Tag: corruption

  • How to fight corruption better, by Korode

    How to fight corruption better, by Korode

    General Leader of the Cherubim and Seraphim Movement Church Surulere district Lagos, Prophet Sunday Korode, has hailed the anti-corruption war of the current administration.

    President Muhammadu Buhari, he said, has demonstrated enough courage and determination to rid the nation of corruption.

    He, however, said the war can be fought better with prosecution of looters and deploying the loots to reviving the nation’s ailing economy.

    Korode spoke last week during a courtesy visit with the leadership of the district to headquarters of Vintage Press Limited, publishers of The Nation newspapers, in Lagos.

    He said there was no doubt that corruption was being fought by the current administration.

    He, however, lamented Nigerians have not bought into the idea, leaving only the executive to fight graft.

    According to him: “The current administration has fought corruption commendably. It has done well but not well enough.

    “They need to move it a little bit strategically. It appears only the executive is fighting the war. Except the legislature and judiciary as well as Nigerians buy into it, we won’t do well.”

    On how to fight the war better, he called for comprehensive completion of all cases of loots and corruption in courts.

    “We must start prosecuting looters as soon as possible. That is the only thing that will discourage others.

    “Also, there must be full disclosure of the actual recovered loots. They have started but must go deep to uproot corruption,” Korode stressed.

    He said recovered loots must also be deployed immediately to cushion the effects of recession.

    Korode called on the federal government to assemble economic eggheads to “move the nation from possibilities to realities.”

    He assured that the church is disposed to engaging in rigorous advocacy and media evangelism targeted at “spiritually fumigating the nation’s Augean of negatives.”

  • Information, security and corruption

    Wiki  Leaks  and American Security  Operative  Edward   Snowden  stunned the civilized  world  some time  ago  when they  revealed confidential, state  and governmental information,   discussions and minutes leading to important state  and diplomatic  decisions of the US  government. It  was  also  revealed  that world leaders had  their  phones  bugged  by  the US security  agencies  and the notable example  was  that  of  German  Chancellor Angela  Merkel  who  around the time of the exposure  was  on  a trip  to the US and  the occasion  proved quite  embarrassing  for the normally  engaging  and amiable  President  Barak  Obama. Ironically,  some news  magazine  provoked  outrage   then,   when  they  recommended  both  Wiki  Leaks  founder   Julian Paul  Assange  and  Snowden  for  Man of the Year   Award   in Transparency  as  a result  of their     anti – secrecy   revelations.  That  to  me was  a  very  bad  joke  given  the  gravity  of the offence of both men  which  to me was  treasonable  as they  leaked  confidential  state secret  and information and have betrayed  their  nation and  jeorpadised its  security  and  stability  and  should  face the wrath  of the law . In fact  both  men knew the damage and offence they  had  committed and  both fled. The  Wiki Leaks founder  has  been  holed  up in Ecuador’s Embassy   in  London  ever  since while Snowden  fled  via Hong  Kong  to  Russia where  he was  given  political  asylum.

    This  background  information   is necessary  to  follow  the discussion  of today’s  topic on  Information, Security and  Corruption. I  think  it is necessary  to highlight  that state and  government information should  be treated  with a certain  measure of confidentiality  and secrecy  not only to protect decision  makers but to  enable government  decision   to  be respected  as in the best  interest  of the larger society  and motivated  by    overall    public    interest  and  the  common  good  of  society. It  is not as if this  is always  the case,  as history  has shown  and as the lid   when   open  on  statute  barred  disclosures  have sometimes  revealed, there  may  be    many other  less  than  salutary   ulterior   motives  of leaders    and decision  makers. Yet  that is no  excuse  for publicity  seeking individuals  in  whatever  guise to throw into  public  domain, without  authorization, the secrets of  government  decision making and processes  while political  actors  and public  functionaries  are  still in office and  carrying  out  their  officially   designated  duties.

    It  is in this light that we  look  at the allegations  by  US President Donald  Trump  that  his predecessor President  Barak  Obama  ordered a check  on the phones  at  Trump  Towers which  was his campaign  headquarters while  he was  contesting for the presidency  of the US, a  competition  which  he won  to become the 45th president of the USA. Former  President  Barak  Obama through  an aide has denied the charge.  But President  Trump went  on to compare  the bugging with  the historical   one   of the Democratic Party’s   Watergate  Complex in  Washington DC  during  the reelection of President Richard Nixon which  led to the resignation  of  Nixon   in  1974  in  what  is now  widely  known  as the Watergate  Scandal . Donald  Trumps’s categorization  may seem  like  an  exaggeration but  when  you look at the pressure he has faced from the media  literally   claiming that the Russians  won the elections for him by  hacking,  it  can  be assumed safely   then  that his accusation against  Obama  is  a calculated  and measured  tit  for   tat  against  the US  media  which   has always  had  a soft spot    for   his predecessor.  Again, when  you  recall  that Obama pardoned  and   commuted    a 35  year   long  jail term  given    to  Chester  Manning  who  released  700000  files   on security  to   Wiki  Leaks  and the offender  will  be out in May  2017  and  Obama  also  granted pardon to a Marine General, James  Cartwright who  admitted    lying  to the  FBI on  the Stuxnet  computer   virus,   on Obama’s departure  from   office,     then  you  really  cannot  easily   dismiss   Trump’s   charge  with a  wave  of the hand.  When  you  add  the fact on record  that on his  departure  from  office Obama  pardoned  and commuted  more  prison  terms  and sentences  more  than the  overall  done  by the 12 previous  US  presidents then  you  see that the US now and in the future  has serious  security  challenges that  are bound to affect  its political stability, diplomacy  and foreign  policy  for  a  long time  to come.

    In  South  Korea this week  the Constitutional  Court ruled  by a margin of 8-0 that  the country’s  president  should  be tried  for  corruption thereby  waiving the immunity  she had  enjoyed from prosecution  as president. The  ruling followed  the vote  at the nation’s  National  Assembly  that the President  should  be impeached. To  the letter of the law,  South Korea’s legislative and judicial  institutions have  lived up to their lawful  duties  and that was summed up in the verdict  of the Constitutional  Court  which ruled  that President Park Geun –hye   had  breached the values  of  democracy  and the rule  of law  and should  be  dismissed   as  president .According  to reports, the S Korean  Acting  Chief  Justice said  the president’s  ‘acts of violating the constitution and law are a betrayal of  the public  trust.  The  benefits  of protecting the constitution that can  be earned by dismissing the defendant are  overwhelmingly big ‘

    The  court  verdict  was a tragedy  for  the ousted president  but  a victory  for  democracy  and  transparency.  Yet  the  ousted  president was well prepared  for public office and service  as she was the daughter of former S Korean military  dictator  Park  Chung  Hee  who ruled  at the same time like powerful  military leaders like Suharto in Indonesia, and Ferdinand  Marcos in the Phillipines.  She  is said  to be married  to her nation as she has  no  husband  or  family.  Yet  she failed  the anti  corruption test  as  she  colluded  with  a friend  to betray  public trust  and she has left  office  in  disgrace. That  is a good  lesson  for  world  leaders  and  politicians,  especially  those in  Africa  to  learn  from.  The   lesson    is  that nobody, not even  a sitting  president  is  above  the law,  no   matter  the leader’s  origins and manner of ascent  to power.

    Let  us  now look  at  the  situation  in our  nation where luckily and happily  our  President   Muhammadu  Buhari   returned  home this  week  after a two month  medical  vacation.  In  his  absence  the Vice  President  Professor Yemi  Osinbajo  who also  turned  60  this  week  held  fort dutifully  and  brilliantly  too,  in my estimation. I  wish  him many  happy  returns  of  the day.  But  no tribute to him on the occasion can  be greater  than that of his  boss  who congratulated  him  for being  Vice  President  who  turned to a friend  and  partner in office. That is  a tribute  to  loyalty  and  diligence  and  nothing  can  be better, coming from someone  in a position  to make such  appraisal.‘

    In  the president’s  absence  his Vice  performed  numerous state  functions  on his  behalf  quite commendably  and  gave several  speeches  and admonitions  to  keep  the anti  corruption crusade  on course  in the absence  of its  Commander In  Chief  and  Champion, President  Muhammadu  Buhari.  But  it is one  of them  that arrests  my  attention  and  tickles  my imagination on the rule  of law, the fight against  corruption  and the administration of justice  now  and in the future in  Nigeria. Fortutous   circumstances made  it  possible   this week  for  Professor of  Law  to stand in as the President of Nigeria to swear  in the Chief  Justice  of  Nigeria.  At  the occasion the Acting  President  asked  for probity  and uprightness  in the administration of justice  in the temple  of  justice in Nigeria.  As  a former  Attorney –  General  and law  professor nobody  could  have said it better and more  painfully  too as a member  of the  ‘learned    profession‘  In  response  the new  CJ,   Hon Justice  N S Nkanu  Onnoghen  GCON  called  for the cooperation  of all  arms  of  government , namely the executive, the judiciary  and the legislature   and  present  at  the occasion were the  leaders of the  National  Assembly  who  are  also  involved  in their own unique  way  in the fight against  corruption.

    What  tickles  my fancy  however was that the last  time a professor of law  had  anything to do with the installation of Nigeria’s CJ  was when the legal scholar  and luminary, Professor  Taslim  Elias was  made  the  CJ himself   and  served  from 1972  to 1975.  Professor  Elias  was  later,   President, International  Court  of  Justice from  1982 to  1985. Now  another law  professor has sworn in Nigeria’s  new   CJ. What  I am  wondering at  is not  a case  of history  repeating itself  but    of what  is in the offing    this    time  or   the future,  in the highest  office in the temple  of justice  in Nigeria. Especially    for someone  who  has delivered so  eloquently and faithfully his  mandate of  Acting President  of  Nigeria,  to the  obvious   delight  and  admiration of  the leader  for whom he  sat in  for two  months. Once  again, long live the Federal  Republic  of  Nigeria.

  • ‘Corruption bane of development’

    ‘Corruption bane of development’

    The Senator representing Ondo Central District, Chief Tayo Alasoadura, has attributed the low pace of development in Nigeria to corruption, ethnicity, and religious bigotry.

    Alluding to the book written by the late sage,Chief Obafemi Awolowo,”The travails of Democracy and the rule of law”, the lawmaker said since early sixties, political and financial corruption  have remained obstacle to development.

    The Chairman,Senate Committee on Petroleum Resources (Upstream) spoke as a guest lecturer at the Obafemi Awolowo University (OAU) Ile-Ife during the 2017 Distinguished Guest Lecture/Award Ceremony organised by its Faculty of Social Sciences.

    The lecture entitled: “Leadership: The bane of development in Nigeria” was delivered on his behalf by his Senior Legislative Aide (SLA),Wale Alake.

    The lawmaker noted that the Transparency International (IT) had ranked Nigeria as 132nd most corrupt country out of 182 countries worldwide.

    He said: ”As we speak,whistle blowers are responding to the new government policy on revealation of financial crimes, stressing that mind boggling sums were being discovered in the possession of totally’ unconscionable’Nigerians.

    Alasoadura noted that Nigerians are now discovering why the country is undeveloped and wallowing in the midst of plenty.

    However, Alasoadura enthused that Nigerians have taken their destiny into their hands by electing President Muhammadu Buhari to rescue the country from treacherous and dishonest leaders.

    The former Commissioner for Finance in Ondo State recalled that in 2015, President Buhari told Nigerians that corrupt officials had stolen more than $150b from government coffers within the last 10 years.

    He pointed out that the revealations have shown that the President was right.

    The All Progressives Congress (APC) chieftain noted that several infrastructures and industries could have been built with the ‘stolen’funds now in private pockets.

    Alasoadura urged the youths, particularly students in higher institutions, who he described as leaders of tomorrow to think, find and develop better leaders for Nigeria to facilitate progress.

  • How to ‘kill’ corruption, by Osinbajo, others

    How to ‘kill’ corruption, by Osinbajo, others

    For two days, they gathered at the State House in Abuja to contribute to the National Dialogue on Corruption. It featured heads of anti-graft agencies, members of the Bench and the Bar, civil society organisations and religious leaders, among others. How will the talkshop organised by the Office of the Vice President in collaboration with the Presidential Advisory Committee Against Corruption (PACAC) help the anti-graft war? JOSEPH JIBUEZE asks.

    If the fight against corruption must be won, new strategies are required. They include enlisting the support of all segments of the society, including the youth, civil society and religious organisations. There is also a need to build systems that do not allow corruption to thrive. According to participants at a two-day National Dialogue on Corruption, the fight against graft cannot be won if all arms of government and the society are not on the same page.

    In attendance were Acting President Yemi Osinbajo, Chief Justice of Nigeria (CJN) Walter Onnoghen, Attorney-General of the Federation Abubakar Malami (SAN), Senate President Bukola Saraki, represented by Senator Chukwuka Utazi, Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) Acting Chairman Ibrahim Magu, Independent Corrupt Practices and Other Related Offences Commission (ICPC) Chairman Ekpo Nta, former EFCC chairman Nuhu Ribadu, Code of Conduct Bureau (CCB) chairman Sam Saba, among others.

    The event had five sessions with sub-themes. There were no fewer than six speakers drawn from labour unions, religious and civil society organisations and anti-graft agencies. The first session, with the theme: Meaning and conceptions of corruption – types, effects and obstacles to effective fight against corruption, was chaired by Prof Ladipo Adamolekun.

    The theme of the second session, chaired by Alhaji Hassan Sunmonu, was: Nigeria’s socio-economic order and economic relations: the reward system and character of the federal system of government. The third session had the theme: The political party system, civil service rules and practices and public/social service delivery. It was chaired by Imam Abubakar Siddeeq.

    The fourth session, chaired by Ribadu, had the theme: Pattern of legal and judicial system and the budget and budgeting process; the fifth session, with Rev Musa Asake as chairman, had the theme: Elite manipulation of religion and ethnicity and leadership preparation of youth.

     

    Osinbajo: We must work together

    Prof Osinbajo said it requires a joint effort to defeat corruption. “We must work together – the legislature, the judiciary and the executive – to put a model that must work. We must ensure that systems that are put in place are fair and comply with the rule of law,” he said.

    He said the fight will not be won where citizens continue to celebrate the corrupt, adding that the underlying causes of corruption, such as deprivation, also need to be addressed.

    He recalled that corruption in the Lagos State Judiciary dropped to zero percent following the sack of 22 corrupt magistrates and three judges, by drastic improvement in welfare.

    According to him, prior to the reforms, he once met an honest judge who retired after 10 years on the Bench but lived in someone’s boys quarters because he had no house.

    He said a judge’s salary of N67,000 then could not build a house. To reverse the trend, every judge was given a house for life, while their remuneration was increased “considerably”, to the extent that Lagos became a reference point.

    “It was because a system was in place and impunity was not allowed. It is important that we put in place models that will work,” he said.

    Osinbajo wants a revamp of the process of appointment of judges, saying that in the United Kingdom, candidates undergo 17 different tests before being appointed.

    The Acting President said a robust international collaboration is also needed to return stolen assets and to stop the hiding of loot abroad.

    “One of the critical issues that we have discovered in our fight against corruption is that we need much more robust international cooperation, especially with respect to return of assets. We find that the process of returning assets, aside from the judicial process, is so difficult and so complicated that it could just take you literally years to get assets returned.

    “And I think that it is important for countries of the world where stolen assets are located to really work with us in ensuring that these assets are returned speedily. I know that the United Kingdom is working with us in particular on this issue of beneficiary register.

    “That will be extremely useful for us because we will now be able to discover who is behind some of the names of companies and other shelves that are used to hide stolen assets.’’

    Justice Onnoghen believes that if the fight against graft is to be won, the  culture of impunity must be discouraged. The CJN admitted that “a few bad eggs exist within the judiciary”, but restated his commitment to collaborate with other arms of government to fight the scourge.

    “If you’re to fight corruption, then you should fight the culture of impunity which is attitudinal, by adhering strictly to the constitutional provisions and the rule of law. If we allow the rule of law to reign, then there will be a dramatic reduction in corruption and injustice. That is how I see it,” he said.

     

    Judiciary’s role

    PACAC chairnan Prof Itse Sagay (SAN) said corruption will be successfully tackled if the Administration of Criminal Justice Act (ACJA) 2015 is effectively implemented.

    He said the judiciary was still disregarding provisions of the law which are meant to speed up cases.

    Sagay said Section 396 of the ACJA provides that cases must be heard from day to day, and where impossible, adjournments must not exceed 14 days, and that where the defence raises a preliminary objection to the charge or information, such objection shall be considered along with the substantive issues and a ruling made at the time of delivery of judgment.

    “In spite of these clear provisions, some judges are still granting adjournments running into months and worse still, will adjourn their cases to give a ruling on a preliminary objection, instead of giving the ruling at the same time as the judgment on the substantive criminal matter.

    “What is more, contrary to Section 306 which provides that an application for stay of proceedings in respect of a criminal matter before the Court shall not be entertained, some courts still adjourn in order to await the outcome of an interlocutory appeal.

    “All this is illegal and strictly constitute acts of misconduct on the part of the Judge.  The outcome of all this is that we have over hundred high profile cases not going nowhere,” Sagay said.

    He also decried what he called a most tragic phenomenon currently creating a major setback for speedy criminal trials where Senior Advocates of Nigeria defending looters and other financial criminals deliberately set out to cross-examine prosecution witness for weeks in the hope of dragging on the trial indefinitely.

    Sagay said: “One prosecution witness was in recent times cross-examined for over a month whilst the Judge sat there helplessly, clearly having lost control of his own court.  All he needed to do was to give such filibustering Counsel a time limit, say two hours and the nonsense would have stopped.  But the Judge having totally lost control of his Court simply looked on helplessly as the filibustering Counsel went on week after week.

    “In this regard, I propose that all defence Counsel should pledge to cooperate with the Court in effecting speedy trials before bail is granted to their clients and such bail should  be revoked if the Counsel goes back on his word.

    “It is not a coincidence that the fastest trials that we have recorded in Nigeria were those in which bail was not granted to the high profile accused persons. We must now think creatively, to speed up corruption trials in Nigeria.”

    The PACAC chairman said the committee will set up a corps of young lawyers to monitor every corruption case, and report any breach of the ACJA to PACAC.

    “We shall then pass these on to the National Judicial Commission for appropriate action,” he said.

     

    Reverse presumption of innocence

    Magu said while Section 36 (5) of the 1999 Constitution provides that Every person who is charged with a criminal offence shall be presumed to be innocent until he is proved guilty; it also has a proviso, which states: Provided that nothing in this section shall invalidate any law by reason only that the law imposes upon any such person the burden of proving particular facts.

    According to him, one area where the presumption of innocence can be justifiably reversed is concerning illicit or unjust enrichment by a public officer. He called for an amendment of Section 7(1)(b) of the EFCC Act which empowers the commission to investigate properties of any person if the person’s lifestyle and extent of properties are not justified by his sources of income.

    “It is recommended that section 7(1)(b) of the EFCC Act be amended to create a specific offence like section 10. This will greatly assist in prosecution of public officers whose lifestyle is beyond their sources of lawful income,” Magu said.

    He also called for strict enforcement of the ACJA, as well as strict compliance with speedy trial provisions under EFCC Act. For instance, he said Section 19 of the EFCC Act empowers courts to ensure that “all matters brought before it by EFCC are conducted with dispatch and given accelerated hearing;” and that courts are “to adopt all legal measures necessary to avoid unnecessary delays and abuse in the conduct of matters brought by EFCC.”

    The acting EFCC chair called for adoption of sentencing guidelines to strengthen sentencing regime for corruption cases.  He spoke of the need for a Witness Protection Legislation.

    “It is important to follow up the announcement of the whistle-blower policy with a legislation to provide a legal framework for its application. The legislation should also provide for a witness protection programme to adequately protect whistle-blowers from harassment, intimidation or victimisation,” he said.

    Other recommendations by Magu are the enactment of Proceeds of Crimes Act, evolving a process that will empower civic participation in the formulation of budgets, and more use of the Freedom of Information Act.

    “Information about sums released for project can also be used to track project implementation. Tracking of project information can generate information unveiling diversion or embezzlement of funds. Concerned citizens and CSOs can provide such information to EFCC to provide a basis for investigating corruption and recovery of stolen funds,” Magu said.

    Saba said the institutional framework necessary to control and diminish corruption includes a strong system for monitoring conduct and exposing wrong doing.

    He said there was need for a strong framework constituting and insulating institutions of oversight, exposure and punishment so that they are not subverted by the very actors they are supposed to be controlling.

    “This means that such institutions must be fully autonomous from party politics and their tenure guaranteed so they are not used by the ruling party or leader or faction as a tool of political vendetta. Surmounting these institutional challenges will create a strong pedestal to lunch an effective campaign against corruption in public service,” the CCB chairman said.

    Saba said upholding moral and ethical values is another effective remedy to diminish corruption.

    “Assets declaration is another veritable and workable tool to eliminate corruption. This is because where it is well administered serves as a tool for detecting and preventing illicit enrichment and conflicts of interest among public officials.

    “While this is already on-going, it should not be kept secret. Furthermore, improper enrichment of public officials cannot be detected unless their own personal and family finances are transparent.

    “Therefore, there should be a mandatory public declaration of the assets and liabilities of the immediate family of all specified senior public officers on appointment or assumption of duty as well as after their tenures,” he said.

    In addition to political will, Saba said the people – those at the receiving end of the effects of corruption – should take ownership of the fight, meaning that they have to develop a higher consciousness far above their ethnic and religious inclinations.

    Saba said: “On the part of government, there is the need to provide a living wage, a good reward system that encompass not only traditional, quantifiable elements like salary, variable pay and benefits, but also more intangible non-cash elements such as scope to achieve and exercise responsibility, career opportunities, learning and development, the intrinsic motivation provided by the work itself and the quality of working life provided by the.

    “Provision of basic amenities for the people will also go a long way to eliminate corruption. If there is constant water supply, good schools, good hospitals, abundant food at reasonable cost, constant electricity supply, affordable housing and good roads for easy transportation, the craze for individuals to get these things through whatever means will reduce if not vanish.”

    He said the attitude of government business being ‘nobody’s business’ should stop, while side-tracking laid down procedures to cut corners should give way to commitment, transparency and honesty.

    “Nigerians and public officers in particular should have a patriotic mind set, which is a mindset of service to the nation above every other primordial interest (religion, ethnicity, tribe, family),” he added.

    Former External Affairs Minister Prof Ibrahim Gambari, who chaired the opening ceremony, said the the arrest and punishment of corrupt officials must be complemented with a revamped national reward system.

    He said it was not all Nigerians that are ‘fantastically corrupt’, but that there were so many decent Nigerians in all works of life doing the nation proud and, therefore, need to be recognised and honoured.

    “In other words, as the looters and corrupt individuals are being shamed and punished, on the other hand patriotic and incorrupt individuals also need to be rewarded and honoured. This approach would make corruption unattractive and at the same time encourage patriotism,” he said.

    Gambari said the sustainability of the fight against corruption in the context of an agenda of change must involve a collective endeavour to open a new chapter in national life that would represent both a clean break with the past and the opening of a new gateway into the future.

    “Therefore, the nation’s elite must be part of the solution and not remain a largest part of the problem. President Buhari is leading the fight for the people and we must support him so that we can take our country back from the enemies of the Nigerian state – the looters and destroyers of our national resources from the professional champions of narrow ethnic interests by whatever name, who thrives on what divides us.

    “To this end, a wholesale attitudinal change combined with new codes of leadership and followership need to be embraced across different segments of society,” he said.

     

    Role of religious organisations

    Magu called for a law to regulate religions organisations. “Religion is now big business. It is like capitalism,” he said.

    PACAC Executive Secretary Prof Bolaji Owasanoye regretted that corruption has become so rife that some looters have become richer that some states. “We need to ask ourselves some questions,” he said.

    Such questions, he said, include the role religious organisations play. “Faith-based groups should isolate the thieves among them and not celebrate them. We should all be sufficiently outraged to challenge them,” he said.

    Activist-lawyer Mr Femi Falana (SAN) said religious organisations have a role to play in discouraging corruption among their members.

    He decried a situation where churches and mosques organise thanksgiving services and access cash donations from people who stole public funds.

    “When anyone has been accused of corruption , don’t organise thanksgiving service for them,” Falana said.

    Executive Director of the Socio-Economic Right Accountability Project (SERAP) Adetokunbo Mumuni said Nigerians were only religious in appearance. “Nigerians are just ceremonial people, not godly people,” he said. He said some religious leaders were only interested in displaying their cassocks and turbans rather than living what they profess.

    “The core of religions is to make you good. There is no religion that supports stealing and corruption,” he said, adding that churches and mosques must teach their members “moral soundness”.

    A representative of the Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC) said thieves were banished in traditional societies rather than being celebrated. He blamed western capitalism for destroying Nigeria’s value systems.

    University don, Dr Maikano Madaki of the Department of Sociology, Bayero University, Kano, said investigation of corruption-related offences experience other problems along the line of cultural, regional, ethnic, and religious divide.

    He said partisanship and nepotism are also used to halt the process of investigation connected to corruption, divides  which he said play a fundamental role in sabotaging investigation to the extent that when a particular individual that belongs to any of the lines is accused of corruption, some of his/her associates will do all that is humanly possible to frustrate, condemn, affect or even influence the investigation process.

    “The fight against corruption is a collective responsibility, as such, there is the need to mobilise and re-orient the entire citizens on the importance of the fight thereby minimising the use of cultural, religious, ethnic, regional, sectional and political differences to halt government effort.

    “These divides are commonly used in Nigeria to selfishly express dissatisfaction with any move to arrest and detain an individual that belongs to a particular group in connection to corruption.

    “This emphasises the need to involve all categories of leaders – community, traditional and religious in the fight against corruption. Sometimes, politicians from the opposition use party platforms to criticise government efforts at fighting corruption baselessly,” he said.

     

    Eliminate obstacles

    PACAC member and professor of criminology, Femi Odekunle, said obstacles in the way of effective fight against corruption can be substantially remedied by adopting a complementary approach and instrumentality that will make the fight against corruption more “systemic”, deeper in reach, and more enduring than the current appearance of  “picking” the obvious or the available and thereby only scratching the surface of the problem.

    He said: “Pay urgently-needed attention and take commensurate action towards an observable, even ‘forced’, reversal of the ‘emerged’ individualised ethos and culture of general indiscipline and lack of law-abidingness in the population at large – an ethos and culture not-unrelated to pervasive corruption and impunity.

    “Adequately fund, staff, and appropriately-equip the leading anti-corruption agencies (as obtains in other serious climes) to really capacitate them to do their real work.

    “Extend the anti-corruption attention to lower tiers of government (States and LGAs) and the private sector as well as to other types of corruption that are causal or consequential to the economic/financial but are equally, if not sometimes more, dangerous to the health of the nation than the financial e.g. political/electoral-corruption, policy-corruption, systemic civil-service/administrative-corruption, professional-corruption, and routine street/work-place corruption.

    “Deliberately mobilise and encourage the generality of the citizenry and the organised civil society to agitate continuously for  representative democracy through insistence on popular and corrupt-free elections; to demand accountability and transparency from elected and appointed officials at all tiers and levels of government; to exert pressures on governments to ensure that officials, in both the public and private sectors, who have engaged in corrupt practices resign their positions, make restitution, and face stipulated sanctions; and to ceaselessly disseminate information about the practical/observable development cost and evils of corruption to the generality of our population.

    “Ensure that the economic dimension of our foreign policy/relations includes certain definitive “reciprocities” with respect to cooperation and ease of return of verified looted funds/assets back to the country.”

  • Stand up against corruption, Ahmed tells judges

    Stand up against corruption, Ahmed tells judges

    Kwara State Governor Abdulfatah Ahmed has urged the judiciary to stand up against corruption by upholding the rule of law.

    The governor, who spoke at the swearing-in of the Grand Khadi of the Sharia Court, Kadi Muhammed Ola Abdulkadir, said judges should be bold, fearless, incorruptible, follow the principles of the Constitution and promote democracy.

    He noted that integrity, independence and impartiality of the judiciary are essential to promoting human rights and fostering development.

    His words: “The judiciary must be inclusive and promote social justice. Ensuring equal treatment of all before the law goes a long way in building trust in the credibility of the judicial system.”

    Ahmed stressed that all citizens must have unrestricted and equal access to justice at all times, and the rights of all must be protected regardless of gender, age or status. He said justice helps a society create organised human relations and forms the basis of strong institutions and good governance.

    “In recognition of the need for justice, this administration will continue to prioritise promotion of the rule of law and enhance access to justice. This is for us to meet the aspirations of our citizens for a just, safe and secure society, which is crucial for sustainable development,” Ahmed added.

    The Attorney-General and Commissioner for Justice, Kamaldeen Ajibade, said the Grand Khadi satisfied constitutional provisions relating to his appointment.

    Ajibade pledged to live up to the people’s expectation. He promised to reflect transparency, honesty, justice and accountability in the judicial system and to build on the legacies of his predecessors.

  • Shun corruption, pro chancellor warns colleagues

    Shun corruption, pro chancellor warns colleagues

    Prof. Kimse Okoko, the Pro Chancellor, University of Uyo, has called on all pro chancellors across the country to shun  corruption in order to sanitise the university system.

    Okoko, who is the Chairman, Committee of Pro Chancellors, made the call  at the 3rd Biennial Conference of  Pro chancellors of Federal Universities on Wednesday in Abuja.

    He also said it was important to lay a good foundation to eliminate corruption in the university system.

    Okoko said pro chancellors,  as the head of their various universities,  must show themselves to be above board on issues of corruption.

    “I think the issue of corruption is very critical and I want to urge pro chancellors to ensure transparency in the system.

    ” Unless we pro-chancellors ensure that we are incorruptible then we cannot lay a good foundation to eliminate corruption in the system.

    ” I  am hoping that my colleagues heed this advice because corruption is now a very upsetting phenomenon in the universities,” he said.

    Okoko also called on the pro chancellors  to tackle sexual harassment now  rampant in  universities as well as  plagiarism.

    ” I  think it is important for pro chancellors to live above board  and  be transparent so that they can pass that to the various vice chancellors.

    “It’s now a shame to see vice chancellors now dragged to prison. It’s not a good image for universities and I think we have to gradually try and ensure that we get rid of corruption in our society.

    ”  I believe that universities are agents of change and you cannot be an agent of change if you yourself is part of the corruption,” he added.

    Also speaking,  the Registrar of the Joint Admissions and Matriculation Board, Prof. Ishaq Oloyede,  called for a review of the proliferation of structures in  Nigerian universities.

    Oloyede said  there should be  mainstreaming of all the different universities  committees  to be coordinated by a central body.

    ” I believe that the coordination of all these committees will heal an already sick system because of the cross fertilisation  of ideas that will bring solution to the challenges that the various universities face,” he said.

  • Corruption eroding gains in civil service, says Osinbajo

    Corruption eroding gains in civil service, says Osinbajo

    THE civil service has remained at its lowest ebb due to corruption in the system despite its modest gains, Acting President Yemi Osinbajo said yesterday.
    He spoke at an inaugural quarterly civil service lecture series at the old Banquet Hall of the State House, Abuja.
    It is themed: “Civil Service in a Change Environment: The Change is Now”.
    Osinbajo noted that the civil service, which had firmly stood against injustices and high-handedness that characterised the military era, suddenly came crashing when civil servants began to see their functions as means to achieving personal aggrandisement, rather than interest of the Nigerian state.
    He said: “It was the judiciary that told the military then that while it may make laws, those laws should still respect the inalienable rights of the people as enshrined in international human right conventions to which the country had voluntarily acceded.
    “These were individuals without guns, just sitting down on platforms up there in the court, who insisted on holding the military responsible.
    “Despite the criticisms that civil servants are subjected to, I am sure that you know that sometimes civil servants are described as ‘evil servants’ but you must take heart. The best professions are usually the most criticised. But I must say that the wholesome privilege of public service is very easily abused or taken for granted. The public service elite represents as we have seen the most important factor in mass development.
    “The power to do great good or evil lies with a few people, who form what we refer to as our civil service. When some in such an elite see the opportunity as one for self-enrichment by corrupt practices, then the nation faces a monumental tragedy.”
    Osinbajo added: “There is no excuses anywhere in a nation where the majority are still poor and are struggling to make a living that anyone who has the benefit of good education and good fortune of a job in the civil service should subvert that service for personal gains. I think it’s the greatest tragedy that a nation can experience.”
    Head of Civil Service of the Federation Winifred Oya-Ita took a swipe at the media and noted that it had been awash with shortcomings of the service while leaving out the modest gains in the system.
    According to her, the Federal Civil Service, in particular, has been in the forefront of national cohesion and has ensured smooth transition of power from one government to another – whether military or civilian administration.

  • Reps investigate foreign Missions over corruption

    Reps investigate foreign Missions over corruption

    The House of Representatives Tuesday mandated it’s the Committees on Foreign Relations and Public Procurement to investigate allegations of corruption in the Nigerian Missions abroad.

    The investigation also spans “the measures to be devised to alleviate the sufferings of Nigerians in the diaspora.”

    The Green Chamber also urged “the Federal Ministry of Foreign Affairs to ensure that Nigerian Missions abroad provide counseling and support to Nigerians in time of need and to operate a twenty-four (24) hours helpline and desk for Nigerians in the diaspora.”

    The joint committee is to report back to the House within six (6) weeks for further legislative action.

    The resolution of the House was sequel to the passage of a motion by two lawmakers, Rita Orji and Sergius Ose Ogun on the “Need to Investigate the Activities and the Procurement Process of Nigerian Embassies/High Commissions to cut Costs and Fight Corruption.”

    The lawmakers while moving the motion said: ” Nigeria’s High Commissions and Embassies are administratively under the Federal Ministry of Foreign Affairs and as such have their individual budgets computed under the Ministry;

    “All sums spent by the foreign missions are meant to be subjected by parliamentary oversight in the light of the fact that the spendings are provided for under the Appropriation Act passed by the National Assembly;

    “Informed of the widely reported news by a number of online news media that sums running into thousands of Pounds have been spent by the Nigerian High Commission in London on activities as mundane as hiring a scaffold, clearing drainages and manholes.

    “Also notes the allegations by Nigerians in the diaspora of acts of insensitivity, laxity, negligence and near outright maltreatment by consular staff of Nigerian Embassies/High Commissions across the world which inflict mental torture on them;

    “The manifestations of these acts in the bureaucratic bottlenecks in the renewal of expired passports, extortion of money from those seeking assistance or redress and outright insensitivity to the plight of those in dire need which had resulted in the abandonment in a mental home in Turin Italy of one Julie Osamese whose kidney was stolen and the death of Nwadike Stephen Chukwuemeka in a deportation camp in Malaysia, etc.”

    The lawmakers expressed concern about the need to investigate the activities of the High Commission and Embassies “including those payments were approved and disbursed and the procurement processes being employed by the Embassies and High Commissions, the Nation will continually be bled the sincerity of the government’s war against corruption will be called to question.”

    However, the Chairperson of the Foreign Affairs Committee, Hon. Nnena Elendu-Ukeje through an amendment sought the removal of committees of Diaspora and Interior from the investigations.

    According to her, the Ministry of Foreign Affairs is in charge of embassies/ missions and the ministry is in turn under the supervision of the House committee on Foreign Relations, hence it would only be appropriate if the Foreign Relations Committee and Public Procurement conduct the investigation.

    Members supported the amendment and the committees of Diaspora and Interior were removed from the mandate.

  • ‘Corruption, infrastructure deficit bane of maritime’

    Corruption and infrastructural challenge have been identified as the bane of the shipping and clearing arm of the maritime sector.

    According to the Chief Executive Officer, Olas Motors, Mr Samuel Anderson, the resolution of these issues would see shipping and clearing making huge contributions to the economy.

    Speaking with The Nation at the weekend, Anderson said he came home to establish a branch of his company in response to former President Goodluck Jonathan’s appeal that Nigerians in the Diaspora should bring home their businesses and expertise to help build the economy.

    He regretted that the government has failed to provide basic infrastructure and tackle corruption.

    “Nigerians in the Diaspora have the expertise, resources and connection that can help develop this country but the country is being strangulated by corruption, policy inconsistency, poor infrastructure and other evils. These discourage them,” he said.

    For instance, he said, in China, the government builds houses and makes other provisions for its citizens in the Diaspora who are willing to relocate and invest in China while in Nigeria there is no form of encouragement, no matter what you want to do.

    Anderson said having stayed in the United States for many years, he has gained enough expertise that would enable him bring about a positive change in shipping and cargo importation in the country, but he was afraid because of too much corruption and infrastruc-tural decay at the ports. He said there was no port in Nigeria that compares to what is obtained in other developed countries and urged the Federal Government to fix the ports and reduce the number of its agencies.

    “In China or Hong Kong, you can have your container released to you in two hours once it arrives the port and this is at a cost equivalent of between N5,000 and N10,000 whereas in our ports, for your container to be released, it takes several days to weeks and costs several hundreds of thousands of naira or more than a million naira in some cases, despite the government’s effort at reformation.

    “In Asia, everything works systematically and you can plan successfully. But here, there are lots of policy somersaults; things are not organised for sustainable growth and most importers in Nigeria find it difficult to cope with this kind of system after experiencing the best way things are done in other countries,” he said.

    On shipping in Nigeria and the United States, he said there was no basis for comparison. “In Nigeria, there is no good equipment at the ports, there is no stability or continuity of policies whereas in other developed counties, the economy, the currency and every other thing is planned and this is what investors want to plan their businesses. It is not easy to set up anything in Nigeria because there is no reliable system in place.”

  • Leadership, corruption and migration

    I start today on the premise that leadership matters in governance and is indeed the ideal catalyst for political stability and economic progress. I also aver that while the world is distracted by the anti establishment emergence of the populist leadership of Donald Trump in America’s 2016 presidential elections, other nations of the world are experiencing worse issues than the controversial migration ban by the US leader on seven majority Muslim nations on Trump’s list. Anyway, the US judiciary has shown the new US president that he cannot run America solo as its presidential system has an in built system of checks and balances that works literally like an automatic stop watch. Events and news from Nigeria, S Africa, Pakistan and France, provide food for thought today in terms of today’s topic.

    Issues arising from these events show that corporate and political leadership can make or mar an institution and much more a whole nation. Leadership is about integrity and trust and once these twin virtues are betrayed, institutional decay and social malaise set in and corruption, an incurable cancer in any such perverse system, rears its ugly head. This is what I shall illustrate, candidly and vividly, today . Firstly the news from Nigeria is, as usual, shocking and unbelievable.

    At an on going trial of the Senate President it was alleged that 77m naira was lodged in in one day in an account whose owner’s salary was just a bit above a quarter of a million. In another news item the boss of the Nigerian Customs Service who was in office for just six years was alleged to have embezzled 40 bn naira and about 17 exotic cars were found in a compound owned by him. In an era of fake news one can be forgiven for doubting the authenticity of these news. But these are published stories from Nigeria’s leading newspapers and not mischievous social media which values speed of viral information at the expense of truth.

    This is verifiable truth being revealed in our courts and in effect show a betrayal of leadership at the level at which the leaders involved have operated to the detriment of the goals and objectives of the public institutions over which they presided as leaders. Also from S Africa came the news that the nation’s President Jacob Zuma has ordered S Africans not to attack foreign nationals living in that nation. The president’s order came on the heels of the news of persistent attacks on Nigerians by S Africans accusing Nigerians of drug trafficking and taking their jobs. This really is like giving dog a bad name in order to hang it.

    This is because while one can sadly agree that the 419 saga and drug trafficking have given Nigeria a bad name, Nigerians are largely hard working people who strive hard to make their mark in the commercial life of any nation, wherever on earth that they work in, including S Africa. Anyway we hope that the S Africans listen to their president and stop attacking Nigerians as historically the free S Africa they now enjoy would have been impossible but for the contribution of Nigeria and its people to the Anti- Apartheid Struggle that led to the freedom of Nelson Mandela from prison after 27 years of incarceration on Robben Island .

    Indeed Nigeria’s civil servants contributed part of their hard earned salary to the Anti Apartheid fund set up by the Federal government to pursue the fight against Apartheid until it collapsed and held a free and fair election from which Nelson Mandela emerged from prison to be president. Such a huge sacrifice and contribution on the part of Nigerians to the political and economic emancipation of S Africa should not now be rewarded by attacks on Nigerians living in S Africa as this will be nothing less than a shameful act of ingratitude to Nigerians and Nigeria by the people of S Africa. It is necessary to mention here that the S African president has problems on his plate just as challenging as his loose control of xenophobia by his people.

    A S African court recently ruled that his withdrawal of his nation’s membership from the International Court of Justice – ICC – was illegal as it was not an act of Parliament which is the judicial requirement. To me that shows that the rule of law is still prevalent in S Africa in spite of the massive odor of corruption that pervades the presidency of President Jacob Zuma. In fact the fear of future prosecution for corruption by the ICC once he leaves office was the rationale for President Zuma’s sudden withdrawal of S Africa’s membership from the ICC, an act which the judiciary in the country has now dismissed as unilateral and unconstitutional. Which means that this court ruling has compounded President Zuma’s poor image on integrity and has fuelled the charge of the opposition which heckles and abuses him annually in Parliament whenever he comes to Parliament to present his state budget. Anyway, Nigerians expect him to still have enough authority and credibility to stop his country men from killing Nigerians working peacefully in S Africa as has been the case from reports in the last few weeks.

    Let us now look at how xenophobia and migration have affected real and potential leadership in other parts of the world namely Pakistan, and France. In Pakistan the Army is waging a huge war against Islamic militancy and terrorism after innocent Muslims were killed in a shrine by terrorists recently. Hundreds of terrorists have been killed in recent weeks and the Army is virtually closing the border between Afghanistan, the base of the terrorists and Pakistan.

    The rise in spate of terror has been attributed to a change of leadership of the Pakistani army and the time needed by that change to come to understand the game on hand. But Pakistan is a fiercely democratic society just as it is very Islamic. Some have mooted the idea that only a military government in Pakistan can confront and defeat the Islamic terrorists once and for all but the politicians will not give such talk any consideration what so ever.

    Yet it is becoming increasingly clear that democratic mandate and arrangements are ineffective against terrorism by Islamic extremists in a very Islamic nation. How far the military and political leadership can accommodate each other in this leadership tenterhook will determine the fate of the security and political stability of Pakistan in the foreseeable future. In France a serious potential political leadership is facing threats based on its positions on migration and xenophobia. Marine Le Pen who is the leader of the Far Right National Front Party in France and who has boasted that the next French presidential elections this year will go the way of Brexit in the UK and the emergence of Donal Trump in the US is now facing trumped up charges. She is facing a charge that some of her aides were being paid from illegal funds from the EU which is a form of abuse of office or misuse of funds.

    But she has denied the charges as politically motivated and she has refused to attend a police interview and technically she can not be arrested because she is a Member of the European Parliament. She has alleged that she cannot get justice given that this is an election time and I believe her. In addition the fact that she has promised to do a Brexit if she is elected president could very well have aroused the hostility of the bureaucrats in Brussels who have brought up the charges. To me this looks like the tax returns issue of Donald Trump in the last US presidential elections.

    Yet Trump won in spite of this. I expect the French electorate to treat Le Pen similarly on this trumped up EU charges. This is a politician well respected for her commitment to principles part of which led to her expulsion of her father from the Party he founded.

    That sort of steely principle and guts also made her to refuse to attend a meeting with an Islamic Mufti in Lebanon where she was asked to cover her head. She refused and left although she had gone there to woo the votes of Lebanese French in this year’s presidential elections. Le Pen’s leadership style is indeed made of sterner stuff and I expect the French to show that her time has in this coming French presidential elections. Just as the US electorate showed the American political elite and haughty party establishment that no one can stop an idea whose time has come when they created an unexpected upset by electing Donald Trump as the 45th US president in the 2016 presidential elections. Once again long live the Federal Republic of Nigeria.