“Wealth stolen from the people can never be clean. Even when children of corrupt officials try to live honestly, suspicion follows them.”
Public office in Nigeria has become, for many, the fastest road to riches. Instead of service, officials treat power as a personal jackpot. They convince their families that the money is for them, to live well, to study abroad, to inherit mansions and cars. But what they really pass down is not security. It is disgrace.
The law has a principle called the fruit of the poisonous tree.
If the root is rotten, whatever grows from it is tainted. Wealth stolen from the people can never be clean. Even when children of corrupt officials try to make an honest living, society does not believe them. Suspicion follows every step they take. Their names become heavy with shame.
The pattern is clear.
A son starts a company and whispers rise that it was funded with stolen money. A daughter earns a position and people dismiss it as the product of influence. Trust does not come with riches, and respect cannot be bought. What was meant to secure the family’s future becomes the very thing that destroys it.
This is not only a Nigerian story.
In another African country, a woman once hailed as one of the richest on the continent was removed from the Forbes list after questions about her family’s fortune. One moment she was admired, the next she was disgraced. Stolen wealth cannot stand the test of time.
The real tragedy is the lie public officials tell themselves. They claim they are protecting their families, but they are destroying them instead. They strip hospitals of medicine, schools of teachers, and communities of water and light, only to boast about children flying first class. They forget that no matter how far a child travels, the shadow of a parent always follows.
History is unforgiving.
It does not celebrate convoys, bank accounts, or mansions. It remembers only whether leaders served their people or betrayed them. Today may look comfortable, but tomorrow always comes. It is just like the saying that you cannot cover a burning fire with dry leaves. Sooner or later, the smoke will rise, and also when the corpse of a loved one stays too long in the house, even the relatives begin to hold their noses.
That is how corruption ends. The fruit of the poisonous tree cannot produce sweetness. It poisons even the families it was meant to protect.
Abidemi is a political analyst and the Managing Editor @ Newspot Nigeria.