Forgotten Dairies

How Cock-And-Bull Stories About Snake, Gorilla And Phantom Agency Keep Nigeria’s Treasury Bleeding -By Isaac Asabor

Nigeria deserves better than a government whose most memorable stories resemble scenes from political comedy. Citizens deserve institutions that safeguard public resources, not systems that repeatedly invite ridicule before quietly returning to business as usual. The jokes have lasted long enough.

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Few countries have produced official explanations for missing public funds as astonishing as Nigeria’s. Over the years, the nation has become infamous not merely for corruption but for the unbelievable stories offered to explain it. Public money, Nigerians have been told, can disappear into the belly of a snake, vanish through the appetite of a gorilla, be paid month after month to people who no longer exist, or even find its way into the budget of a government agency that exists only on paper.

Were these stories the product of a satirical novel, they would be said to be inspirational. Unfortunately, they are drawn from the realities of Nigeria’s public administration. That makes them less amusing and more deeply troubling.

The infamous “snake swallowed the money” episode remains one of the most embarrassing chapters in the country’s anti-corruption history. In 2018, a staff member of the Joint Admissions and Matriculation Board (JAMB) claimed that a snake had swallowed ₦35 million in public funds. The explanation immediately became a national punchline, provoking ridicule both within and outside Nigeria.

Barely a year later, another unbelievable story surfaced. This time, officials at the Kano Zoological Garden reportedly claimed that a gorilla had made away with ₦6.8 million generated from gate fees. Once again, Nigerians laughed. Social media erupted with jokes, memes and endless sarcasm.

Yet behind the humour lay a dangerous reality. Every outrageous explanation that gains public attention also reveals a disturbing assumption: that those responsible believe Nigerians can be persuaded to accept almost any excuse for the disappearance of public resources.

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Sadly, the absurdity did not end there. The recent forensic audit in Osun State uncovered more than 8,000 ghost workers and nearly 7,000 ghost pensioners allegedly drawing salaries and pensions from government coffers. Together, these fictitious names reportedly drained an estimated ₦1.14 billion every month.

Unlike the snake and gorilla stories, there were no animals to blame this time. Instead, the culprits were invisible beneficiaries created and sustained by human hands. Behind every ghost worker was a living individual who approved appointments, processed payments, manipulated records or deliberately ignored glaring irregularities. Though it has been denied by the Osun State government, but all indications show that the public is yet to be convinced.

Then came perhaps the most astonishing revelation yet. A completely fictitious body known as the Presidential Foreign Intervention Promotion Council (PFIPC) reportedly secured a ₦1.3 billion allocation in the 2026 national budget. More disturbing was that the phantom organization allegedly operated from office space within the Federal Secretariat and held meetings with unsuspecting public officials, despite having no legal basis for its existence.

If an entirely imaginary government agency can find its way into the nation’s budget, occupy office accommodation and transact official business without immediate detection, then the problem extends far beyond isolated acts of corruption. It points to institutional failures that have become deeply entrenched.

These incidents should never be viewed as disconnected scandals. Together, they expose a governance culture in which accountability is weak, verification systems are porous, and public institutions too often fail to perform even the most basic due diligence.

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More importantly, they expose the dangerous normalization of impunity. Every bizarre excuse serves a strategic purpose. It distracts public attention from the real issue. Citizens spend days laughing at the absurdity while the architects of the fraud quietly escape scrutiny. The conversation shifts from stolen money to internet memes, and eventually the scandal fades from public memory with few, if any, meaningful consequences.

This pattern has repeated itself too many times. Meanwhile, ordinary Nigerians continue to shoulder the burden of a system that consistently fails them. Citizens pay taxes, struggle with rising inflation, endure epileptic electricity supply, navigate deteriorating roads, and cope with underfunded hospitals and schools. Yet the same public resources meant to improve their lives are diverted through ghost names, fictitious institutions and fabricated stories.

The true predators of Nigeria’s treasury are neither snakes nor gorillas. They are individuals who manipulate payroll systems, forge official documents, exploit weak procurement processes, create fictitious organizations, falsify records and authorize illegal payments. They occupy offices, sign approvals and often enjoy the protection of bureaucratic networks that make accountability painfully slow.

Perhaps the greatest danger lies not in the theft itself but in the gradual erosion of public outrage. Each new scandal competes with countless previous ones for attention. Citizens have become so accustomed to extraordinary revelations that many now respond with resignation rather than indignation. Corruption has become so routine that even its most ridiculous manifestations scarcely shock the public anymore.

That complacency is precisely what allows the cycle to continue. Nigeria cannot continue to treat public-sector fraud as an unfortunate but inevitable feature of governance. Every naira diverted from the treasury represents fewer classrooms, fewer hospital beds, poorer infrastructure, weaker security and diminished opportunities for millions of citizens.

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What is urgently required is systemic reform. But mere denial is not enough. Nigerians have grown weary of official rebuttals that seek to deflect public outrage without addressing the substance of allegations. What is needed is not blanket denials but transparent investigations, public disclosure of findings, and firm sanctions against anyone found guilty. Only then can confidence in public institutions begin to recover.

Every public employee (Civil Servant) should undergo periodic biometric verification linked to an integrated national payroll system. Budget preparation and implementation should be fully transparent, allowing citizens, journalists and civil society organizations to monitor allocations and expenditures in real time. Independent audits must become routine rather than reactive, while anti-corruption agencies should pursue prosecutions swiftly and without political interference.

Equally important is the certainty of punishment. Public officials found guilty of diverting public funds should face consequences severe enough to deter future offenders. The theft of public resources is not simply financial misconduct; it robs citizens of essential services, undermines confidence in government and weakens national development.

Nigeria possesses the institutions, laws and technological capacity needed to significantly reduce these abuses. What has too often been lacking is the political will to enforce accountability consistently and without favour.

The era of unbelievable excuses must finally come to an end. The snake, the gorilla, the ghost workers and the phantom agency may differ in form, but they all point to the same uncomfortable truth: corruption flourishes where accountability is absent.

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Nigeria deserves better than a government whose most memorable stories resemble scenes from political comedy. Citizens deserve institutions that safeguard public resources, not systems that repeatedly invite ridicule before quietly returning to business as usual. The jokes have lasted long enough.

What remains is the staggering cost to national development—and that is no laughing matter.

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