dr Adebowale Adedokun and his Chief of Staff, Mr Olanrewaju Obasa. What has unfolded is not scrutiny but spectacle, a sobering lesson in how quickly public discourse can be debased when sensation is allowed to outrun substance.
The accusations, padded with a dizzying array of bank account numbers and tales of clandestine syndicates, have been eagerly amplified by certain Civil Society Organisations and media platforms that ought to exercise more rigour. Advocacy is noble when it adheres to facts. It loses its soul the moment it trades evidence for uproar and stirs public hysteria in the name of reform. What we are witnessing is not accountability. It is a descent into conjecture where innuendo passes for inquiry, and the sheer volume of accusation is taken as proof. This alchemy of turning baseless claims into a national crisis is reckless and impoverishes our civic culture.
We must begin with fundamentals. The Bureau of Public Procurement is not a decorative agency. Let us be clear: it is the central nervous system of fiscal discipline in the Nigerian state. Established under the Public Procurement Act of 2007, the Bureau serves as the custodian of value for money, the referee ensuring that public funds translate into public good. Its mandate is to sanitise a once opaque system, entrench competitive bidding, and protect scarce national resources. To lazily brand such a reform-minded institution, a citadel of corruption on the strength of an unverified petition, is to undermine the very foundation of national development. Nation-building requires clarity and moral steadiness. It cannot thrive in an atmosphere where institutional credibility is sacrificed for the thrill of instant publicity.
The most sensational claim, that the DG and his chief of staff operate more than fifty bank accounts for illicit transactions, collapses the moment it is examined with sober reasoning. No serious fraud operation, let alone one allegedly run by senior government officials, would be constructed on a framework so chaotic and easily traceable. Even a cursory review exposes duplicated entries, inconsistent numbering, and multiple accounts that belong to legitimate corporate entities entirely unrelated to the individuals accused. A spreadsheet is not evidence. It is, in this case, a theatrical prop engineered to mislead the public, weaponise ignorance, and tarnish reputations without a shred of verifiable proof.
Equally misleading is the manufactured outrage over official vehicles. The Toyota Land Cruiser and Prado jeep mentioned in the petition are not symbols of indulgence. They are standard operational assets for officials whose duties demand constant mobility, secure transportation of documents, and sensitive engagements across government institutions. These vehicles are documented in asset registers, procured under established guidelines, and open to audit. To twist their existence into a narrative of personal enrichment shows either a poor grasp of public administration or a deliberate attempt to misinform. It is a cynical strategy designed to provoke resentment rather than illuminate facts.
What is most troubling is the corrosive precedent being set. The petition leans heavily on hearsay from unnamed insiders and shadowy actors within the so-called procurement ecosystem. It bypasses every lawful channel for reporting wrongdoing. It offers no authenticated documents, no credible testimony, and no verifiable transaction trail. Yet it calls for immediate prosecution. This is not democratic accountability. It is a gathering mob. The procurement system already contains clear grievance procedures, layers of internal control, digital monitoring, and established investigative pathways. To ignore all of these in favour of social media theatrics and press conference drama is to trivialise the serious business of governance and replace reason with noise.
Nigeria stands at a pivotal moment, confronting challenges that demand discipline and intellectual honesty. The work of national renewal cannot be derailed by sensational distractions. The Bureau of Public Procurement plays an indispensable role in safeguarding transparency, ensuring contract integrity, and inspiring investor confidence. To sabotage such an institution with unexamined accusations is to act like a sailor who punches holes in his own vessel while insisting he is trying to keep it afloat. It is an act of self-harm masquerading as advocacy.
The path forward is clear. Investigations, where necessary, must follow proper statutory channels. Facts, not fevered imaginations or orchestrated publicity campaigns, must guide outcomes. The rights of individuals and the integrity of institutions must be shielded from the impatience of the mob. The media must rediscover its responsibility to verify before amplifying. Civil Society Organisations must reclaim the discipline and depth that once made them pillars of democratic accountability. Nigeria gains nothing from noisy distractions that erode trust without illuminating truth. It gains everything from a sober commitment to due process and evidential integrity.
In the end, due process is not an inconvenience. It is the spine of justice and the anchor of progress. To abandon it for the thrill of sensational headlines or the rush of digital outrage is to betray the very future we claim to defend. Truth does not emerge from frenzy. It emerges from patient, verifiable fact. That is the foundation on which we must stand.
● Sufuyan Ojeifo, a media professional, communication consultant, is publisher/editor-in-chief of THE CONCLAVE online newspaper [www.theconclaveng.com]