Tag: corrupt

  • ‘No hiding place for corrupt officials’

    All Progressives Congress (APC) National Publicity Secretary Alhaji Lai Mohammed spoke with reporters in Lagos on efforts by President Muhammadu Buhari to tackle insecurity, revatalise the economy and re-invigorate the anti-corruption war. He also reflected on the National Assembly crisis and efforts being made to resolve the logjam. EMMANUEL OLADESU was there.

    Is there any justification for the delay in the release of ministerial nominations by President Muhammadu Buhari?

    A lot of work is been done to ensure that equity and balance are maintained in compiling the ministerial list. I don’t think the government is unduly slow. However, the most important thing is that people have laid emphasis on this appointment to the detriment of whether the government has settled down or not to govern. But, to tell you the truth, this government is on course. Three issues are cardinal and the government has taken them as its priorities. These are security, the economy and the anti-corruption battle.

    Could you shed light on these three priorities and how government has approached them?

    In the area of security, I think he has lived up to expectation. What has been achieved in the last few weeks in the area of security is phenomenal. The President has held meetings with Niger, Chad and members of the Chad Basin Commission-Cameroun, Niger, Chad and Benin-and territories where the Boko Haram has been operating, in an attempt to make sure that insurgency is curtailed. He has moved the headquarter of the military command to Maiduguri. By the end of this month, he will launch the multi-national joint task force. When that is done, it will cripple the Boko Haram insurgency. It would appear that in the last two weeks, the insurgency has actually been on the increase. Because the sect has been dislodged from their forest and their hideout, they are now attacking soft targets, including markets. They have been cornered. They have been dispersed. With the intelligence gathering put in place now by the forces, the base of Boko Haram has reduced. So, I think in the area of security, some efforts have been taken.

    In the area of the economy, he has really settled down. When the government came, a lot of money was owned at federal and state levels. If it was not addressed on time, it could lead to industrial unrest and crisis, not only for the states, but for the nation. When the APC came in, 16 states were owing between three and nine months salary arrears. There should be no blanket labeling. It is wrong to attribute the inability of the state governments to pay to incompetence. What happened was that while the government was getting 720 billion in 2014, it reduced to 388billion by 2015. If on the average, in 2014, 720 billion was disbursed to the three tiers if government, by April 2015, it has gone down to 388 billion, clearly, it is almost 50 per cent decrease. There is no way, even in the best managed economy, without a shock absorber, it will be hard for the state to meet their obligations.

    The President believes that it is scandalous not to pay workers. He believes that workers deserve their pay. You can imagine the damage has been done been done in the last nine months? If someone does not get salary for nine months, how can he feed his children? How does he goes to work? How does he foots medical bills? So, this bail out is being downplayed for reasons best known to them. But, I know it is one single act that has touched the lives of more Nigerians. It is socially and politically important. It is the best way to save the economy. You get more money, you buy more goods. When you buy more goods, you manufacture more goods. When you manufacture more goods, you employ more people.

    The President has also asked the Central Bank to create a loan of between N250 and N300 billion for them to be able to pay their arrears. But, he has now asked the Central Bank to go and negotiate on long term basis the debt owed to commercial banks by the states. This is as important as the bail out. The states will be able to pay their salaries as at when do and be able to meet other obligations. By restructuring these loans, states will survive. There is a standing order that N500 m should be deducted from the allocations to some states monthly to service debts. With the restructuring of their loans from short-term to long-term, they will have more money to pay salaries and undertake developmental programmes.

    The question is not about where the money comes from and who saved the money. It is about creative ingenuity of the government. The money has been there all along. Why has it not been used for this purpose? If the priority of any government is the welfare and wellbeing of the people, I don’t see any reason why people are not paid their salaries. No penny was taken from the Excess crude Account. The money came from what has accrued to the NLNG. Also, the Central Bank was asked to create the soft loans for banks. The critics do not know the terms of the soft loans. They have also forgotten that, a few years ago, when banks were in trouble, the Federal Government came out and bought the debts of these banks. That was how they created ANCON. Five Nigerians were owing banks in excess of N700 billion. If the Central Bank could buy the debt of five Nigerians to save the banks, why can’t Central Bank buy the debt of 20 states for less than N700 billion? This is a caring government. This is a government that believes that the welfare of the people is important.

    What about the anti-corruption battle?

    In the areas of anti-corruption and transparency, things have changed. It is the first time that they were seen all the figures at the meeting of the National Economic Council. The truth is now coming out. We are now in an era of transparency. The Central Bank governor even aid that, because of the frugal approach to the economy, blockage of leakages, the foreign reserves have gone up by two billion dollars in a month. People are not looking at all these. They are looking at the appointments that have not been made. But, I know that, in the not too distant future, key appointments will be made and thye ministerial list will come out.

    But, the President has got approval for 15 special advisers from the Senate…

    It is part of the key appointments the President will be making. But, the President wants to be painstaking about it. He has gotten the number. The names should be look out for. Normally, these appointment are made within the first six weeks. But, we are not doing too badly. There is the need for balancing, in terms of the diverse ethnic units and religions.

    Ekiti State Governor Ayodele Fayose has said that what is being disbursed to them is what is due to them…

    They know that it is not true. What prevented their own government? They only left two months ago. Benue and Kogi states, which were PDP states, have been owing salaries before they left. What prevented them from using the money to help the states? why did not occur to them that they could approach the Central Bank to arrange soft loans. Why can’t they approach the Central Bank to re-negotiate the loans they owe to commercial banks? That is hallow thinking on their part.

    Fears are rife that, if the governors fail to moderate their spending habit, their states may still come back to the same situation they are facing now…

    I don’t want to believe that governors of all the states that are unable to pay salaries are poor. You know if a governor is corrupt, he can only be free for that period he is in office. After that, he will be brought to justice. Look at what is happening today. Ohakim, Nyako, Lamido and their children are answering questions; which means that no governor is free. He may be free when he enjoys immunity. Look at another former governor, Nnamani. He is asked to forfeit property. When you have a regime that is sincere about the anti-corruption war, it will send a signal to the governors that the time for corruption is over. Is that why people who should be paid should be punished? Imagine people not being paid for six months. The President felt that it is scandalous not to pay workers. What is the duty of government? We were worried at the transition level because we knew how much was being owed at the federal and state levels. With the load that has been lifted off the state, the bailout, the loan, you will see that there will be stability in the society. You saw what happened in Osun. As they were announcing the package, people were already demonstrating. If the package has not been announced, they will still be demonstrating by now. It could have become violent. It is very unfortunate that this could happen where Rauf Aregbesola is governor. He is one governor I can attest to his frugality and transparency. From N3.6 billion, the allocation dropped to N1.6 billion. How can the state survive? That is why the relief is a welcome development. The President has not made any distinction between the APC and the PDP. The APC asked for bail out. The President said all governors should go back and enforce fiscal discipline in their states. In the last administration, the former President gave N2billion to each of the PDP states as ecological fund, leaving out the APC states. But, the present governor has genuine intention and it is transparent.

  • Buhari ’ll not allow corrupt officials to go scot-free

    Buhari ’ll not allow corrupt officials to go scot-free

    Elder Femi Olaore is a chieftain of the All Progressives Congress (APC) in Oyo State. In this interview with BISI OLADELE, he speaks about people’s expectations about the Buhari Administration.

    Do you see the APC government making any difference at the federal and state levels?

    First, let me start from the state level. For the first time in the history of Oyo State, we have a phlegmatic active governor, who has shown that hard work is the magic to achievement. What you are seeing now is not occasioned by the inability to pay salaries, but we are all aware that in last six months allocation to most of the states controlled by the All Progressives Congress (APC) has dwindled. Imagine a state that used to receive over N6 billion  now getting a meagre N1.3billion. This has caused a cumulative setback for the past six months and they cannot pay their workers. That is what they are facing now. When allocation is returned to normal, all these arrears will be paid. I don’t see that much as a challenge to someone who has been able to manage public finances in the past.

    Buhari’s Administration is inheriting debt. States are broke, the power sector is going moribund, the economy is shrinking and the labour unions are complaining. What is the way out?

    The problems you have defined are not mountains.  Now that we have somebody who prides himself as ‘Mr. Integrity’ as the Nigerian President: a man that keep to his word, a man who is concerned about the people, who shares the pains of the masses and who has offered himself to address this problems, we should be rest assured that Nigeria is on the verge of greatness. I believe that one of the major issues that President Buhari will be bringing on to pilot the affairs of our country is high level of personal discipline.

    For someone who has been Head of State and can only boast of a million naira in his bank account and just two houses, there is no more for us to know that we are in for a good time. He is incomparable to others who have held similar positions.This is the kind of man the country needs at this stage. Nothing can distract him. Those who are going to work with him, I am sure, are going to be persons of impeccable character. That is why I am very convinced that surrounding himself with the right people will be the first thing we should expect. He is such a principled person that he is unlikely to be intimidated  by names that are not backed by achievements. He is not likely to recycle those who have been in power for long. He will not be persuaded by religious or ethnic sentiments. He stated clearly that confidence, uprightness  and steadfastness in party affairs are some of the cardinal criteria anybody who would work with him must possess apart from the fact that they are going to be properly screened for him to know those who truly have the interest of the people at heart.

    Nigerians forsee a crisis in the APC between Buhari and other party leaders. Do you share this belief?

    I do not subscribe to that because I am aware of the many sacrifices that the majority of the so-called politicians made before we had this change of affairs. They contributed greatly to Buhari’s emergence as president. That must be clear. To President Buhari, he must be fair to everybody, no matter their financial contributions. Buhari has learnt over time to adjust himself to the dictates of the people so that the hopes of people will not be dashed. What Buhari will do is using his rich broad nature to cut across those various groups that have good materials or that may not be able to be at the forefront of putting the campaign materials resources together. He is not likely to fetch those who are likely to work with him on the basis of those who come around or donated resources for his election. I remember as a member of the Congress for Progressive Change (CPC) in 2011 when Buhari gave an instruction not to take anything above a million naira donation from anybody so as to not be tied to them in discharging our duties. So far, so good, he has made it clear to most of those who surrounded him that they have done it for the goodwill of Nigeria; that they have done to show that, yes, this country matters to them. So he owes them nothing in terms of payback by giving them any post that is juicy. No, he has made it clear to them right from the onset. If you want to help, do it as your contribution. People like the former governor of Adamawa, Imo State Governor, Rochas Okorocha have done so much.  Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu has also done so much. Yes, they even had to forgo their personal ambitions. So they know what it takes; they will not want to truncate their efforts because they know that people see them as a coperative team. So there is no likelihood of crisis that cannot be solved. Though there will be challenges of working together for the first time, but because they share common identity, it is going to bring them together to move Nigeria forward.

    There is fear among the people, especially from the Southsouth and Southeastern that Buhari will exclude them. Is the fear misplaced?

    I want to reassure my brothers from the South East and South South that Buhari will not exclude them. He must not forget his background and anyone who has come close to all the forces would not do that.  As they come they merge everybody together. And as somebody who rose to the rank of general before leaving the army, no section that offers itself for good use will be left out.  But even if you come from his doorsteps to sabotage efforts to revive the country, he is not going to take it lighty. He is not going to give position or engage the person that will affect the turnaround of the economy. Despite all these, he is not likely going to do what you call a revenge mission on them. No! In fact he was the first to reassure the Catholic Bishop of South South and South East that anyone who is confident enough is welcome despite the fact that they did not vote for him. Like I said earlier, he is a man of few words. Every bit of the word he says echoes deep down inside of him. So he can never renege on them. He will include them. They will have good positions but they must be prepared to deliver, they must be prepared to subscribe to service integrity.

    This is not a situation where you will get a  ministerial slot with money. It will not be business as usual this time around. So even if they have so much, you have to put in so much in order to perform as expected. He will be waiting to see them deliver as Nigerians and not just as somebody from the East or from any minority group, wherever they find themselves.

    The APC has promised not to focus on probing outdone leaders. But many Nigerians believe that such a decision would not help President Buhari’s anti-corruption image. Do you share this view?

    I want to come from the standpoint from the work involved in all these probes and resources. President Buhari is not known for wastages. In fact, he is a very conservative leader. The average probe takes about four to six weeks to complete and it involves so many investigations with  volumes of books produced. By the time you now spend N200 million on probe, what would be left to address the infrastructural decay? He will take his time and start from the problem at hand. When people  are being probed, they start causing a lot of questions and to the system it will add to the problem. So what he will focus on will be centred around what has been done in the past. Let’s see the recommendations; let’s see if we can actualize them so that the money that has been spent is not spent again the second or third time. Any area that has been touched in the past and has made significant impact may not need to be touched soon but later?. This is to suggest that no area of the economy is forgotten and that corruption is not tolerated in any area. But he will not go out and start  this from day one.  ?It will be not be good to begin his administration with probe. He should rather look at the reports of the probes done since the last 16 years and set up a panel and reinvite those involved for clarifications.  But I don’t see Buhari closing his eyes on corrupt officials who have milked the nation dry.

  • ‘Isiaka planning to corrupt public opinion’

    ‘Isiaka planning to corrupt public opinion’

    Soyombo Opeyemi, Special Assistant on Media to Ogun State Governor Senator Ibikunle Amosun, spoke with reporters on the allegations against the governor by the candidate of Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) in Ogun State in the recent general elections, Mr Gboyega Nasir Isiaka…

    The candidate of Peoples Democratic Party in Ogun State, Mr Gboyega Isiaka, has described the election of Governor Ibikunle Amosun as fraudulent. How do you react to that?

    Let me say straightaway that we are now in the court of public opinion. We did not seek this; it was thrust on us by people who are in the habit of overrating themselves. And their intention is simple. To corrupt public opinion in the hope that such opinion corruption will diffuse to the court of law. Otherwise, having taken his case to the court of law, one would have expected Mr Isiaka to devote his time to the suit. But our courts are not unaware of the antics of some political litigants in Nigeria. Rather than bring concrete evidence to the courts, they recourse to duplicitous stories on the pages of newspapers in the hope that the courts will rule in their favour based on such avalanche of lies in the media. It doesn’t happen that way. If you describe as fraudulent an election that has been hailed all over the country as free and fair and in line with pre-election surveys, opinion polls and prognoses by credible individuals, bodies and institutions, then it is a pity because you now face the self-inflicted burden of having to manufacture evidence to prove that.

    So, you believe Isiaka stands no chance at the tribunal?

    Judges give verdicts based on facts, not sentiments; they deal with facts, not fantasies, and this is trite. As I stated a couple of days ago, Isiaka himself knows that he lost the election and knows the reasons why he lost. He knows about the performance of the Ogun State governor, Senator Ibikunle Amosun, which endeared him to voters. He is very much aware of how Amosun, despite being the incumbent, never took our people for granted but went from village to village, hamlet to hamlet. He also canvassed for votes in towns and cities; toured the entire 236 Wards in the state; went on an extensive local council tour and devoted hundreds of hours to meeting all shades, groups and socio-cultural associations across the state before the election. Please, ask Mr Gboyega Isiaka how many Wards he visited during his campaign? He knows that his own electioneering never attained any steam until few days to the election, when it was already too late. And for his godfathers to resolve their tug of war over who should control the PDP candidate and party machinery only 3 days to the election did enomours damage to Isiaka’s campaign.

    Let me tell you that Mr Isiaka has only taken the tribunal option to score a cheap political point ahead of 2019 election. He wants to court public sympathy; he wants to be seen as the champion of the masses in order to get a soft-landing come 2019. There’s also the paranoia of having to lose election thrice in a row to the same candidate. So when some politicians go to tribunal, they have other reasons. Unfortunately they waste the time of people who have high regard for their time.

    Isiaka has also accused Amosun of pursuing self-aggrandizing projects

    You know such comments are made to seek newspaper headlines. I told you in an interview before the election that but for the freedom allowed during campaign, we should have dragged these people to court for using the name of Amosun without  permission to raise their public profile. They need to attack Amosun in order to remain in the public domain. And I don’t have any problem with the opposition attacking or criticizing Amosun provided they do so with facts. Even the governor himself has said severally that we need constructive criticisms to keep us on our toes. But when a 10-km road is constructed for say 50 million naira, you then sit in your critic armchair to divide N50m by 10 and claim that each kilometer costs N5 million, deliberating ignoring the fact that on that same 10-km road, you have one overhead bridge or flyover, 2 or 3 bridges constructed over river and several other road furniture. Does it make sense to pick your calculator and say a kilometer of road costs N5m when it is known in construction world that such bridges will take close to 30% of the entire cost. Is this criticism or sheer deceit? What is self-aggrandizing in erecting model schools, in providing free education, in providing limited free health care through Gbomoro, in providing hundreds of transformers in order to bring to life comatose businesses, in building light rail, in boosting agriculture through provision of massive land clearing equipment, in providing an enabling environment for businesses to thrive and thousands of jobs generated for our youths? But for the investment of Amosun in security, what will have become the economy of our state today? How will our people who could not sleep in the night and work in the day under the climate of fear be productive? How will a global institution like the World Bank have taken notice of the giant strides made in just few years of the current administration? Were you not here in 2008 and 2010 when the respected institution rated Ogun as lowest in terms of ease of doing business in Nigeria? And the same body says we’ve moved to the top rung of development ladder within three years of the Amosun administration. Is that also self-aggrandizing? Politicians should not play politics at the expense of our people.

  • Treat corrupt judges like criminals

    Treat corrupt judges like criminals

    He was a Judge for 10 years. He practised as a lawyer for 19 years. Now in retirement, Justice Babasola Ogunade is into consultancy, which allows him more time for God’s work. Justice Ogunade is the Chancellor of the Diocese of Lagos West, Church of Nigeria (Anglican Communion). In this interview with JOSEPH JIBUEZE,  he speaks on what makes a great judge; life in retirement; why being a judge is challenging;  his expectations of the incoming Buhari administration and the need for more voter education to reduce ‘money politics’.

    Are you satisfied with your time on the Bench?

     If you have done your best while in service, in retirement you will feel happy that you have done your best. If you work according to your oath of office, then you should leave it better than you met it. That is my satisfaction.

     

    How did you join the Bench?

     

    A good number of us went to the Bench not because we aspired to. I was a full time legal practitioner from the first day of my call to the Bar until I was invited to come to the Bench. I did not apply. I did not lobby anybody. In actual fact it’s like I was dragged into it. I was first asked to come to the Bench in the mid 1980s but I didn’t take it, for two reasons. The way that judges were retired in 1975/76 by the Murtala/Obasanjo regime – I felt it was an unnecessary intrusion into the affairs of the temple of justice.

     

    What was wrong with how the judges were retired?

    I knew of two people who were retired in Lagos. One was in the limelight of the Bar when he was in practice. And on the Bench, he was someone that everyone was looking up to. The reason for his retirement was only made known to him after they had retired him. And when they heard him, they said: ‘We’re sorry, we didn’t have the facts.’ And most unfortunately, the Attorney-General at that time was a solicitor of the Supreme Court. In order to make up for it, they converted his compulsory retirement to voluntary retirement. It’s a long story. Because even though they knew the facts, one of those ones who played a prominent role in their retirement knowing all the facts came round to write a book to malign the character of that judge. So, when you have seen that kind of treatment, how are you encouraged to go to the Bench?

     

    So, what convinced you to go to the Bench?

     

    The first time I was asked, I said I was satisfied with what I was doing; I didn’t want it. But you realise that it is a position of honour. No matter what anybody says, the highest point you can reach as a lawyer is for you to become a judge. It’s the other way round in this country. In England I do know that a number of the High Court judges there are Queens Counsel (QCs), and they always regard it as an honour when they are invited to the Bench. But it’s not the same thing here. In the end, I had to surrender and I accepted to go to the Bench.

     

    Did your earning increase while on the Bench?

     

    The way I met the Bench wasn’t anything to write home about. One, my income was reduced by almost 75 per cent. But I didn’t complain because I knew what I was going into. I felt satisfied with what I had done in practice. And I was sure I could manage with whatever I earned. So the usual temptation that people have, to want to cut corners – I didn’t have it, maybe because of my family background. I’m satisfied that I gave of my best.

     

    Are you satisfied with the way retired judges are treated?

    My view is that having done your best for the Bench, you shouldn’t be among those going cap in hand to ask for your pension. And I think it’s worse here because your earning is tied to the apron string of state executives. They are the ones who will pay you if you have served in the states. I think they are trying to improve upon that now. Most of the time it’s for the governor to say: ‘I don’t have money for pension. We’re struggling to have money’. Without being partisan, the present governor of Ogun State has been doing his best for retired judges until last September when he had to confess that the income of the state had been drastically reduced to the extent they had to look for money through internally generated revenue.

     

    How can this anomaly  be rectified?

     

    I think effort should be made to totally separate both serving and retired judges’ emolument from the apron strings of whether federal or state administration. I understand that the emolument and remuneration of judges rarely comes under First Charge on revenue. They have managed to relegate it to this stage that judges have almost become beggars. Those who are serving will have their own story to tell. You’re left under the whims and caprices of whoever becomes the governor. It’s just not right, particularly for a person who believes that he has given of his best and has not for any time soiled his hands and is satisfied with the sacrifices he made. And when you retire, you’re going to be left short of funds. Even that which has been given to you, you may not be having it on time. I don’t think it’s the best.

     

    What do you make of allegations of corruption on the Bench?

     

    Today you talk about corruption in the judiciary. I don’t really know what it is. There may be some (who are corrupt) because of human failings, but it’s not as all embracing as it’s made to appear by politicians and unfortunately even by the media. They expect judges to be prosecutors. For instance, someone has stolen. Those who are going to prosecute will not bring evidence, and when the judge gives judgment according to the evidence before him, he will then be the one who has done ill.

     

    What do you miss  most about the Bench?

     

    I miss the regular interaction with lawyers in the court. Any practitioner who had enjoyed his practice will always appreciate what it is, especially when you have lawyers who know their onions. You miss all that. Unfortunately as a judge, you have more or less been secluded from society. Many of your friends would have deserted you when you are on the Bench. And when you leave, before they start coming back to you, it takes some time. I remember I was at a party. One of my childhood friends who I grew up with and went to school with, a reputable professional in his own right – he sarcastically said: ‘You’re the learned people, we’re not learned.’ This is the sort of attitude that people have generally. That’s the fate that we suffer. You’re there but your friends don’t come to you anymore. And when they see you, the attention is rather cursory. It’s not as cordial as it used to be. So it takes a while to start warming yourself into their embrace again.

     

    Would you say the life of a judge is challenging?

     

    It is challenging. As a lawyer, friends come to you. The moment you are appointed a judge, your friends and clients keep you at arm’s length. It’s for good reason because I had done that to my friends who became judges. The moment they are appointed judges, I keep my distance from them, because of the society in which we live. And you sort of suffer that isolation. What is worse is that you are isolated from your friends, even from your extended family. It becomes such that you are restricted to your immediate family, because you never know the reason people would be coming to look for you in the house.

     

    Do you see that as good or bad for a judge?

     

    Well, it’s a mixed bag. There are a few lawyers who have not been quite helpful. They say all sorts of things to their clients. ‘We’re friends, I know him, I’ll go and see him for you’. He would come towards your chambers, perhaps speak to your clerk, and he would go back and say: ‘It’s all done; it’s finished.’ So the client believes when he gets to the court, he’s going to get judgment, whether rightly or wrongly. If he doesn’t get it, he turns around and says: ‘That judge is corrupt; he took money from me.’ Sometimes it’s better for you to minimise your association with people. It’s not too much of an advantage on the other hand, because there are times you would want someone to share a burden with, not necessarily with your wife, but it’s an immediate burden you feel you want to share with someone. You could think X is your friend, then you caution yourself. ‘Do I know what advantage he will take of my discussion with him?’ So, it’s challenging.

     

    How about working conditions?

     

    What is worse is the atmosphere under which judges work. Lagos is an exception. For a quite a while, the state has been taken care of their judges. Wherever they have designated as judges quarters are judges quarters. It’s not the same in other states. If you go to some states now, what used to be judges’ quarters had been sold or shared among other people, except the judge had come from that area and has his own house, which in itself is not helpful. There is no longer that atmosphere of serenity or privacy.

     

    Did you have any such experience?

     

    There was a time during my career on the Bench when I had to live in hired accommodation. That is bad enough, because everybody you see is a potential litigant. What is worse? At some point, my landlord and his son had a controversial case in my court. I didn’t know anything about it. I saw the papers in the office, and thought: ‘This surname sounds like that of my landlord, but it doesn’t matter.’ You have taken oath to do justice to all manner of people irrespective of their relationship with you. A week after I started the case, bingo came an anonymous letter from someone saying: ‘Yes, you live in his house. We know you have compromised your position. You’ve taken a bribe of N1million  from him. But don’t forget, we know your father and your mother. They are good people. Don’t soil their name.’ You could see the danger. Then in the town, it’s all over the place. ‘What justice are you expecting? They live together.’ The young man whose case was before me lived directly opposite my house. I didn’t know it until this case started. When his father was going to his house, he passed by mine. So you can really see the danger to which you are exposed. The judges before me in that jurisdiction had been living in that house. When I was transferred to the place, which happened to be my hometown, the house was in a shambles. Sometimes I’d receive anonymous letters. Some would say: ‘We know the way you take to Lagos; we’re coming to double-cross you on the road.’ These are the challenges you have in an effort to do your work.

     

    Are judges more at risk?

     

    The way I see the position of a judge, particularly a judge of first instance – magistrates and judges – they are the ones who will see the litigants take evidence, write judgments, and be seen by the litigants everyday. On appeal, the appellate justices look at records. They don’t need to know anybody. In fact it’s sufficient for them for the lawyer to just come. But the judge is the one seeing the litigants. They know you, they can ask questions about you. So you can see that it’s a sacred job, but at the same time one that endangers your life. But quite a number of us, because we believe in God that you’re not going to do what is wrong, so no matter what effort you make, one is not afraid.

     

    Was there a particular judgment you regretted giving?

     

    I cannot remember one. This is not really self-praise. I am human and fallible, but I have not deliberately gone out of my way to give judgment in favour of anybody who by my own judgment does not deserve it. I had not.

     

    Was there any particular challenging case you handled?

     

    This particular one was a chieftaincy dispute. I did it as I thought would bring peace to the town. Both sides appealed. Both sides accused me, saying I did it to just push them away. I gave judgment in 1997 but the case is still lingering in court till today. There was an appeal from 1997. It took 13 years before judgment was delivered. After 13 years they went to the Supreme Court. It’s been lying there for about three years. Unfortunately I would go into the town; nobody would come to me, but they would tell my friends that I was the one who had prevented them from having an oba in their town. But as far as I’m concerned I’ve done my best. I didn’t invite anybody to bring a case to me. They brought it and I gave judgment according to evidence. Having done that I have no apologies.

     

    What can be done to limit interlocutory appeals?

     

    By the various reforms being done, I think they are trying to find a way of limiting interlocutory appeals. But the instance I gave you, it was not a problem of interlocutory appeal. It’s the final judgment that they appealed against. Then a lot of things came into it. Again if I may suggest, serving judges are made to do a lot of other things, which eat into their judicial time. There may be a tribunal of enquiry, but they won’t trust a retired judge to handle it. They will ask a serving judge to do it. Speaking for myself – myself alone – I don’t see how we should inundate the highest court of the land, the appellate courts and the High Courts with election matters. You can imagine how long election matters take.

     

    So who should handle such cases?

     

    There are judges who are retired. You can make enquiries about them. And you can use those of them who will not compromise under any ground. Why can’t you ask them to handle some of these things instead of dragging serving judges into it, and in the course of it, they are maligned? There were a lot of unproven cases of bribery after the 2007 and 2011 elections. There were even cases where judges were retired because of allegations of collecting bribe. If their excuse is that if a retired judge collects bribe, he cannot be disciplined, has bribery stopped being a criminal offence? If a person has committed a criminal offence, why can’t you prosecute him? If a person who has a public duty to perform collects bribe, and you’re able to prove it that he collected bribe, why can’t you prosecute him? Prosecute him and send him to jail! Even if you say you cannot discipline him internally, you let the law take its course.

     

    Why does NJC not allow serving judges accused of corruption to be tried rather retiring them?

     

    I don’t know. Speaking for myself, I wouldn’t know why. Look at what happens in other climes. You do anything that people believe is scandalous, or is criminal, you get arrested. Investigations will be done. If they find that you’re culpable, you’re prosecuted. If they’re able to prove their case, you go to jail – just as it happens to politicians and the rest of them. Nobody is above the law as far as I know.

     

    How would you rate the standard of judgments today compared to your time?

     

    Without really intending to denigrate anybody, standards generally are falling. The tool of a judge are books. You have to give them books. A judge is supposed to have a library. Ask any judge to show you their library, even library in the court and look at what is there. I am saying this because I know. It has happened to me. As a practitioner, anywhere I had gone I was carrying my own books. I was carrying my entire library with me everywhere I went. The judiciary is badly funded. Regular law reports that should be made available to you are not there. I do believe they’re improving on that now. I understand that some allowances are being given for you to buy books and things like that. I can say that of Lagos. I’m not a judge in Lagos but I see what they do.

     

    How can the problem be addressed?

     

    It could be better. If you don’t equip a man, how do you expect him to produce? You ask a man to go and till a farm and you give him a dead hoe, what do you expect him to produce? Regular training is needed. There is the National Judicial Institute where judges undergo periodic training, but they should intensify that. You live on computer now. You should have a situation in which you equip the courts, put in sufficient power, so that they can use the electronic devices that you give them. Before I left practice, I remember the many efforts that were made to put electronics in the courts. But the thing would not just work. You could be making use of them and suddenly you have a power surge and it wipes away all your records. That’s worse than using my long hand to write. I wrote in long hand for 10 years. I do know of judge who was advised by a doctor that if he’s not going to lose the use of his hands, he should retire. That is why occasionally when judges retire, you will be wondering what happened to them. Three or four years after retirement, he’s a ghost of himself. A man will be about 70 and he will appear like an 80-year-old. And it’s because of the atmosphere in which they had been working. All these things could be better.

     

    You mentioned that you were invited to the bench. Is it not better to ask people to apply to be judges?

     

    I tell you this. That is what makes it beautiful. In England, nobody ever applies to be a judge. You don’t apply to be a judge. The Attorney-General would have done some enquires. He would ask for some names to be shortlisted. Many judges were practitioners. If you were a treasury lawyer, you would begin your career there and end it there. You won’t assume that the next position is to be a judge, unlike what you have here. People from the department of justice of those days, the moment you become a Director of Public Prosecution (DPP), the next thing you’re looking forward to is to be made a judge. When you have looked at the quality of practice, even in the official Bar, and they found that one is a good material, there is nothing wrong with an appointment being made that way.

     

    What do you think is wrong with advertising it?

     

    The moment you start asking people to apply, you know what happens? There is going to be lobbying. It’s going to be about who knows who. I think it’s much more dignifying to be invited. A man will appear in court, and the Chief Judge will say: ‘When you’re going please see me….I’m considering including your name in the next list of appointments. Go and think about it.’ Sometimes they don’t have to ask you. If they find that what you’re doing is good, they will put your name and inform you that you have been appointed a judge. If the environment is good, nobody will be told that he is appointed a judge and he will refuse it. But due to poor earning, poor treatment, that is why you find that if you offer people who are in the inner bar (SANs) judgeship, they will say: ‘What, I’m not going to touch it.’ But in other areas, QCs (Queens Counsel) take such offers with open arms.

     

    Do you agree with suggestions that the Chief Justice of Nigeria (CJN) be appointed from outside of the Supreme Court?

     

    What is he coming to do there? Practicing as a lawyer is not the same thing as having gone through the hierarchy as a judge. An advocate looks at his clients. Whether his case is right or wrong, he takes it, although ethically you’re expected to advise your client. Many practitioners don’t look at the ethics of the profession. If the money is right, they will look for the law. An eminent jurist once said: ‘When I’m in practice, I don’t care whether I’m right or wrong. You pay me the right money, and I’m going to find the law to deal with it. When I became a judge, I started looking for where I can do justice.’ If there is a case before him in which he finds that ordinarily, someone should be given judgment, if he is able to find a law that will support him, he will use it. That is not the concern of a Senior Advocate. They (SANs) are industrious; they are supposed to be hard working. But for you to skip the High Court, the Court of Appeal, and the Supreme Court – I know they are agitating for it, but speaking for myself, I pray that day will not come. Those who had been there (Supreme Court), do they lack knowledge? You only need to be more selective in your appointment. Forget about Federal Character. Look for the best. This Federal Character is what is killing all our institutions. Look for the best and put the best there.

     

    What about the argument that it’s been done before?

     

    I must admit we have had two instances. One of them rose to become the CJN – that is Justice Teslim Elias. But that is an exceptional case. He was not practicing, and was more of an academic lawyer, but he had world reputation. Then we had Justice Nnamani who was Attorney-General and then became a justice of the Supreme Court. Those are very exceptional cases. Don’t make it a norm. There could be exceptional cases. But it’s not to make those outside to rank pari-pasu with those who are already there. Look for the best. For all I know it’s not just about mere advocacy. I was a practitioner. I got to the Bench and found it was different. I found that I had to look at the cases with detached mind. So it’s not the same.

     

    What is your advice on how to do justice?

     

    My advice simply is this: Always remember your judicial oath. Be industrious. There is no need for you to sit late. Your training at the Law School enjoins you to be prompt. If you’re a practitioner and you’re late in going to court, your client one day will go and look for another lawyer. Sit on time; do your best when you’re there; always remember your judicial oath. Minimise your social outings because the work is so demanding. You’re not going to look at the case of one side; you’re going to look at the two cases, and on your own, look at similar cases that had happened in the past that could assist you in what you’re doing. So really, the time for socialisation is so little. Take it that you’re handling something that is sacred. If the remuneration is not as high as you expected, God is your paymaster, he will pay you. Since I retired 14 years ago, I’ve not looked over my shoulder. God has always provided for me. I’m not stupendously rich, but I’m not poor. If I want to eat, I have money to buy food. I have a car in which I ride. And if I need to satisfy family needs, I’m able to do it within my income. Live within your income. Don’t let people look at you and your status and say ‘Ah, how will they say he’s a judge and he cannot do this?’ If you’re unable to do it, you’re unable to do it. That’s the way I look at it. So, the temptation of having to add a little bit unjustly to what you’re earning may not be there.

     

     

    What are your expectations of the Muhammadu Buhari administration?

     

    The president-elect has put on the toga of a democrat. We only pray he will be able to live his word. The vice-president-elect, I believe is God’s doing. From the little that I know of Prof. Osinbajo, he is not a politician although he served in Lagos State Government as Attorney-General. He served professionally, as a technocrat. I’m not saying that any man who puts on the toga of a pastor is a pious man.  But we could really see some of them who by their calling will bring it to bear on their office. If we’re able to have them to live according to their word, maybe we’re into something good in this country.

     

    How can ‘money-politics’ be stopped?

     

    But for goodness sake, let us stop all this money-taking. We need political education in this country. Tell the man who is expecting me to give him N2 that he’s only selling himself. When I give N2 in 20 places, when I’m elected, I’m going to see that I double what I have spent. Many of them don’t see it. We need a great deal of political orientation in this country. If the National Orientation Agency is working hard, what people see in this country would have been different. This last election, God has taken care. God has taken control of it. I think we should really educate ourselves the more. Any politician wanting office and comes to offer you money – some will say: ‘I’ll take his money; after all it’s my money.’ You’re encouraging what you should not encourage; you’ll pay for it. They might give four people money, out of which three will vote for him and he will get there. So let people be told that if you collect money from politicians, you will pay for it and you’re mortgaging the future of even your own children. I think someone should tell them that.

     

     

     

     

     

     

  • I’ll expose corrupt monarchs after 2015 election, Akiolu insists

    I’ll expose corrupt monarchs after 2015 election, Akiolu insists

    The Oba of Lagos and the Chairman, the state Council of Obas, Oba Rilwan Akiolu, has reiterated his promise to reveal the names of alleged corrupt traditional leaders in Yorubaland after the 2015 general elections.

    He said some of the traditional rulers were close friends of the late former Head of State, General Sani Abacha, adding that was why they were unable to promote Yoruba’s agenda.

    Oba Rilwan, who was among the entourage of the Emir of Kano, Muhammadu Sanusi II, to the palace of  Awujale of Ijebuland yesterday, insisted that some traditional rulers collected money from the former head of state.

    He exempted the Awujale from the alleged corrupt monarchs, saying some of the former military officers described him as no-nonsense Oba who would not collect bribes.

    The Lagos oba said as a commissioner of police during the regime of the late Abacha, he was among the delegates who gave money to the monarchs.

    He said: “There are some qualities I appreciate in Awujale, which include his frankness, courage and straight-forward-to -he point. Even if you are a thief, Awujale will tell it to your face. Because of time, I don’t want to bore you with different occasions he had demonstrated that.

    “Few months ago, I made a statement that after 2015 general elections, I am going to disclose many things and I still mean it. I was a serving police officer for 32 years and I was privileged to be at a meeting where some contacts were made with some people.

    “Those I was referring to were friends to the late Gen. Sani Abacha. I was an obedient servant of Abacha because I was commissioner of police as at that time. I was at a meeting where it was said that all these missions you are going to embark upon, leave the name of Awujale completely because he is anti-Abacha.

    “The person, who now said myself and Awujale are friends, when the time comes, we shall reveal the amount he took. I, Rilwan Osuolale Akiolu, by the special grace of God, myself and my people gave the money to him and he took it. When the time comes, I will open-up and I am serious about it.

    “I am not afraid of anybody but I respect people. I have no regret of my friendship with Awujale.”

    Oba Akiolu, who encouraged the Emir of Kano to emulate the late emir, said Sanusi became a monarch as a result of efficacy of prayers, urging him to contribute to the development of his environment.

  • ‘Corrupt judges should face trial’

    ‘Corrupt judges should face trial’

     Adedotun Habeeb Adetunji is the Chairman of Nigerian Bar Association, Ikorodu Branch. In this interview with JOSEPH JIBUEZE, he expresses his views on how corrupt judges should be treated among other issues.

    A retired Supreme Court justice once said the legal profession is retrogressing. Do you agree with him? And how can the falling standards be halted (both in the bar and bench)?

    Before I became a lawyer, I have been hearing of falling standards in the legal profession. But we should look at this from the broader perspectives and  not just the legal profession , the educational standard in the country has fallen and with it all the other sectors too.

    Tracing the retrogression in the legal profession, one would see that decentralisation of the Nigerian law school was part of it. This is evident when you observe the sorry performance of some of our Lawyers in courts. I mince no words in advocating that law degree should be a second degree course in Nigeria as its obtainable in the United States and United Kingdom.

    Most of our young colleagues these days graduate between the ages of 20-22 years  and I believe they should be encouraged to do their post graduate courses to enhance their deep knowledge of the law and their capacity to face the challenges of the profession. Continuing legal education as a way of halting the falling standard in the legal profession cannot be over emphasized, for me it should now be compulsory for all legal practitioners as obtainable in other climes.

    A lot has been said about slow the process of justice administration/dispensation. How can this problem be solved?

    The caliber of personnel appointed to judicial positions is one of the major problems we have as it relates to the slow process of justice administration/ dispensation. For instance if a legal practitioner is called to the Nigerian bar and hitherto has worked all his years in the banking sector attending to mortgages and debentures, who is eventually appointed to the bench to deal with matters that are not banking related, how do you expect him to perform?

    Obviously, that person lacks the capacity to adjudicate on the various cases that comes to the court. Remember our courts are not that specialised. One judge will do land matter today, tomorrow he will do company matter, another day he will do criminal matter. It is a general court, if you now bring somebody whose only knowledge of law is about mortgages and debentures to handle land matter, how do you expect him to   deliver a sound judgment? That is why there is delay; they keep adjourning the cases because they don’t know what to do or what to write.

    Even at the Court of Appeal, some of those that are being appointed these days are not really       qualified but because of the flaws in the system, they find their way to the court of appeal. The solution lies in putting a square peg in a square hole. The procedure for appointment of judges must be reviewed and overhauled for us overcome this challenge.

    What is your assessment of NJC’s role in judge’s performance, considering that some still exhibit laziness, such as by sitting late?

    The presence of lazy and incompetent judges in the judicial system is a great challenge to it. The NJC that ought to be the regulatory body has largely been found wanting. Till date, the NJC has neither sacked nor penalised judges for laziness or for lack of productivity and as such we continue to experience long delays in the adjudication process. Ditto for incompetent judges; every day we read about horrible judgments being dished out by some of our judges and yet nothing is done by the NJC.

    The best they did was perhaps the suspension of Justice Talba of the pension fund scam fame for just one year. So we find people getting more courageous at being lazy and incompetent because they know they can get away with it.

    There have been calls that judges found guilty of corruption be made to face trial rather than just retiring or dismissing them. Do you buy the idea?

    The principle of presumption of innocence entitled a person to defend himself with everything at his or her disposal including good legal representation. Besides, the best way to deal with corrupt judges is not merely to dismiss or retire them quietly when they are found culpable as NJC presently does, but to subject them to a full criminal trial. If it has been established that a judge is corrupt, he should be tried. That’s the only way the judiciary can operate with moral authority. We must give corruption the real treatment it deserves hence it is my opinion that judges in such situation must face the consequences of their actions.

    The CJN said the corruption in the judiciary is aided by lawyers. Do you think the NBA doing enough to check lawyers’ excesses or is more required?

    Corruption is the greatest challenge we are facing in the judiciary. It is pervasive and threatens the legal profession like the sword of Damocles. The issue of corruption in the judiciary must be tackled headlong if we are to remain relevant in the society. Judges should be made to publicly declare their assets at the time of being sworn in and at the time of retirement or elevation.

    Judges should be made to explain the source of money for the mansion and castles they build while in office. Judges who have less than two years to retire should not feature in election petition cases or appeals. In this way, judges will be cautioned and would to a large extent be able to resist temptations from lawyers who will or may want to tempt them with mouth watering sums as bribe.

    In the same vein, lawyers caught in such act should be made to face disciplinary action at the NBA level even though it is apparent that the NBA as presently  constituted have not gotten enough machineries to monitor lawyer’s activities and /or to check or contain lawyers excesses. The NBA needs to be visible in this regard and be seen to be able to curtail the excesses of lawyers which are quite enormous in the circumstance.

    You were recently elected chairman of NBA, Ikorodu Branch. What should your members expect from you in the next two years?

    Welfare of members is paramount on my mind with special attention to the young lawyer’s forum of the branch. Unity of the branch cannot be compromised and all promises made during electioneering campaign, I shall strive, God willing to fulfill. I promised amongst other things a functional website and wireless internet connection at the secretariat, lawyers estate in ikorodu, reduced membership fees, befitting law week, series of continuing legal education session amongst various others.

    Do you agree that NBA election is long overdue for reform? What aspects of the process would you want changes made?

    I would have loved to see the delegates system of voting abolished as unrealistic as that may be for now. The zoning nonsense in the NBA is one thing I don’t believe in.  I believe it does not produce the best of the candidates. I would love to see a system of electronic voting introduced so that lawyers can vote without necessarily converging at a point and would have avoided the risk involved in transporting oneself to a particular location where the delegates’ conference is to be held.

    Nigeria is still rated high on the corruption index. Is the government losing the war against graft and official sleaze?

    In my view, Nigeria has no clue of how to tackle the monster called corruption. Every day, it rears its ugly head, it lives with us, dine with us.  Only a massive revolution can separate Nigeria from corruption. We have not started the war against it, so we can’t be talking of winning or losing it.

    Some have said President Goodluck Jonathan has failed as far as security is concerned. Do you agree? And are you impressed with his administration’s performance for him to return for a second term?

    Saying the president has failed as far as security is concerned is an understatement. Is it the Chibok girls we’ll talk about, or the Boko Haram that is killing scores of people daily?  All this administration is after is how to perpetuate itself in office, the President has turned crucial national policies into 2015 elections. When it comes to crucial economic decision, the government is clueless, but when it is politics you see the bare fang of the President.

    Please tell us a bit about why you chose law as a profession. Was it by accident?

    Actually, it was not an accident, rather by design. My father, Chief M. A. Adetunji JP,   was the architect of my choosing law as a profession and he, with the help of God, did all he could to ensure that I became a Lawyer. I am proud to be a Lawyer today and I would remain eternally grateful to him and my Creator.

    If you weren’t a lawyer, what would you have been?

    I thank God for putting me on the right path because if I weren’t a Lawyer, I have always wondered what I could have become. Becoming a political scientist is the closest I have ever thought of but I wouldn’t have been so satisfied and contented the way I am today as a lawyer. I think being a lawyer to me is the ultimate.

  • NFF to sweep away corrupt officers

    Acting president of the Nigeria Football Federation (NFF), Mike Umeh has exclusively told supersport.com that he will lead the fight to rid Nigerian football of “all corrupt officers.”

    Erstwhile president of the NFF, Aminu Maigari was on Thursday impeached “on grounds of financial misappropriation, misapplication and maladministration.”

    Umeh, who took the reins following Maigari’s fall from grace says the move to rid the Glass House of “individuals of questionable character is ongoing as we look to repair the damage done to Nigerian football.”

    “We want to assure Nigerians that we will not relent in adopting due process in showing corrupt officers of the NFF the way out. I can state through this medium without fear or favour that the procedure of kicking out individuals of questionable character is ongoing as we look to repair the damage done to Nigerian football.

    “That is my immediate mandate. We are not small boys. We know what to do,” he told supersport.com on Thursday.

    Umeh will preside over the affairs of the NFF, pending the composition of the new NFF Executive Committee after the elections of Tuesday, 26th August, 2014.

  • ASUU to Jonathan: sack, prosecute corrupt people in your govt

    ASUU to Jonathan: sack, prosecute corrupt people in your govt

    The Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU) has urged President Goodluck Jonathan to sack and prosecute corrupt public officers in his administration, to act as a deterrent to others.

    The union’s National President, Dr. Nasir Fagge, who spoke at a symposium at the University of Ibadan, Ibadan, Oyo State, called for a review of the immunity clause, which protected corrupt people in power from prosecution.

    The symposium was organised by the Education Rights Campaign (ERC).

    He said covering up the crimes of the powerful was inimical to the growth and development of the country.

    Fagge said the law was against the masses, who suffered from the consequences of unchecked stealing and pilfering of the collective wealth of the nation.

    The ASUU boss, who said the present leadership could not be trusted, enjoined Nigerians to mobilise and demand accountability from governments at all levels.

    He expressed worries about the scandals happening at the corridor of power.

    According to him, Nigerians must demand accountability from those at the helm.

    Fagge said in normal and sane climes, heads ought to roll anytime there is scandal, adding that it is regrettable that corruption has become endemic, hampering growth and development, with no effort made to curtail it.

    He noted that corruption was a sign that Nigeria was a sick society where leaders were suffering from slave mentality.

    Fagge said: “There is no sincerity of purpose in our leaders. We cannot trust them. May be in future we will have a leadership that can be trusted. The scandals occurring in the country, if they happen in sane climes, heads will roll, but they are covered up here.

    “In Nigeria, unfortunately when you are doing the right thing, your head may roll or your job may be lost. It is a tell-tale of a sick society. You and I are not sick, but we have leaders who are sick. They are suffering from serious slave mentality. The people who are running the country are interested in personal gains and not development. Our citizens are languishing in poverty with the smallest percentage raking the commonwealth. Our law, which protects leaders who steal while in office from prosecution, is against the masses and the country’s progress.”

    On the increment of fees at the Lagos State University (LASU), he vowed to frustrate the hike, which he said was capable of denying students access to public education.

  • NDIC to prosecute corrupt MFBs’ directors

    NDIC to prosecute corrupt MFBs’ directors

    The Nigeria Deposit Insurance Corporation (NDIC) has vowed to prosecute Directors of Micro-finance Banks who misappropriated depositors funds.

    Managing Director of NDIC, Alhaji Umaru Ibrahim, disclosed this in Abuja yesterday when members of National Association of micro-finance Banks (NAMB) visited him in his office.

    Ibrahim said the Corporation has created a Task Force to ensure that such corrupt officials are held accountable for their infractions. TheTask Force is in the process of compiling cases for prosecution by the Attorney-General of Federation and possibly the police and other security agencies, he said.

    “There is no doubt that one cannot over-emphasise the importance of microfinance banks. The issue of prosecution of offenders of microfinance banks is very important to us. Now when the CBN revoked the licenses of 103 microfinance banks about two and a half years ago, we are making sure that we pay the depositors of these banks.

    ”Some people abused the trust given to them, that is why we have established a task force comprising of officials of the Attorney General’s office, the Ministry of Justice, the police, EFCC and other relevant agencies to go through all these cases of fraud and misdemeanour perpetrated by these people, and ensure that they are prosecuted. They will not be allowed to go free to serve as a deterrent to others. This are funds that were given to them to keep in trust, they had no rights whatsoever to misappropriate the funds,” he said.

    Umaru enjoined members of the association to continue to sensitise their members on this issue, saying it can be enhanced by evolving a very good framework for risk management and ‘Know Your Customer’ (KYC) policy. This is an issue that bedevils the industry and micro-finance banks are not an exempted from fraud and abuse, he said.

    Ibrahim also reiterated that any MFB that refuses to fulfill its obligation of paying its premium to the NDIC risks losing its NDIC cover with its attendant repercussions. He lamented that some MFB bosses were complaining of the planned direct deduction of premiums from their accounts by the NDIC after signing the relevant MoU on the grounds that they are consistent with their remittances.

    MFBs he said are very important in the development of financial systems and the economy adding that that is the basis for the regular on going initiative in collaboration with the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN)  to train operators and board members and get them certified.

    Earlier in his remarks, President of NAMB, Chief Jethro Akun said the association was advocating for a policy review on “unit branches so that they be allowed to open branches/cash centres within the Local Government in consistence with the regulatory guideline and policy framework on microfinance banks.”

  • Corrupt system threat to Nigerians’ can-do spirit -Study

    THE Foundation for Value Transformation (FVT ) has released its National Cultural Assessment Report, which it conducted in September 2012 in conjunction with Courtney Inglis Consulting and Barrett’s Value Centre (BVC), a USA based organisation.

    The report, presented this week in Lagos at a media launch, revealed: “Nigerians are energetic and have a can- do- spirit that takes pride in the outcomes they produce.”

    It said much of this energy “is, however, overwhelmed by a dysfunctional socio- political system steeped in corruption, poverty and insecurity.”

    The report also revealed that Nigerian “citizens are largely disengaged from governance with no input into programmes that impact their lives, even at the local community level.”

    Other highlights of the study include a confirmation that “accountability of governance is the highest priority in moving the nation forward” and that “unity is among top values desired by Nigerians.”

    Executive Director of the foundation, Segun Caulcrick, said Nigerians desire unity but “the seeming discord among ethnic groups and religions will appear to be fanned by leaders with selfish motives.”

    Making reference to the Human Development Index 2011 in which Nigeria trailed far behind countries like Ghana and Egypt in some key sectors, Caulcrick said Nigerians have what it takes to succeed but would need fundamental change to move forward.

    He said the change must begin with individual citizens and “we have to build it up through engagement of leaders for change.”