Tag: anti-graft war

  • Obasanjo praises Buhari on anti-graft war, Boko Haram

    Obasanjo praises Buhari on anti-graft war, Boko Haram

    The Buhari administration deserves credit for its war against Boko Haram insurgency and efforts to rid the nation of corruption, former President Olusegun Obasanjo has said.

    But Obasanjo faulted the Federal Government’s approach to economic revival. He said the All Progressives Congress (APC)-led Federal Government had not done enough to revive the economy and redeem the country’s image on the international scene.

    The ex-president was the guest on HARDtalk, a 30-minute programme on BBC TV, where he was engaged on contemporary challenges facing Africa, including population explosion, corruption and the energy challenge.

    Assessing the government’s achievement in the last two years, Obasanjo said: “All I said about Buhari before he got there have not changed. I said Buhari is not strong on the economy; that has not changed. I said Buhari is not strong on foreign affairs, this view has not changed. I said Buhari would fight corruption; he has made attempt to fight corruption. Please, give him that credit. I said Buhari would fight insurgency; he has made attempt to fight insurgency. Give him that credit. If anyone sees pessimism in Buhari’s government, I do not see pessimism. I am optimistic.”

    Obasanjo said his administration made effort to reduce the nation’s dependence on crude oil through agricultural reforms and investment in infrastructure. He blamed his successors for abandoning the reforms and programmes initiated by his administration to diversify the nation’s economy and reduce dependence on oil.

    He said: “When we came in, cocoa production in Nigeria was 150,000 metric tons. By the time I left as president, it was 400,000 metric tons… I started a 25-year railway programme to connect the whole Nigeria and I started building it. That plan is what they are using today. But, those who took over from me decided they would not go on with it.

    “You talked about power. When I came into government in 1999, the price of oil was between $8 and $9 per barrel. By the time it got to $22 per barrel, we started going into power production.”

    Obasanjo rejected the notion that his government institutionalised corruption, saying the present crop of national lawmakers who accused him of being a “grandfather of corruption” were talking rubbish. He said he never offered anyone a bribe during his administration, insisting that the National Assembly is a cesspool of corruption.

    He said: “When I took over in 1999, the first message the National Assembly members sent to me through my National Security Adviser was that, whenever I was sending a bill to them, I should send it with money. I said no. If I send a bill to them and they don’t pass it, I would still run the affairs of Nigeria. I never gave anybody a bribe to do anything. Never.

    “I created the EFCC and ICPC. The EFCC investigated me thoroughly and came out with a report that completely absolved me of corruption. I will keep on lecturing them (National Assembly members) including you (the BBC host) who do check the results of our efforts. The anti-corruption institution that I set did not even take out the report on my government when I was there. It did its report and waited until I left, and then submitted the report to my successor.”

    Obasanjo described the increasing African population as his greatest fear, saying the continent is sitting on ticking bomb if the youth are not engaged productively. He said education remained the potent tool to control African population growth.

    Asked how many children he has, the ex-president dodged the question, saying his culture does not allow him to openly count his children. Obasanjo, however, admitted that he made a mistake to have given birth to more than 20 children, stressing that he had told his children not to toe his path.

     

  • Buhari must subvert judiciary in anti-graft war

    Buhari must subvert judiciary in anti-graft war

    A member of the Presidential Advisory Committee Against Corruption (PACAC), Prof. Femi Odekunle, has urged President Muhammadu Buhari, to use executive powers to subvert the shenanigans of the judiciary for the anti-graft war to succeed.

    Odekunle, who accused the judiciary of shielding corrupt lawyers and judges, said the government needs to break the rule of law to win the fight against corruption.

    He stated these when he appeared on Focus Nigeria, a programme on African Independent Television (AIT) on Thursday morning.

    Odekunle said the judiciary has failed to support the federal government’s anti-graft war.

    He said: “The only problem we are having is that we are not having the full cooperation of the legal profession in the matter (corruption). Lawyers and judges have this sentimental affiliation.

    “The legal profession felt threatened by the stance of this administration on corruption, about the role of the legal profession, about the senior lawyers and about the judiciary.

    “So there was a kind of development of some subconscious to protect their own. Perhaps there must be a way in which they can be reached to say the interest of the nation must come first.

    “We have to find a way of breaking into this and one way of breaking into this is to engage in what I said. For example, somebody was quarrelling with me and I am being honest, without breaking the law. Fighting corruption involves roforofo fight.”

  • Ribadu: unholy alliance working to scuttle anti-graft war

    Ribadu: unholy alliance working to scuttle anti-graft war

    The Federal Government should remain steadfast in its commitment to the anti corruption war because “there is an unholy alliance of corrupt people in and out of government” trying to derail it, former Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) Chairman Nuhu Ribadu said yesterday

    In his view, the anti-corruption war is working, but Nigerians must resist those in high places who want to scuttle it.

    Ribadu said EFCC Acting Chairman Ibrahim Magu and his team were doing a great job and needed the support of well-meaning Nigerians.

    He said some Nigerians may not like Magu’s face or his strategy, it should never be a reason for rejection of fundamental truths and his good job.

    Ribadu, who spoke at the fifth anniversary of Connected Development (CODE), a non-governmental organisation in Abuja, said those who had been stumbling blocks to the war against corruption clearly did not understand or feel the biting impact of corruption.

    He said: “There is no doubt that the current anti-corruption regime in the country is working. We have seen the feat attained in recent past and the ongoing effort to stall it.

    ”We, as Nigerians, must also stand to be counted on the intractable issue which poses a bigger challenge, the corruption malaise. Importantly, at a time like this, when a clear line is re-emerging, demarcating agents of progress and those bent on stopping them, as citizens, we have a duty not to be on the fence but make a clear choice between these contending forces.

    “Nigerians must take a stand between those who are working diligently to get back our stolen money and those who are poised to scuttle such efforts.

    “We are witnessing essentially a classical case of state capture in which individuals, including those in high public office, use their position to undermine the state and its policies because of their personal interest.

    “Unfortunately, some people who are supposed to be part of efforts at restitution are colluding with those who have stolen our commonwealth to frustrate the work of those who are genuinely committed in reversing the ugly trend.

    “And as this unholy alliance of corrupt people in and out of government takes root, it is us, the ordinary Nigerians, that are the victims.”

    “Those who have been a stumbling block to the war against corruption clearly do not understand or feel the biting impact of corruption.

    “If they do, they would not put up the kind of resistance we are currently witnessing in the efforts to make a success of the anti-corruption war.”

    To Ribadu, Magu and his team has been performing well and they ought to be supported.

    “At the implementation level, I am of the opinion that Ibrahim Magu and his team are doing a great job and they need the support of all well-meaning Nigerians.

    “ I know how tough this work is, and I can appreciate the challenges they are contending with. We must support and encourage them. Not because we like or dislike them but because they are offering a selfless national service, and they are doing it very well,” he said.

    Ribadu said it was wrong to personalize the attack against Magu and the EFCC.

    “Yes, you may not like someone’s face or even disagree with his strategy but that should never be a reason for you to reject fundamental truths and the good things that such a person is doing,” he said, adding:

    “It is also no excuse for you to personalise your duty or responsibility or undermine efforts that are beneficial to us as a country.

    “I have chosen to take a stand on this because I have passed through this myself and I see similar signs of those dark moments of 2007 hovering all over us.

    “It is always a dangerous cocktail when some corrupt elements in power decide to side with private interests outside government, using the rule of law as a ruse, to muscle sincere efforts to tackle corruption.”

    The ex-EFCC chairman said the nation was yet to finish paying for the mistakes of 2007 and the years after.

    He said Nigerians should not allow history to repeat itself.

    He said: “We haven’t yet finished paying for the mistakes of 2007 and the years after. We should not allow history to repeat itself in this regard.

    “Personally, I believe this administration is doing a wonderful and patriotic duty by putting the fight against corruption on the front burner. Corruption is a serious ailment afflicting this nation and by facing it headlong, the Buhari administration is doing us a whole lot of service.”

    Ribadu urged the youthful members of CODE to join the anti-corruption crusade.

  • Senators on mission to sabotage anti-graft war, says ex-Kaduna Gov Umar

    Senators on mission to sabotage anti-graft war, says ex-Kaduna Gov Umar

    •Traces origin of Senate/Customs boss’ recent face off
    •Asks Saraki to rein in members
    •’Nigerians must rise to save Customs CG, Magu, Hadiza’

    A former military governor of Kaduna State, Col. Abubakar Dangiwa Umar yesterday gave a new perspective on the recent face-off between the Senate and Customs Comptroller General Hamid Ali.

    He said it was all about the Customs seizure of a huge consignment of rice imported by a company owned by an influential member of the Senate, but which the company declared as yeast in a bid to avoid paying the appropriate import duty on the rice.

    Umar said the same senator is the brain behind a company involved in the controversial $34million Calabar port dredging contract.

    The outspoken former governor, in a statement in Kaduna, said the conduct of the Senate on these and similar matters seem to  suggest that Senators  “might be on a mission to crash the federal governments’ war against corruption using the power of ‘oversight’ as cover.”

    He, therefore, wants Senate President Bukola Saraki to rein in Senators who are stepping out of line especially those in the Committee on Customs, Excise and Tariffs.

    He cited the Committee’s handling of matters concerning the Nigeria Ports Authority and the Customs which, in his view, leaves room for suspicion.

    Umar asked Nigerians to actively support the Comptroller-General of Customs, Hamid Ali, the Chairman of the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC), Mr. Ibrahim Magu, the Managing Director of the Nigerian Ports Authority, Hajiya Hadiza Bala Usman, and a former BPP DG, Emeka Nzeh.

    “Incidents such as these are the reason the Nigerian public feels let down by our Parliament. They are the reason why a whole lot of Nigerians take a dim view of members of the National Assembly,” Umar said.

    “Some even believe the conduct of our legislators is a major factor holding Nigeria down; why it is a laughing stock among the nations of the world.

    “It is the duty of all Nigerians to demand correct conduct from all public officials, including from members of the National Assembly; especially the Senate.

    “Senator Bukola Saraki, the Senate President, must enforce discipline among his colleagues. No member of a committee, much less a chairman, should remain in his duty post once credible information about possible crime is received on the person.

    “We need not remind our political leaders, most of all our legislators, that punishment always follow excess.”

    He asked Nigerians to take interest in the activities of the Senate Committee on Customs, Excise and Tariffs, especially its relationship with the Nigeria Ports Authority.

    His words: “There are good reasons why Nigerians should take more than a passing interest in the controversy generated by the actions of members of the Senate Committee on Customs, Excise and Tariffs and that of the Nigeria Ports Authority.

    “If the reports in the media are true, the matter goes beyond the victimization of one organ of government by another.”

    On the recent humiliation of Col. Hamid Ali (rtd) by the Senate he said it all started with the October/November, 2016, importation of 1,200 metric tons of rice in thirty, 40-foot containers by a rice trading company owned by an influential senator.

    According to Umar, the company in its attempt to evade paying the correct custom duties declared the ‘rice’ consignment as ‘yeast’.

    “The goods were later intercepted and seized on the orders of the Comptroller-General of Customs. Unfortunately, this seemingly patriotic action by a public officer was seen as an affront to one senior member of the National Assembly.

    “A Senator, the leader of the Senate Committee on Customs, Excise & Tariff, wrote the CGC demanding that the consignment be released forthwith, on the dubious claim that he had investigated the matter and had found the importer blameless. His findings? That it was the clearing Agent not the importer that called the goods ‘yeast’ instead of ‘rice’!

    “The CGC brushed aside this incredible story; as any right thinking person would do. But to the shock of all Nigerians, all hell broke loose. The Senate Committee then summoned him to appear before them in uniform- seeing that as a retired army colonel, the CGC had refrained from wearing the Customs uniform.

    “He was also directed to answer a long list of queries by this same angry panel. In the end, he was dragged before the Senate at plenary, put through a cruel inquisition, publicly humiliated and dismissed as ‘not fit to hold public office’.

    “Fast-forward to last week.

    “This time, a dubious scheme was uncovered in which a subsidiary company of the Nigerian Ports Authority (NPA), went into a joint venture with a private company to manage the Calabar Port.

    “Both the NPA subsidiary, called Calabar Channel Management (CCM) and the private company, Niger Global Engineering & Technical Co. Ltd, were incorporated together in 2014, just for this deal. The purported JV partner was then awarded a contract to dredge the Calabar Channel; a contract the Bureau of Public Procurement was to condemn as violating all due processes.

    “This did not discourage them from demanding and getting a whopping $12.5million upfront payment from the NPA or asking for a purported balance of $22million.

    “In the meantime, a rash of petitions and reports had inundated the NPA against this contract, with many alleging it to be a bogus scam to siphon public funds.

    “The Bureau of Public Procurement was the first to cry out, saying both the award of the dredging contract and the initial payment of over N4billion to Messrs Niger Global Engineering & Technical Co. Ltd, were done in violation of the law. “Even worse, all efforts of the new management of the NPA under Ms. Hadiza Bala Usman, to find evidence of the dredging work purported to have been done in the Calabar Channel at the time the company claimed to have done so, was unsuccessful.

    “That is not all. There was also the report by a consultant that advised against a joint venture partnership for the purpose of managing the Calabar port. Their reason was simply that maritime activities in the Calabar port was too low, that a joint venture scheme as obtained in Lagos and Bony was unsustainable.

    “Faced with these negative outcomes, the NPA management under Ms. Bala Usman decided that national interest would be better served if the JV scheme as well as the so-called dredging project are terminated.

    “On their part, the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission, EFCC, have moved in, with a mission to “recover public funds collected for job not done”.

    “Now, the name of the person driving this scheme is quite instructive going by the very loud and sustained counter attacks being mounted against the public officers; officers that insist that right things are done.”

    Umar said the person is an influential Senator who owns the rice company that brought in the confiscated consignment, and   also Niger Global & Engineering Co. Technical Ltd.

    Umar added: “Nigerians must not leave the likes of Hamid Ali, Ibrahim Magu, Hadiza Bala Usman,(former BPP DG) Emeka Nzeh et al at the mercy of these strange lawmakers; politicians that have demonstrated time and again that they are in politics to serve themselves and themselves alone.

    “The experience of Hadiza Bala Usman, the new M.D of the NPA, is particularly sad. The more she tries to fight, to reduce graft and perfidy, the more determined they seem to mobilise against her, to neutralise her and see her back.

    “They want her out because, they now claim, she is ‘too young’ to manage a complex organisation such as NPA – even though she is past 40 years of age. Unashamed, they question the wisdom of appointing a woman to such a post – her training and experience counting for nothing; apparently.”

  • ‘Criticism against Buhari’s anti-graft war unfair’

    ‘Criticism against Buhari’s anti-graft war unfair’

    An Ijaw Chief, Wilfred Ogbotobo, on Tuesday condemned the criticisms against President Muhammadu Buhari’s anti-graft war and the Attorney-General of the Federation and Minister of Justice, Abubakar Malami (SAN).

    Describing such criticisms as unfair, the Ijaw chief said it was impossible for the Federal Government to eradicate corruption overnight.

    Speaking in Yenagoa, Bayelsa State, Ogbotobo, who hails from Nembe Kingdom, said most of the expectations of the critics could only materialize in dictatorship and not in democracy that required rule of law and due process.

    He said the treasury looters were also spending such money to manipulate citizens to frustrate anti- graft war.

    He said: “I don’t think it is fair to say the war against corruption is slowing down. The fact is that Nigerians want to see actions daily. They want to physically see the looted billions hauled in cash, in cash not stories, and the culprits arrested, chained and thrown into jails.

    “These include mostly high ranking former office holders including past heads of state. They want to hear the names of the criminals mentioned. Unfortunately, it can’t be done that way all the time. This is a democracy where rule of law is paramount. It is not a military dictatorship.

    “We should also realize that we are contending with a leviathan that had been with us since independence, successfully poisoned more than three quarters of our national life and effectively crippled our national psyche. A monster whose venomous tentacles permeate all facets of our institutions and hierarchies of our society.

    “In a way it has the foundation of our corporate existence on its tentacles which it can threaten at will. This is the challenge we have before us. So fighting Nigeria’s brand of corruption is akin to challenging the very existence of the country. And I believe this is already manifesting glaringly, so I’m not hypothesizing.

    “I believe there are points where outwardly the momentum would appear slow or actually slow down due to the ramifications, weight or depth of the issues concerned at that particular point.

    “We must understand that. This shouldn’t be misconstrued as an ebb or a weakening in the fight against corruption. Not at all.”

    Ogbotobo said it was also unfair to challenge the competence and commitment of Malami to the anti-corruption crusade.

    He said Malami came from a lineage in the APC, where the anti-graft campaign of the administration originated and would not shirk in discharging his responsibilities.

    He added: “I think the President found him competent, stable and reliable before choosing him as the point man on this very crucial responsibility which, arguably, is the signature of this administration.

    “Malami is a lawyers’ lawyer. He understands the sensitivity of the challenge and I believe he has been very successful.

    “In a way, this can be attested to by the robust international collaboration complementing our efforts and thereby drawing respect and support to Nigeria’s anti-corruption fight, from serious nations across the world.”

  • Banks, looters and anti-graft war

    Banks, looters and anti-graft war

    Treasury looting cannot take place in a vacuum. It is with the connivance of banks, which hide the loot and refuse to report shady transactions in defiance of the law. To address the problem, the Presidential Advisory Committee Against Corruption (PACAC), the Association of Chartered Certified Accountants (ACCA), the Convention on Business Integrity (CBi) and the Chartered Institute of Bankers of Nigeria (CIBN) have held a conference on improving financial integrity. JOSEPH JIBUEZE was there.

    It is not in doubt that corruption cannot thrive without a middleman. But, most times, it is the culprits who are held to account, but those who facilitate the act, such as bankers, are rarely brought to book.

    Stakeholders and experts believe that corruption cannot be tackled if the financial sector does not play its role in detecting and reporting suspicious transactions.

    To them, those who aid looting and facilitate the movement of stolen funds should no longer get away with it.

    As a way out, the Presidential Advisory Committee Against Corruption (PACAC) collaborated with the Association of Chartered Certified Accountants (ACCA), the Chartered Institute of Bankers of Nigeria (CIBN) and the Convention on Business Integrity (CBi) to find solutions.

    At a conference on Financial System Integrity Improvement in Abuja, they addressed regulatory and institutional measures being taken by the financial services sector and regulators to minimise fraud and corruption in the sector, the effectiveness of such measures and steps needed to close existing gaps and sanction breaches by defaulters.

    The collaborating parties believe that all stakeholders in the financial services sector share a common goal of enthroning systemic integrity and accountability in the light of existing self-regulating measures, even if inadequate.

    Speakers identified preventive and practical measures for the players and regulators to tackle fraud, corruption and other forms of financial crimes.

    The keynote speaker was Nick Leeson, whose dealings at Barings Bank led to the collapse in 1995 of one of Britain’s oldest financial organisations.

    Others who spoke were PACAC Chairman Prof Itse Sagay (SAN), CIBN President/Chairman of Council Prof Segun Ajibola, CBi Chief Executive Officer Soji Apampa, ACCA Regional Head of Policy Jane Ohadike, Ambassador of Ecuador to Nigeria Leopoldo Verdesoto, former Accountant-General of the Federation Dr. J.K. Naiyeju and Access Bank Plc’s Mrs Mosun Belo-Olusoga.

    Others were Head, Risk Management, Securities and Exchange Commission, Okey Umeano, Chairman, Board of Integrity Organisation, Opeyemi Agbaje, former Central Bank of Nigeria Governor Tunde Lemo and Chairman, Inter-Agency Asset Tracing Team, Bamgbola Sokoya.

    The Director-General, West African Institute for Financial and Economic Management (WAIFEM), Prof Akpan Ekpo, Director-General, Nigerian Financial Intelligence Unit, Frank Usani, a consultant, Dr. Biodun Adedipe, and ACCA council member Taiwo Oyedele also spoke at the event.

     

    The role of banks

    PACAC Executive Secretary Prof Bolaji Owasanoye believes looting cannot succeed if financial institutions played their roles well as critical stakeholders.

    He said: “Banks are critical stakeholders if we’re to prevent money laundering and financial crimes. It is impossible to successfully carry out any act of corruption without the middlemen. So banks, auditors, lawyers and real estate brokers are included.

    “With regard to banks in particular, people cannot hide assets like funds if banks follow their KYC (Know Your Customers) principles, ethical standards and provisions and the extant laws of the land.

    “It is the duty of banks to know their customers and when any transaction raises an eyebrow, they should not ignore it.”

    Owasanoye, who spoke with newsmen on the sideline of the event, said rather than play their role in preventing corruption, banks have aided and abetted it.

    For instance, he said the alleged bribing of Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) officials by former Petroleum Minister Mrs Diezani Allison-Madueke with $114 million was facilitated by banks.

    “Banks were actively involved not only in holding those funds in suspense accounts, but in helping to disburse them. Was that every anticipated? We were hoping that banks would act as gatekeepers, to help the system and the society diminish corruption, because ultimately corruption will destroy the banks too. The banks didn’t play that role and that’s a major cause for concern,” he said.

    According to Owasanoye, while it is not all banks that engage in illicit activities in aid of corruption, the institutions ought to strengthen their processes while ensuring that the bad eggs are severely punished.

    “Our argument is: if banks follow their own processes and procedure, it would not happen. If banks followed international best practices, it would not happen. If banks followed the laws of the land, it would not happen. So, in all three fronts, they’re violating the rules and helping money laundering to happen.

    “Even though banks do not necessarily need to know the source of funds, when a customer fills an account opening form, the bank asks for what they do and house address and the customer provides a utility bill to back it up. If it is a company, they make you pay for a search at the Corporate Affairs Commission to be sure the company is real.

    “So, when a company that has N10,000 shareholding and doesn’t file annual returns suddenly deposits N1billion into the account, the banks have a duty to report according to law. And there are situations thay can take pre-emptive measures. It is because of the refusal to follow these principles that we’re having these conversations.”

    To Owasanoye, beside banks complying with the laws and banking regulations, there is the need to sanction offenders to serve as deterrent to others.

    “We’ve said that erring bankers, like other professionals and role actors, must be sanctioned. Everyone who violates the rules and those who help them should be prosecuted.

    “Auditors who look at the books of banks professionally, see anomalies and fail to report them, or regulators who are supposed to regulate the banks but collect gratification to look the other way or choose to look the other way because they were encouraged to do so, all them are culpable. So we need to enforce the laws as they are,” he said.

    Sagay (SAN) decried fraud in the banking sector, saying the fight against corruption cannot be won without the collaboration of banks and financial institutions.

    “Private sector fraud, particularly in the banking sector, is enormous,” he said, adding that the economy and banks are at risk if urgent steps are not taken to tackle corruption in the sector.

    Ajibola regretted that the banking sector was not immune to “the rot and corruption in the entire economy and even across the globe.”

    His words: “It is no gainsaying that several corrupt individuals in the society have used the channels of banking and finance services to perpetrate financial crimes and corruption on the nation’s collective financial resources, thereby impinging on the integrity and credibility of the system.”

    As a way out, he said the institute ensures strict adherence to the Code of Conduct in the banking industry by all cadres of employees.

    CIBN, he said, also acts as a financial ombudsman, being the secretariat of the Bankers Committee sub-committee on ethics and professionalism, with a mandate to adjudicate cases or petitions against banks on unethical practices or excess charges.

    Ajibola said since inception in 2001, the sub-committee has received 1,889 petitions/cases with total claims of N320.4 billion and $415 million. No fewer than 1,766 cases have been refunded, with N22.98 billion and $16,9 million refunded to petitioners and bank customers, he said.

    “In addition to this, banks or individuals who engage in any form of infraction and reported, are arraigned before the institute’s Investigation Panel and Disciplinary Tribunal and appropriate disciplinary sanctions meted out against such an organization or individual.

    “We would like to further encourage the banking public to continue to report to the institute actions that are inimical to the promotion of high ethical conduct in the industry. We are ready to collaborate with government agencies and he private sector in our collective bid to further entrench financial system integrity in the economy,” Ajibola said.

     

    Causes, solutions

    Leeson said opportunities to commit fraud must be removed. He argued that corruption in the banking sector would be curtailed if culpable persons did not get away with it.

    “If you catch someone doing something wrong, there has to be adequate punishment. But if you see people doing something wrong and getting away with it, you’re also likely to do it,” he said.

    Leeson said banks needed to keep their rules updated. “If your rules are two years old, then know that someone is already circumventing them,” he warned.

    Apampa said lip service was being paid to the behaviour of banks. To him, stricter regulation and sanctions for wrong behaviour is needed to stop what he called “tainted money” being hidden in banks.

    “We turn a blind eye and allow certain practices to go on. We have reporting problems and transparency issues. We don’t sanction and reward appropriately. There’s a big gap that leaves us vulnerable. There is also a big gap in the area of self-regulation,” he said.

    Verdesoto said Nigeria had not punished erring banks and middlemen adequately.

    “If a corrupt banker is not in jail, then something is wrong. The society and his colleagues ought to punish offenders,” he said.

    Belo-Olusoga said for any economy to be vibrant, the financial sector must be free of corruption.

    To her, it behoves individual bankers to ensure that their colleagues do not get away with wrongdoing.

    “You cannot legislate integrity. It is something you decide to do. But we must put in place a system that rewards good behavior and punishes bad behavior,” she said.

    To her, asking people who engage in wrong acts to retire was not enough; harsher punishment is needed. “We should dismiss them,” she said.

    The pressure banks put themselves in, she said, also leads to banking improprieties.

    “Banks put too much pressure on themselves. If Bank A makes N100million profit, Bank B will want to exceed it. So, they take more risks. Let’s stop short term performance that should be based on an industry-wide agreement,” she said.

    Agbaje believes poverty and inequality are among socio-economic factors are causes of corruption. He decried a situation where junior and middle-level staff are paid peanuts, saying that could be an incentive for fraud. “There must be fair remuneration,” he said.

    He warned against allowing ethnic and nepotistic arguments to obscure the need to punish acts of corruption.

    “Let them not say I am the one who destroyed his career,” he said as an example of why people fail to report and punish acts of fraud.

    Agbaje said banks should also be compelled to show the strategies that underline the targets they set and how to achieve them without the undue pressure that leads to cutting corners.

    Lemo, in the same vein, said the compensation structure of financial institutions needed to change. He said a situation where top staff earned bonuses that are twice their annual salaries to the detriment of other employees should be stop.

    Oyedele said the practice of banks competing on the basis of profit must also stop.

    “The regulator could recognise the best banks from a corporate governance point of view,” he said.

    According to him, suspected kidnapper Evans could not have succeeded in his business if banks played their role well.

    “It was easy for him to move money within the banking system. He could have been caught if banks had done the right thing,” he said.

    Oyedele called for a specialised Financial Services Integrity Tribunal to which the regulators and the regulated will be subjected.

    Prof Ekpo said corruption was a systemic problem, therefore, financial institutions were not immune to it.

    He thinks existing laws have not been well enforced. “Several laws are already in place but are we acting on those laws? The monies being looted go through banks. People should be heavily punished and jailed. If the crime is so serious, I don’t mind them being executed,” he said.

    Usani said a specialised criminal court with trained manpower was needed to adjudicate corruption cases so they do not drag in court or culprits get away with crime.

    Adedipe said strong anti-corruption institutions were needed rather than strong individuals.

    “We must build a strong monitoring system. We must create a system of incentives that demand and encourage good behavior. Regulation must also be strong,” he said.

    Naiyeju called for better use of the tax system in detecting crime.

    “Taxation has been used in other jurisdictions to catch people who engage in financial crimes. Let those supervising the financial system be alive to their responsibilities,” he said.

    He also backed the death penalty for corruption.

    But, Owasanoye does not think the death penalty will solve corruption. To him, strict enforcement of the law and compliance with rules and regulations will.

    “I don’t support death penalty for anything. The reason is that the death penalty has not been proven to be deterrent to crime. There are many other factors involved. I appreciate that in some countries there is the death penalty, but the very fact that you still have criminals in those places where there is capital punishment justifies the fact that death penalty doesn’t solve crime.

    “Using Nigeria as an example, when death penalty was introduced for armed robbery, it escalated. It didn’t go down. Armed robbers became more desperate. For me, death penalty is not the issue,” he said.

  • How to reinvigorate Buhari’s anti-graft war

    How to reinvigorate Buhari’s anti-graft war

    After assessing the anti-graft agencies, stakeholders have faulted their methods of fighting corruption. They suggested ways the agencies can enhance their performance. Assistant Editor LEKE SALAUDEEN writes.

    Stakeholders have faulted the Federal Government’s anti-corruption strategy, saying the approach is responsible for its limited success. They have identified the problems that require urgent attention, if the fight is to achieve its objectives.

    For instance, the Nigerian Bar Association (NBA) said the framework for anti-corruption crusade is defective in structure and does not make for effectiveness of the anti-graft agencies. The NBA believes that a lot needs to be done to improve the general institutional framework for the campaign.

    NBA President, Abubakar Mahmoud (SAN), said: “Though some successes have been recorded, especially with the advent of the whistle-blowing policy, it must be remembered that reliance on the new policy is a signal that the policing and anti-crime agencies are weak.”

    The leadership of the National Assembly also complained that the anti-graft war was not addressing the fundamental issues. Senate President Bukola Saraki described the anti-corruption fight as sensational and selective, while the Speaker of the House of Representatives, Hon. Yakubu Dogara, said the war was only dealing with the symptoms of corruption.

    Other stakeholders, such as lawyers, also share similar views. Legal luminary, Femi Falana (SAN), for instance, has identified the limited capacity of the anti-graft agencies as a major problem retarding the success of the crusade. He observed that the agencies are understaffed and overwhelmed.

    Falana said the Independent Corrupt Practices & Other Related Offences Commission (ICPC) receives an average of 100 petitions daily and that the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) even gets many more from the public. Yet, the EFCC leadership inherited about 2,173 staff. Even with the plan to engage 750 more staff, the EFCC will still have less than 3,000 staff. The implication is that with such limited number of investigators and prosecutors, the success rate of the agency is bound to be extremely poor.

    He said: “Without adequate funding of the anti-graft agencies and motivation of investigators and prosecutors, many more corruption cases are going to be lost to accused persons who have access to well-prepared and well-paid team of lawyers.

    “The British government spent millions of pounds on the investigation and prosecution of a former governor in Nigeria. If the Federal Government is genuinely desirous of winning corruption cases, it should be prepared to invest in the anti-graft agencies. As a matter of urgency, the government should immediately set aside part of the recovered loot to fund the investigation and prosecution of corruption cases.”

    Falana also canvassed autonomy for the agencies. The senior advocate said the agencies should be free from executive control and interference, to properly discharge their statutory functions. He said his plea for autonomy is coming against the backdrop of a report that the EFCC submitted on the investigation of the criminal diversion of N19 billion from the London/Paris Club loan refund by some governors and other reports of serious economic crimes to the Presidency.

    He said: “It is my submission that the practice of submitting reports of investigation of economic crimes to the Presidency or any other authority should stop, because it is not provided for under the EFCC Act. It is not even in the interest of the Presidency, as it may give the impression that the anti-graft agencies are being used to settle political scores.”

    Another lawyer, Malam Yusuf Ali (SAN), agrees with Falana. He said for the anti-graft agencies to perform, they have to be strengthened in terms of human capacity and deployment of high tech. He said the operatives of the agencies should be above board, in terms of their integrity. He said: “The public perception is that some of those fighting corruption are not clean; they are not wholesome and they are not supposed to be there; the job is meant for credible people that can account for what they have.”

    However, Ali disagreed on the issue of autonomy. He said there cannot be full autonomy for the agencies, because they are appointed by someone. He added: “It is the character of those running the agencies that matters; they should not take directives from anybody. They should know that they owe allegiance to Nigeria; the absence of this explains why our institutions are weak.”

    The legal practitioner said the success of the anti-corruption crusade lies on the political will of the government. He said where there are sacred cows, as in the current effort, because the leadership is shielding some people, the crusade is bound to fail. Falana agrees. He said: “The government too has joined the forces of corruption by frustrating the anti-graft agencies from prosecuting indicted public officers. Even though the government has repeatedly assured the Nigerian people that there are no sacred cows in the fight against corruption, the Presidency has casually dismissed serious allegations of corruption and abuse of office levelled against certain public office holders.

    “For instance, when a serving minister was implicated in the report of the procurement of arms and ammunition, the Federal Government claimed that the probe panel had not concluded its assignment. Was the panel not disbanded thereafter? When a top army officer was accused of buying properties beyond his legitimate income, did the Code of Conduct Bureau not absolve him without conducting any investigation? When the Senate indicted the former Secretary to the Government of the Federation, Mr Babachir David Lawal, over his involvement in the criminal diversion of about N200 million set aside to cut grass in the camps of internally displaced persons in the Northeast region, did the Federal Government not say he was not given fair hearing?”

    On the loss of corruption cases, Falana said the EFCC lost its trained and committed personnel when it was taken over by powerful criminal suspects in connivance with a former Attorney General of the Federation (AGF). Under the pretext of fighting corruption, in line with the rule of law, they castrated the EFCC; it is going to take some time to rebuild the commission, because the damage is enormous, the lawyer said.

    Lawyer and public affairs analyst Mr Monday Ubani also observed that the framework for the anti–corruption fight is weak. He called for a review of the existing laws and a comprehensive law that would tackle corruption at all strata. He said the anti-graft war is concentrated on political elites, leaving out the civil servants that collect bribes for services offered on daily basis. He said: “For you to obtain a Nigerian passport, you must pay extra amount to immigration officials to facilitate the processing of your application; to get driver’s licence, you must bribe the Federal Road Safety Corps; to clear your luggage at the air and sea ports, you must offer gratification to the Customs officers.”

    On why the EFFC have lost series of corruption cases recently, the second National Vice President of the NBA said if the prosecution failed to lay his evidence properly before the court, the case will be thrown out. The judge can also strike out cases for lack of evidence and diligent prosecution. He advised the EFCC and other anti graft agencies to engage competent hands to handle investigations and experienced lawyers to prosecute.

    Ubani declared his support for the Buhari administration anti-corruption crusade when he said: “I am totally in support of the government in anti-graft war; we must nip corruption in bud; we should not allow it to kill Nigeria; it is a hydra-headed monster that must be tackled. The EFCC should bite. Ibrahim Magu is giving it teeth. If there are deficiencies in the law setting up the anti-corruption agencies, the management should complain to have them reviewed.

    “We should build a system that will sustain the fight against corruption, like it is being done in advanced democracies. We should involve people in the fight and that is why I like the whistle-blowing policy of this administration. Since it was introduced, the EFCC has made many discoveries of looted funds. The policy is working, because people are carried along by the government in its anti-corruption crusade.”

    But, the Chairman of Presidential Advisory Committee on Corruption, Professor Itse Sagay (SAN), disagreed with the opinion of his colleagues that the framework of anti-corruption crusade is defective. He said: “People saying this and rejoicing over this statement are ignorant; they didn’t find out what we are doing; they did not know what the framework is and what the anti-graft agencies are doing.”

    Sagay insists that there is nothing wrong with the framework, because the agencies are doing an excellent job. He said: “We are the think-tank of the anti-corruption agencies; we supply them information on what to do and how to go about fighting corruption. Corruption has retarded our socio-economic growth; it is a destructive force. The anti-corruption agencies are determined to reduce corruption to the minimal level, so that the country will not only survive, but to also develop.”

    He blamed some lawyers for their role in the pervasive corruption in the country and described them as enemy of anti-corruption crusade. He said: “They are the harbingers of corruption; they carry money to judges’ homes to pervert the cause of justice; they live on the proceeds of crime; they feed fat on looters, subvert the system, by ensuring that cases are not concluded; they are accomplices of the suspects. The statement that the framework of anti graft crusade is defective is a psychological warfare; they don’t want the fight against corruption to continue.”

    On the number of cases being lost at the courts by the anti-graft agencies, Sagay said it is not possible to win every case. He added: “Not all judgments are correct; there are judgments that are pervasive. Nobody is talking about the conviction of former acting governor of Adamawa State, James Ngilari; former Minister of Niger Delta, Chief Orubebe who lost at the Code of Conduct Tribunal and had his property confiscated and those taken to court over oil subsidy scam and were jailed. Various courts have granted EFCC approval to seize asset of looters, even though they are still on trial; what of recovery of looted funds that are too numerous to be mentioned.”

    Civil rights activist, Comrade Mashood Erubami, said the notion that the anti-corruption crusade has failed, because no suspect had been convicted is not true, because certain institutions are determined to frustrate the APC and the Buhari administration.

    Erubami said: “At present, there are forces that have constituted themselves into opposition in the police, the EFCC, the legislature, the judiciary, including the bar that is waging counter offensives against the anti-corruption struggle. They are against the anti-corruption war and are currently fighting back the crusade to sanitise the society, using their monopoly without discretion to debar accountability through weakening the anti-corruption institutions.”

    Erubami, who is also the President of the Nigeria Voters Assembly (VOTASS), said: “All attempts being made to build strong institutions to discourage corruption are being frustrated, because the suspects have the capacity to hire experienced lawyers who are able to come up with technicalities to thwart the adjudication processes and free the guilty from being made to account for his or her misdeeds.”

  • Senate faults AGF’s approach to anti-graft war

    Senate faults AGF’s approach to anti-graft war

    Senate on Tuesday carpeted the Attorney General of the Federation and Minister of Justice, Abubakar Malami, over what it described as his poor handling of the anti-graft war.

    The lawmakers faulted Malami for not seeking the collaboration of the National Assembly on the appropriate legislation required to aid offenders’ prosecution.

    The Senate joint Committee on Judiciary, Human Rights and Legal Matters with the Anti- Corruption and Financial Crimes Committee expressed the views at a public hearing on two critical bills meant for strengthening of the anti-graft war.

    The two bills are – Proceeds of Crimes Bill 2017 and Nigerian Assets Management (establishment etc) bill 2017.

    Malami, who was represented by one Anthony Odu Abba at the hearing, could not attend the event due to other pressing matters in his office.

    The senators were taken aback when Abba said the office of the Attorney General had no prepared position on the two proposed bills.

    Rather, Abba said the Executive arm would forward a single bill on the matter to the National Assembly for consideration at a later date.

    But the committee chairman, Senator David Umaru, said the position of the AGF was unacceptable to the panel.

    Umaru said, “This is unacceptable to us. One, you have no written memorandum on your position on the bills. Two, your principal, the AGF who was recently reported in the media to have castigated the Senate and by extension, the National Assembly for allegedly sitting on anti-corruption bills sent by the executive is not here. Three, your submission is neither here nor there as regards support for or opposition to the bills.

    “What is expected from the office of the Attorney- General on these bills are clearly written positions saying yes or no and not verbal proposition or information on another bill. This is not right and not expected from the AGF.”

     

  • Corrupt elite threatening to derail anti-graft war, says Magu

    Corrupt elite threatening to derail anti-graft war, says Magu

    THE Chairman of the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC), Mr. Ibrahim Magu, said yesterday that a band of corrupt elite was out to derail the nation’s anti-graft war.

    He said the cabal profiteering from corruption wanted the campaign watered down.

    The EFCC boss said while many Nigerians are calling for stiffer punishment for the corrupt, the patrons of corruption now tell the citizenry that it does not pay to punish the corrupt.

    He, however, said God will not allow the corrupt elements to succeed in truncating the war against graft.

    Magu, who  spoke after the EFCC-Stakeholders’ Walk Against Corruption in Abuja, said the days of impunity were over.

    The walk was also staged  in Lagos, Kaduna, Port Harcourt and Enugu.

    He said by taking on the high and mighty in all sectors, the EFCC has proven that there are no sacred cows in the fight against corruption.

    He said: “The nation is at a critical juncture in the fight against corruption. Much gain has been recorded in the last two years.  These gains are attested to by massive recovery of stolen assets and convictions of some high profile corruption suspects.

    “The reign of impunity in the conduct of public affairs has been checked to a considerable extent. By taking on the high and mighty in all sectors, the EFCC has proven that there are no sacred cows in the fight against corruption.

    “All of these have been made possible by a new political climate in Nigeria under President Muhammadu Buhari, who has demonstrated the will to fight corruption by not interfering in the operation of anti-graft agencies.

    “This ordinarily should provide impetus for greater exploits. Sadly, that is not the case. A band of corrupt elite threatened by the momentum of the anti-graft war have sworn to derail the process. They are deadly and without remorse as they plot and scheme to defeat the anti- corruption programme and take the country back to the dark days when corruption and impunity reigned supreme.

    “While most of us who feel the pains of corruption are asking for more vigour in the fight, the cabal profiteering from corruption would want the campaign watered down. While many Nigerians are calling for stiffer punishment for the corrupt, the patrons of corruption now tell us that it does not pay to punish the corrupt!

    “While we are sweating in the sun to express our collective hatred for corruption, they are busy in their air-conditioned mansions, plotting how to continue the looting.”

    Magu, however, said God will not allow the corrupt elements to succeed in truncating the war against graft.

    He added: “Must we allow them to succeed in truncating the fight against corruption? I believe that God will not allow them to succeed because they have exposed themselves as the true enemies of the masses of Nigeria. These wicked people must be defeated!

    He said victory for those against corrupt practices ”because the days of impunity are gone, forever”.

    The EFCC chairman said the commission would not relent in its war against corruption because Nigerians were fed up with the filth.

    He said: “Nigerians who are fed up with the corrupt status quo yearn for change. The change they want is not a return to impunity. The change that they want is not a return to looting. Nigerians are fed up with the looters.

    “I stand before you today and make a solemn pledge never to give up the fight. Those who dread to be punished for their corrupt deeds should take notice; that the EFCC is watching. The commission will trace and recover all ill-gotten wealth and bring the perpetrators to book.”

    But he pleaded with Nigerians to join the fight against corruption by blowing the whistle anywhere.

    He said: “All hands have to be on deck as the EFCC cannot be everywhere. I have always said the fight against corruption can only be won if all Nigerians get on board.”

    The President of the Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC), Comrade Ayuba Wabba said the organised labour attended the event to support the fight because the war against corruption is worth it.

    He said: “Nigerians must take it over. Our politicians are crying but the people that are being exploited are also crying. We don’t know who is even corrupt. But the fact is that even the corrupt elite are also saying that Nigeria is corrupt; we that on ground are also saying that the system is corrupt.

    “But the fact still remains the same. There is systemic corruption in Nigeria at all levels and, therefore, Nigerian citizens must be ready at all cost to make sacrifice and make Nigeria a better place.”

  • Anti-graft war yielding results, says Fed Govt

    Anti-graft war yielding results, says Fed Govt

    CRITICS of the Muhammadu Buhari administration’s anti-corruption war got a reply yesterday.

    The administration has a good story to tell, Minister of Information and Culture Lai Mohammed said.

    He said the government had taken on corruption at its core in the last two years.

    Very soon, there will be more prosecutions and convictions of treasury looters than the nation has ever seen, the minister said.

    Mohammed spoke at the Special (10th) Edition of the Town Hall Meeting in Abuja, following swipes from Senate President Bukola Saraki and House Speaker Yakubu Dogara.

    Mohammed  said: “Let me say straightaway that in giving this mid-term report, I am convinced beyond a reasonable doubt that this Administration has a story to tell, a story of achievements that – if we are able to continue along this path – will stand the test of time and put our dear nation on the path of sustainable growth and development.

    “We have taken on corruption at its core. There are more prosecutions and there will be more convictions for public sector corruption than Nigeria has ever seen.

    “We have acted to address the leakages in government spending that make corruption possible. Through the zero- based budgeting and the Treasury Single Account (TSA), the government’s efficiency unit and the hugely successful whistle-blower policy.”

    The minister said the government was waging the war against corruption because of its interest in a prosperous future for all Nigerians

    He added: “At the same time, corruption levels in our society had become completely unacceptable. The brazenness and impunity of those involved, and the lack of accountability at all levels of society had to be addressed if we were to create the foundations for future prosperity.

    “That future prosperity, for all Nigerians, was the overriding objective of the administration. We were, and remain, 100% committed to delivering an economy that enables all Nigerians to achieve their ambitions, no matter how big or small.”

    Finance Minister Mrs Kemi Adeosun said the anti corruption fight was not only yielding fruit but had become acceptable among Nigerians.

    In her view, “the whistle-blowing policy has made every Nigerian a detective’’ and many of them are not requesting for any compensation.

    According to Adeosun, the Federal Government had got more than 2,500 tips that are likely to lead to the recovery of looted funds and blocking of leakages.

    She said the government was taking measures that would get the country out of recession, adding that Nigeria would come out stronger.

    Mohammed spoke on other achievements of the administration.

    He said: “When President Buhari was inaugurated on May 29th, 2015, he set out an ambitious agenda to take on the most pressing challenges our nation faces. It’s important to remember the context of that speech, and the situation that we faced at that time.

    “As he was speaking, Boko Haram was in control of a significant part of Nigeria’s North-East. In Borno State alone, Boko Haram occupied 24 out of the State’s 27 local councils. The territorial integrity of Nigeria was threatened. Our first and most pressing assignment, therefore, was to restore security to the nation.

    “We have restored security to the North-East and ended the scourge of Boko Haram.

    “We are addressing comprehensively the issues in the Niger Delta that make the production of our oil resources so vulnerable. We are restoring the sanctity of our judicial system, and. We are implementing and Economic Recovery and Growth Plan designed to reset our economy and remove our reliance on oil production, and oil revenues, forever.

    “These are just a few of the initiatives that government is delivering on and it is this last message on the economy that I want to focus on now:

    • We must be able to own our own future. We cannot be a hostage to oil price or production levels. That means taking back control of our economy and making it productive, and delivering value for all  of our people.
    • By building an economy that is no longer reliant on income from one commodity, thanks to the ongoing diversification process, we will create a sustainable basis for long term and inclusive growth for all.
    • The Economic Recovery and Growth Plan sets out the framework for achieving that, and the Honourable Minister of Budget and National Planning is 100% focused on implementation. He will tell you more about his plans shortly.

    “At the heart of this is the need for Nigeria to rebuild the social contract between its government and its people. Government must be accountable, and this government is very accountable. We are providing security; we are providing an enabling environment for business and we are delivering strong and effective public services.

    “Our citizens need to see the value that their taxes are delivering in order to have faith in government, and for us to attract the revenue we need for even greater investment in the future. We are here today to show Nigerians that we are and will continue to deliver our side of that bargain.

    “That is why we are front loading borrowing to fund capital expenditure and build the infrastructure we need. You can see the work going on and it will only grow as we implement the 2017 budget.

    “President Buhari has made these commitments to the Nigerian people. He, and his team, are delivering. We are building a future in which all Nigerians can access opportunity and a Nigeria of which we can all be proud.”