By Okechukwu Nwanguma
The ongoing Senate probe into the Police Pension Fund has once again peeled back the rotten layers of corruption in Nigeria’s public sector.
In just a few sittings, the committee has unearthed a ₦3 billion police pension account in UBA allegedly opened without the required approval of the Accountant-General; summoned seven bank chiefs to explain suspicious accounts; and exposed the Pension Reform Task Team’s extravagant spending — ₦978 million in one year instead of an approved ₦80 million.
We have also heard of £6 million supposedly recovered but whose whereabouts remain unknown, and watched the drama of a former pension director sneaking into the National Assembly to avoid arrest by the EFCC. It is theatre, complete with villains, missing money, and a stage crowded with big names.
But we have seen this play before — in the Abdulrasheed Maina saga and in the equally scandalous Police Trust Fund mismanagement case, where the ICPC began an investigation with great fanfare only for it to vanish without a trace. The pattern is depressingly familiar: a noisy start, high-profile summons, media frenzy, and then… silence. No convictions. No real recovery of funds. No justice for the people whose resources were plundered.
The question is whether this time will be different. Will the revelations lead to arrests, prosecutions, and actual restitution? Or will this be yet another expensive show that entertains the public, shames a few actors for a while, and quietly fades into the archives of forgotten scandals?
The answer will depend on whether Nigerians — the media, civil society, and citizens — sustain the pressure beyond the headlines, and whether the Senate dares to back its findings with action. Pensioners who have given their best years to this country deserve dignity, not drama.