Tag: corruption

  • Corruption: When will Nigeria get serious?

    SIR: On May 14, 2014, a former Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert was sentenced to six years in prison. The judge also fined him one million shekels about 289,000 dollars and ordered that 560,000 shekels in his assets be seized. Olmert was found guilty by the Tel-aviv District Court of accepting a 500,000 shekel bribe from developers of a controversial apartment complex known as HOLY LAND after which planning and zoning laws were changed, and another 60,000 shekels for another project, and sentenced accordingly.

    The 68-year old prime Minister was convicted, interestingly not necessarily for crimes he allegedly committed as a Prime Minister, but in connection with the real estate deal that took place while he was Mayor of Jerusalem. The sentencing must have humbled the man who left power in 2009, following a gale of alleged corruption charges. That he is now going to prison for a bribe he took as a Mayor many years is pointer to the fact that there is nothing like just a little sin. It also tells us that no matter how long it takes to be discovered or decided, crimes should always be punished. More significantly, it is pointer to the fact that laws should be no respecter of persons no matter the status in the society.

    Yes the judge acknowledged that the former Prime Minister had made a large contribution to the country, he nonetheless had no choice than to sentence him because his offences were noxious and he was guilty of moral turpitude.  Under Israeli laws, this precludes Olmert from running for public office for seven years after finishing his jail term. His only hope is for his appeal to be upheld. The former Prime minister’s comportment in the court room was also instructive. He reportedly stood quietly in the court room, head bowed.

    Nigerians look forward to that difficult day when one of their former leaders or even the people that are being tried now would be shown the way to prison; some of them deserve to be behind bars considering the mind-boggling corruption they perpetrated in office. That they walk about freely and even insult our sensibility with their insensitive comments and actions make our hearts bleed.

    Some gullible Nigerians will being to ask questions that makes someone sick. Why starting from these persons. Why not start from this person and that person. Who prosecuting only members of these parties, why not the ruling party?

    Last month, the PDP Caucus in the National Assembly said they were withdrawing their support for President Buhari on the premise that the anti-corruption agenda of the president is one-sided. The PDP caucus must be reminded of their primary responsibility of lawmaking and representation of their constituents at the National Assembly. I advise the PDP Senate Caucus not to allow political shenanigans to becloud overall national interest.

    Corruption is a monster that has slowed the development of this country. We must join the fight against it. Had it been that PDP under President Goodluck Jonathan fought corruption the way APC under President Buhari is fighting the menace, I believe we would not have been where we are today. Any Nigerian no matter his status in the society caught in any corrupt practice should be dealt with. I am not a fan of plea bargaining or soft landing. Our judges should help us to deal with this monster. They should not entertain all these frivolous motions and delay tactics of some so-called Senior Advocate of Corrupt Nigerians. I believe our Judges should learn from this judge of Israel who gave this landmark judgement.

     

    • Otimkpu Paschal,

    Awka, Anambra State.

  • Corruption:  Moving money  out of purgatory

    Corruption: Moving money out of purgatory

    In the crackdown on kleptocracy, ‘global policemen’ states have faced difficulties in returning illicit assets to citizens, writes Financial Times Kara Scannell.

    A aron Bornstein arrived in Kazakhstan in February 2009 with $84 million and a daunting assignment. His job was to hand out millions of dollars to impoverished families, non-governmental agencies and students who wanted to pursue secondary education. The catch was that he could not have any dealings with the Kazakh government, which was not exactly happy to see him coming.

    The money had been frozen in 1999 and the United States (U.S.) later alleged that it had been used to pay illegal bribes to top Kazakh officials under Nursultan Nazarbayev, the country’s long-serving President. Now, Mr Bornstein was in Kazakhstan to give the cash back to the citizens who, according to the U.S. and Swiss authorities, it had been stolen from.

    Mr. Bornstein, an international aid worker, and his team set up field offices, screened local hires to weed out anyone with government ties and created a database of qualified recipients. The foundation was named Bota, or “little camel” in Kazakh.

    Over the next six years — two longer than projected — Bota distributed all the money Mr Bornstein had arrived with, plus $31 million in interest. In that time, more than 150,000 mothers and children received nutritional assistance and early education programmes. Scholarships were handed out to 841 students.

    For the U.S. Department of Justice (DoJ) and its “Kleptocracy Initiative”, which was launched in 2010, Bota was a victory in the global battle against official corruption. But even supporters acknowledge that it will be hard to replicate in other countries where corruption is rampant or when larger sums of money are involved. And it was burdened by the fact that, at heart, the DoJ is a law enforcement agency, not a charity.

    “It was over-bureaucratised,” Mr Bornstein recalls. “The Department of Justice is not a development agency. It just wasn’t its priority.”

    It is difficult enough for law enforcement agencies to successfully bring international graft cases and seize stolen assets. But it is proving just as difficult to return the money to the citizens without it landing back in the hands of the thieves.

    That quandary has become more acute as the U.S., United Kingdom (UK), Switzerland and other countries extend their reach as global policemen tracking stolen assets. The World Bank’s Stolen Asset Recovery Initiative estimates that $20 billion -$40 billion a year is stolen from developing countries. Others say it could be as much as $1 trillion.

    The U.S. has more than $1.5 billion belonging to Nigeria, Uzbekistan, Thailand and Ukraine tied up in bank accounts in various stages of litigation as part of its Kleptocracy Initiative. Earlier this year the DoJ announced forfeiture actions freezing $850 million it alleges were bribes paid to Uzbek officials to award telecoms contracts.

    Of that, only about $120 million, or one-eighth of the frozen assets, has been returned to the victim countries.

    “When you think about the money that’s stolen it’s like an inverted pyramid,” says Shruti Shah, Vice President of Programmes and Operations at Transparency International (TI) United States of Africa (USA).

    He said: “The top is the money that’s stolen. A smaller percentage is frozen and a minuscule percentage is actually returned.

    “All government and international institutions should work harder to try to find solutions.”

    The United Nations (UN) convention against corruption says money should be returned to the victim country without conditions. But countries including the U.S., UK and Switzerland have generally insisted on terms to ensure that the money is not stolen again. That often means cash is tied up in litigation.

     

    Funding extravagance

    In 2011, the U.S. sought $80 million in assets that it alleged Teodoro Nguema Obiang Mangue, the son of the President of Equatorial Guinea, stole and used to fund an extravagant lifestyle — a Gulfstream jet, a $30 million Malibu mansion, nearly $2 million in Michael Jackson memorabilia and a Ferrari. After three years of court battles, the DoJ reached a settlement with Mr Obiang, agreeing to turn over $30 million in assets.

    He managed to keep a crystal-encrusted glove Jackson wore during the “Bad” tour and his Gulfstream jet. The DoJ plans to return the money to a charity to benefit Equatorial Guinea — but it first needs to sell the six-bedroom mansion perched above the Pacific Ocean.

    Sani Abacha stole as much as $5 billion when he was President of Nigeria (Head of State) from 1993 until his death in 1998, according to Transparency International. About $3 billion of the funds are tied up in Lichtenstein, Switzerland, the UK, U.S., France, Luxembourg and the Channel island of Jersey. So far, $1.3 billion has been repatriated and in March the Swiss announced an agreement to return another $321 million.

    The U.S. agreed in 2014 to return $480 million but the money is frozen awaiting court appeals by entities linked to the Abacha family.

    Muhammadu Buhari, a former military ruler who became Nigeria’s president in 2015 after pledging to clean up graft in the oil-rich country, summarised the difficulties at an anti-corruption conference in London this spring.

    “Our experience has been that repatriation of corrupt proceeds is very tedious, time-consuming and costly,” he (Buhari) said.

    Even with agreements, civil society groups are concerned that the Abacha money will be misused. An earlier tranche that was returned was placed in the central budget with little transparency or accountability to ensure it was spent as intended.

    David Ugolor, Executive Director of the Africa Network for Environment and Economic Justice, a civil society group in Benin City, said: “The issue of asset recovery cannot be discussed in the absence of the victim.”

    His organisation would like the money to go towards supporting victims of the Boko Haram Islamist group, people harmed by oil exploration and education.

    “We’re very concerned about the US government putting its money where its mouth is. Too much policy without action doesn’t mean anything to Nigeria and its people,” Mr Ugolor said.

    DoJ officials say they will engage civil society groups after the court process is over.

    Sometimes it is easier to return the cash — especially when there has been a change in power. Last year the DoJ returned $1 million to South Korea that was allegedly stolen by a previous president, Chun Doo-hwan.

    U.S. prosecutors argue that the corruption cases are within their jurisdiction as long as the proceeds pass through America, whether in bank accounts, fancy cars or beachfront property.

    “We want to protect the U.S. financial system from becoming a haven for these proceeds,” said a U.S. official. “Where you have a rotten government — those are the kinds of places where organised crime and terrorism take root.”

    U.S. officials also point to another benefit — tying up the money for years will deprive dictators from thriving off of it.

    Yet, some sceptics say the U.S. is part of the problem because it allows for impenetrable shell companies that corrupt dictators can use to mask their purchases. Earlier this year, the U.S. said it would require banks to verify who the true owners are behind accounts.

    “The fact that the U.S., Britain, and the Swiss are a magnet for these illicit assets presents an integrity problem,” says Mr. Bornstein.

    “The new government in power will say my guy may have stolen the money but your system allows that to happen.”

     

    Transferring the cash

    Establishing the Bota foundation was drawn out over a decade. In 1999 the Swiss government froze bank accounts linked to Mr. Nazarbayev’s finance ministry on suspicion of money laundering.

    Four years later, the U.S. indicted an oil executive and an American businessman in an alleged bribery scheme. Both later pleaded guilty.

    Kazakhstan laid claim to the money and after years of negotiations, an agreement was struck in 2007 between Kazakh officials, the Swiss, the U.S. and the World Bank to set up an independent foundation as a way to return the funds to the country. It took another year of talks to hash out the specific terms of the pact.

    Mr. Nazarbayev was still in power and both the U.S. and Swiss worked to ensure the foundation was completely independent from the Kazakh government.

    After competitive bidding, the World Bank chose Irex, an educational non-profit group, and Save the Children to run the programme. Mr Bornstein was hired and dispatched to Almaty, the country’s business capital. The biggest concern when setting up the foundation was to ensure the money would not leak back to the government.

    “It was a little bit of a constraint for us,” says Kathy Evans, director of Irex. “Kazakhstan is a socialist country, so, everything is tied to the government. We’re supposed to be working with schools and health clinics and to find any not tied to the government was challenging and not always the best alternative.”

    Bota started in two regions and expanded to six. To launch a conditional cash transfer programme, which pays parents about $15 to have their children vaccinated, among other things, it opened field offices and had mobile enrolment centres that travelled from village to village.

    She said: “They used a lot of volunteers instead of government social workers,” said Penny Williams, senior operations officer for the social protection unit at the World Bank.

    “They found ways to abide by the commitment that it would be independent of the government.”

    Bota’s work sometimes ground to a standstill as it waited for all three governments to approve budgets.

    “We delayed when we had to delay. It wasn’t a turn off the lights situation but we had to delay payments” to tens of thousands of individuals, Mr Bornstein said.

    In one programme, Bota said it delivered $56 million to 154,241 beneficiaries under the cash transfer programme and 74,470 children were provided early childhood education. In another it distributed 632 grants worth $12.5 million to Non-Governmental Organisations (NGOs) to support the creation or expansion of social services. Of the 841 needs-based scholarships granted to poor and vulnerable youth, more than 90 per cent of the recipients were the first in their family to access higher education, the foundation said.

    Bota surpassed its stated goals except one — the agreement called for it to continue “to operate as a functioning foundation”. But without the support of the Kazakh government it was wound down after the money was distributed.

    “The government was quite co-operative with us but once the time period was over it wanted to be done with it. It didn’t want people asking questions,” said Ms Evans of Irex.

    The project helped many poor families, but its closure has left a void.

    “Nobody is working on child welfare issues on a comprehensive basis,” said Janyl Mukashova, a Kazakh who was director of Bota’s social services programme. “It’s a pity.”

     

    Applying the model

    As the U.S. steps up its efforts to rein in kleptocrats many challenges remain. In the mobile phone bribery case, Uzbekistan has argued the $850 million should be returned unconditionally since it arrested individuals in connection with the bribery scheme.

    If the U.S. prevails it will need to find a way to return the money while dealing with the same officials. There have been some discussions about following the Bota model, but the Uzbek case is of a bigger magnitude.

    “Whether a Bota foundation arrangement is remotely feasible in a country as repressive and corrupt as Uzbekistan is truly a serious question that everyone is asking and scratching their heads about,” said Ken Hurwitz, head of the Open Society Justice Initiative’s anti-corruption legal work.

    Some question whether prosecutors should be in the business of collecting money if they do not have clear pathways to return it. But others say patience is needed.

    “For one thing [the DoJ has] only been making a serious effort for a few decades in creating what is in effect a new area of law,” Hurwitz said. “There is a huge learning curve. We’re not there yet but when there is a critical mass of such cases then there becomes a deterrent effect,” he added.

  • Buhari using ‘corrupt EFCC to fight corruption’

    Buhari using ‘corrupt EFCC to fight corruption’

    Ekiti State Governor Ayodele Fayose has alleged that President Muhammadu Buhari “is using a corrupt Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) to stamp out corruption in Nigeria”.

    He insisted that the President must start the corruption fight from his party, the All Progressives Congress (APC) as well as his immediate aides.

    “EFCC opinions remain their opinions and if they are so sure of whatever information they have, they should go to court and stop subjecting Nigerians to media trial. No amount of media trial from the same elements that orchestrated my removal in 2006 can erode my popularity among Ekiti people,” the governor said.

    Fayose said any property that might be linked to him or his company was bought legitimately and his properties were duly declared in his assets declaration form.

    He insisted that sources of such funds were not illicit.

    The governor, who spoke through a statement issued by his Special Assistant on Public Communications and New Media, Lere Olayinka, said: “As a promising candidate of my party, I cannot stop Nigerians from supporting my election like every other candidate of other political, including President Buhari,” Fayose said.

    He claimed that since the money he got for his election was from legitimate sources and not from the Office of the National Security Adviser

    (ONSA) as being alleged, how the money was spent remained his own business and not that of anyone.

    The governor debunked the allegation by the EFCC that he received bribe from contractors in Ekiti, saying: “If they have anything against me, they should keep their gun powder dry.

    “Because in 2006, when they took me to court, their allegations crumbled like pack of cards because court decisions are founded on facts and law, and not on media trial as being done by the EFCC as tele-guided by the All Progressives Congress (APC) in their desperation to set the people against me, knowing that they are not on ground.”

    He added: “Having failed to buy the conscience of Ekiti House of Assembly members, the APC people have become increasingly afraid of

    1. The agencies of the Federal Government should know that no matter how hard they try, Ekiti electorate will not be deceived by their blackmail and media trial.

    “The EFCC should be told in clear terms that this is 2016 and not 2006 when impeachment notices against governors were signed on the table of EFCC operatives. Those who are tele-guiding the EFCC now should also be reminded that they did more than what they are doing now in 2006, yet I was overwhelmingly voted for by the Ekiti people eight years after the orchestrated impeachment, which the Supreme Court declared illegal.”

    He maintained that he would continue to speak his mind on issues affecting Nigerians and can never be cowed.

    “Nigerians are suffering. States can no longer pay workers salary, a litre of kerosene is now N220,  a bag of rice is now N20,000 and some people will sit in Presidential Villa and expect that all of us should keep silent?  That’s not possible!

    “No amount of media trial by agents of the Buhari-led APC government will make me to stop baring my mind on the cluelessness of the Federal Government,” Fayose vowed.

  • Lawmaker calls for redoubling of effort in war against corruption

    A member of the Lagos state House of Assembly, Hon. Adedamola Richard Kasunmu, has said that though President Muhammadu Buhari’s war against corruption has been total and fierce, there is need to redouble effort and do more in order to get to the ‘tap root’ of corruption.

    The lawmaker who represents Ikeja 2 constituency and a first timer stated this when a delegation of the Christian Coalition Against Corruption (CCAC) led by its president, Dr. Francis Shopekan gave him the ‘Excellent Leaders Award’ in his office at the Assembly complex on Friday.

    Kasunmu who pointed that what has been seen and heard yet is just a tip of the iceberg said while Nigerians need to thank God for bringing Buhari and Asiwaju Bola Tinubu as the vehicle of change, but that the fight against corruption requires the cooperation and collaboration of everybody as being demonstrated by CCAC.

    He said, “so far so good, President Buhari’s war against corruption has been total, purposeful and fierce, yet what we are seeing is just a tip of the iceberg. We are yet to get to the tap root of corruption. What this simply means is that we need to double our effort and do more, if we are to make any meaningful impact.

    “The current economic challenge our country is facing is as a result of the mindless looting and reckless corruption that took place under the last administration.”

  • Corruption: Group urges FG to publish names of looters

    The Centre for the Vulnerable and the Underprivileged (CENTREP), has called on the Federal Government to publish the names of looters alongside the amount recovered from them.

    The Executive Director of the organization, Mr Oghenejabor Ikimi, made the call in a signed press statement made available to the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) on Tuesday in Warri.

    Ikimi said that the publication would not only engender transparency, it would also boost the confidence of the people in the anti-corruption policy of the government.

    According to the Warri-based lawyer, the publication would also discourage others from indulging in corruption.

    “Publishing names of looters side by side the various currencies of monies recovered from them will go a long way to deter other serving public office holders presently engaged in the social vice of looting our public treasury.

    “CENTREP is of the view that non release of the names of looters side by side their loots will create the impression that the government has something to hide,’’ he said.

    Ikimi, said that since the treasury looters were not being prosecuted in the Law Courts, it was expedient that their names and the amount stolen were published to strengthen the anti-corruption drive.

  • ‘Blame religious leaders for corruption in Nigeria’

    Professors of Islamic and Arabic Studies, Lanre Badmus and Hamzat Abdulraheem have blamed religious leaders  for not discouraging corrupt public holders by allegedly accepting gifts from them.

    The duo told The Nation in Ilorin, the Kwara state capital at the sideline of a Ramadan lecture organized by Managing Partner of Abdulrauf Jimoh and Co, Alhaji Muideen Obanimomo.

    Prof Badmus, who is the Dean of Post Graduate School, University of Ilorin (UNILORIN), said that “religious leaders have not helped matters. They know the source of corruption. If corrupt people are coming with gifts and our religious leaders can be courageous to reject them, this will minimize corruption among the leaders we have in the society. So we appeal to our religious leaders to demonstrate courage and call a spade by its name and not to parry with the leaders that are devastating the people under them.”

    He went on: “In Nigeria today, there is no doubt that we are facing the twin problems of corruption as well as poverty. Both problems have defied solution. The government has been trying the very best, but the more the government tries the more biting the two problems are. All over the place people are complaining of one thing or the other.

    “The only thing we can do is to try to mobilize ourselves and look at the Islamic provisions on how to eliminate poverty; on how to curb corruption. Every human has corruption tendency in him. But in the spirit of Ramadan, we are being taught to have self-control over our urge, our inordinate ambition and over our desire to appropriate or misappropriate what is supposed to be in our care for public good.

    “What is causing the rising wave corruption is lack of patriotism and lack of God’s consciousness on the part of the Nigerian people. Forget about the differences in religions; that is Christianity and Islam. There is no religion that encourages corruption and injustice, but we perpetrate the two in Nigeria.

    “We are more godly when we are inside the churches and mosques, but when get to the public glare we tend to keep God away from our lives. And we seem to have the feeling, although wrongly, that we are independent and that we can do and undo; as if God is not watching every one of us. As we are not going to die; people are amassing wealth when they die that is the end of it.”

    Prof Abdulraheem who teaches at the Kwara state University (KWASU) said that “I cannot say that they have played serious role; though they preach but some of them don’t really follow what that they say. What is expected from religious leaders is for them to have the courage to tell the truth to whoever is involved in any type of corruption.

    “My advice to government is to let social justice prevail. People should feel well treated and catered for. Poverty should be wiped off, because as long as we have poverty in the society it will be difficult to fight corruption. Poverty is a major source of corruption. If people have fear of the unknown they tend to enrich themselves illegitimately. If there is provision for everybody and everybody gets what is due to him, I think through that way corruption would be eliminated.”

  • Cleric urges Nigerians to support Buhari on corruption war

    Fiery social critic, Reverend (Dr) Moses Iloh, the General Overseer of the Soul Winners Chapel,Ebute –Meta, has called on Nigerians to give unflinching support to President Muhammadu Buhari in his war against corruption.

    He said the war “is against the army of corrupt ones who are highly sophisticated, influential, powerful and stupendously wealthy”.

    “They are so callous, ruthless and insensitive to the plight of the nation and the down-trodden that they will destroy any perceived obstacles in their way. They are of the devil because the  mission of the devil is to steal, kill and destroy.

    “It is, therefore, not surprising that Satan, through his cohorts, has perpetrated a viciously orchestrated vandalisation and brigandage over our national resources, weakening the economy, and now desperate to destroy Nigeria”, Iloh said.

    He emphasized the need for Nigerians, irrespective of class, tribe and religion, to encourage the president in his current reformation drive, aimed at lifting the nation to greater heights.

    Iloh, an ex-labour leader, said Nigerians should eschew every temptation by any of their disgruntled leaders to use them against the constituted authority.

    “This is a golden opportunity for Nigerians, particularly the down-trodden, to let it be recorded that they backed a president, divinely ordained for Nigeria, to reform it and redeem it from the vitriolic fang of corruption and rapacious depredation of the national soul,” he said.

  • CORRUPTION: Lessons Alhaji thought me…

    There are some men you come across in the course of life’s journey you wished had fathered you. Not because by the slightest of stretch, you disavow your paternity or you would rush to trade places; no.

    The reason is that as you forge character and mindsets in the searing crucibles of boyhood, adulthood and even manhood, precepts change rapidly and old perceptions are tweaked by new realities. So you are likely to come across men who are imbued with those extra qualities and impetuses which you desire and admire. And are bound to leave live-long imprints on your life.

    Such is the case of Alhaji. He is a man of awesome stature and presence. Towering above six feet and sturdy with it, he is a man of few words. He is laconic in the manner of a typical British middleclass gentleman. This perhaps arises from his long association and training from them.

    He used to be agonizingly fastidious and methodical with work – any size of work he had to do or gave you to do. He was thorough to the point of pain. For instance, he would rework an address until you, his aide get dizzy. Indeed, he worked like a clock, if not better.

    He reached the pinnacle of his career rising to be the chief executive of a bank as he seemed to have been destined to be by the sheer force of his work ethic and trove of intellect.

    It was at this point I served as his personal aide and media manager (of the bank) about 16 years ago. Alhaji thought me about the back-breaking discipline of work: the nullity of efforts without results and even the futility of results that fall short of desired targets – and yet again, all the things in-between.

    One of those days, I had informed him I had to leave the appointment as a bank manager to edit a new national newspaper. He did not initially understand why anyone would  prefer the turbulent world of journalism in Nigeria to the settled and pristine house of mammon where life is sunny and living paved in cobblestones.

    After many days when it was obvious that I really had to go, he gave me some unforgettable parting shots which have remained with me like precious pearls. From hindsight now, I think Alhaji must have notice the smoke of idealism billowing above the head of the heady young man seated before him.

    And he said to me, changing a system takes time, it is a long, painstaking and methodical effort. Things have gone bad over a long time and it will take some time to fix. I know you and your friend (Sully) are burning with the zeal to change the world but it has to be a gradual process.

    Then he dropped this clanger: “Corruption for instance, is like a forty-foot tanker laden with fuel and you have to turn it around a narrow roundabout. A wise driver must do it slowly, patiently and methodically. If he gets impatient and tries to do it hastily; of course the tanker will tip over and its combustible cargo would go up in flames and consume the entire neighbourhood including the driver.”

    This was in 2003, over 13 years ago during the reign of President Olusegun Obasanjo when corruption ravaged the land and Transparency International consistently consigned Nigeria among the league of bandit nations.

     

    New IGP and injustice against Ndigbo

    Many readers of this column will jump to the conclusion that one raises this matter of inequity because one is Igbo. But justice has no tribe. This is not the first time this matter of PMB’s injustice to Ndigbo will come up here and it won’t be the last it seems.

    A new Inspector-General of Police has been appointed concluding PMB’s rout of Ndigbo from the nation’s security establishments. This has never happened before.

    At the National Security Council meetings where crucial life and death decisions are taken, Ndigbo are not represented. This is a dangerous precedent. For a group that represents at least one quarter of the country, this is deliberate exclusionism that cannot be explained.

    We say this because in a few years hence, if power changes hands and the Northwest or Northeast is excluded in this manner, we all would have to condemn it as unjust. It is actions like these that nation fracture nations and sow seeds of perpetual discord.

    The danger of this seeming small matter of today will germinate into a big iroko tree many years after.

    Meanwhile, I congratulate the new acting IGP, Mr. Ibrahim Idris.

     

  • UN lauds FG’s efforts to eliminate corruption at ports

    UN lauds FG’s efforts to eliminate corruption at ports

    The Country Director, United Nations Development Programme (UNDP), Abuja, Dr Pa Lamin Beyai, said that corruption undermined human development, democracy and reduced access to public services by diverting public resources for private gains.

    Beyai made said this in a message to a public launch of Standard Operating Procedures (SOPs) for Port agencies and Port Service Support Portal (PSSP) held on Thursday in Abuja to eliminate corruption at ports.

    The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports that Beyai was represented by the Peace Development Advisor of UNDP, Dr Takwa Zebulon.

    Beyai said that when public money was stolen for private gain, it meant fewer resources to build schools, hospitals, roads and water treatment facilities.

    “When foreign aid is diverted into private bank accounts, major infrastructure projects come to a halt. Corruption enables fake or substandard medicines to be dumped in the market and hazardous wastes to be dumped in landfill sites and in oceans.

    “ First as part of our mandate as encapsulated in United Nations Development Assistance Framework (UNDAF) 2014-2017 to strengthen public accountability mechanisms through the conduct of corruption risk assessment.

    “UNDP is glad to have been part of this process from inception. We believe that with effective system and an enabling environment, Nigeria’s corruption perception index can improve positively.

    “Nigerian Ports will not only render statutory services, but become the preferred hub for the sub-region,’’ the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) quotes Beyai as saying.

    He said that an efficient and effective port sector would positively contribute to the ease of doing business, adding that it could be a good source of revenue and act as a stimulant for the diversification of the economy.

    Beyai, however, commended the efforts of the Ports Steering Committee who had worked tirelessly since the launch of the Corruption Risk Assessment Report (CRA) in 2013.

    He said that without the committee’s commitment, the CRA report on the Port Sectors would have been consigned to the archive.

    Beyai said that UNDP would, therefore, look forward to seeing the maximum utilisation of the portal and the SOPs to make Nigerian ports user-friendly.

    Also the Ambassador of Denmark, Mr Torben Bettermann, commended the Nigerian government and the minister of transportation for performing an outstanding work by trying to eradicate corruption.

    Bettermann said that Denmark was an active player in corruption campaign in Nigeria.

    Also speaking the Head, Technical Unit on Government and Anti-Corruption Reform (TUGAR), Ms Lilian Ekeanyanwu, said that a Research, Monitoring and Evaluation unit was set up by government to respond to the critical needs for a rigorous approach to policy making.

    Ekeanyanwu, who was represented by Mrs Jane Onwumere, said that TUGAR dealt with policy making based on empirical data collection and analysis.

    She said that TUGAR had supported the anti-corruption agenda with knowledge products by connecting the dots and connecting different actors to build synergy.

    “We are proud today that this is our baby and that the corruption Risk Assessment Project that is our brainchild has come to frution.

    “We will continue to monitor the effectiveness of this process to ensure that it achieves the desired objectives,’’ NAN quotes Ekeanyanwu as saying.

    The Acting Director-General, Bureau of Public Procurement (BPP), Mr Ahmed Abdul, said that launching of the SOP’s and PSSP was the climax of a four-year journey which started in 2012.

    Abdul said that some agencies such as; TUGAR, BPP, UNDP and Independent Corrupt and Anti-Corruption Reform Crime Commission (ICPC) were at the forefront of Corruption Risk Assessment (CRA) project and pilot exercise in Nigeria.

    He said that the BPP was also in Ports CRA exercise and the development of SOP.

    Abdul said that BPP would continue in its determination to deliver its mandate of ensuring transparency, efficiency and competitiveness in government business.

    He said that CRA was aimed at strengthening preventive mechanisms by identifying areas that were prone to corruption.

    Abdul said that with collective collaboration with stakeholders as well as develop plan to strengthen transparency and accountability service delivery would be enhanced.

  • ‘Osuwon Omoluabi’: Solution to cultural corruption

    After months of serene emptiness and bewilderment occasioned by economic adversity, the Nelson Mandela Freedom Park, Osogbo came alive, abuzz with people attending the epoch-making launch of “Osuwon Omoluabi”-the re-introduction of the culture of Standard Weights and Measures as the basis of commodity sales transactions after many years of guesswork purchasing. This Culture-changing event consistent with the vision enunciated by Governor Rauf Aregbesola in his famous “Six-Point Integral Action Plan” for the State’s accelerated and orderly development drew a large crowd of residents determined to put behind the hard times and embark on the match toward expected economic recovery. The official launch on the 15th of June 2016 of “Osuwon Omoluabi” (standardised, calibrated weighing Scale) the compulsory use of which will ensure that buyers get value-for-money in these lean times. With this important step toward equity, weights and measures of quantities of goods sold and bought in markets of Osun, whether solid or liquid, bulk and retail commodities can now be verified and uniformity of standard ensured throughout the State. The Introduction and use of 40,000 units of “Osuwon Omoluabi” in all markets in Osun will eliminate sharp practices, haggling and quarreling, introduce uniformity and make equivalent quantities of goods sold predictable thus ending the short-changing of buyers while ensuring that sellers get a fair return on their sales. This will reinforce State Government’s drive for honesty and integrity in matters of trade and attract more buyers to the State, thus reinforcing the Osun Brand reputation. Thus the State Government’s insistence on compulsory usage of this Scale in all markets marks a turning point in the life of the people of Osun, and indeed the South West of Nigeria. It is a resolute pursuit of Vision and conviction. As it is often said, in lean times, look ahead for the coming prosperity!

    Underdeveloped societies are characterized by illiteracy, inability to measure or count with accuracy, and so we do not measure the amount of goods bought but merely guess, we do not measure work done but we pay the worker based on claims and assumption that ‘work has been done’; we do not go by the clock but we awake and say ‘I arrived very early, I swear’ simply because the Sun was not yet shining! Twenty persons all arrive in an Office and sign the same moment of time the same minute! We buy food in a restaurant, meat in the market, but nobody is sure what he is actually paying for, and unless you insist, the petrol attendant would not bother to give you your change, and somehow we go home taking it all as ‘normal’ until we are overwhelmed by bills from unverified services, goods not bought but that must be paid for, including ‘estimated electricity consumption’ based on doubtable tariffs. There is no clocking in and out to verify and nobody knows how much work was done to worth the day’s pay but all expect to be paid and all get extra bonus, allowances and even promotion while productivity is actually dropping and the wage bills are rising!

    Yorubaland had an ancient practice of ensuring through counting that a fixed number of pieces of goods equivalent to One Penny was used as the basis of sales transactions of food items but it fell into disuse long ago and no decent replacement was found for this reliable age-old system. This system was so effective that it ensured that even when a seller was absent, goods could be bought by simply placing a Penny coin next to the sample of goods displayed for sale and the goods collected. Both the buyer and seller were assured of a fair deal through the use of this ‘comparator measurement and pricing system’. The buyer could collect the quantity of goods desired by simply placing the monetary equivalent side-by-side whatever quantity he/she wanted. The owner of the wares simply picked up the Penny coins paid and placed on the goods counter the next day, intact! That was the pristine, safe and secure society that predated modern Nigeria. This pre-existing tradition was jettisoned with the embrace of a new culture of capitalism: haggling and negotiating prices of goods probably as the result of the rise of a new elite of white collar workers who were seen to have plenty of money from the Government, without having to do the back breaking work of farming, and the mixing of various ethnic groups due to migration. This old tradition fell out of use as traders tried to make more money from this ‘special set people’ whom they perceived as having more money in their pockets than the ordinary Native. These people showed a different kind of buyer behaviour with their regular monthly visit en-masse to the markets for purchases that enabled them haggle and pressure the farmer-salesmen. Come every month each seller attempted to make more money from them while the buyers naturally would press the traders to sell for less. As it is well known, what cannot be measured cannot be managed; these transactions favoured the clever and more psychological prepared seller but created a massive problem of standards and integrity which we now live with and has become a break on our development. It has created a vicious circle of exploitation, resistance and unpredictability where people cannot plan their expenditure with reasonable assurance, and this gradually led to pervasive corruption and integrity gradually vacated the markets and this erosion eventually crept into all transactions. People struggled to make ends meet and they tried to compensate themselves at the expense of others, firstly, the unknown and un-initiated stranger, non-natives, finally the natives turned on one another, destroying the common trust. Manipulation, deceit and making money at all cost without any regard for the interest of others eroded the common trust among Nigerians-and displaced the tradition of consistency, measurement, integrity and management.

    The haggling tradition which seems to have been embraced first by the coastal Yoruba and it eventually spread and eliminated the system of counting of standard pieces in the hinterland, the result of this displacement of tradition often meant that the hinterland traders were cheated by their exposed countrymen and women from the cities. They in turn have learnt to be clever by deploying all strategies to get the better of the deal, through cheating: with false bottom measuring pans and baskets, doubling and tripling of prices so that the buyer bargained downward without any reference price, etc. In colonial times, Produce Buyers and Agents insisted on buying weighed goods at a fixed price per unit of weight and meat was sold based on weight on a scale incity markets; some would in the process tamper with the scale which was barely understood by the illiterate farmers, and who in turn loaded the bulk goods with sand and pebbles to gain extra weight for more cash. And now, water and air are pumped into meat to boost the weight for unsuspecting buyers! Everyone has learnt to cheat, and to make matters worse, swear and curse in the God’s Holy Name to back up falsehood! This is how far we have gone in creating a vicious circle of insidious criminality and laid the foundation and cultural roots of corruption, dishonesty and inefficiency that has plagued modern Nigeria and held it down like a millstone in matters big and small.

    The launch of “Osuwon Omoluabi” at the beginning of the 2016 Ramadan fasting when all Muslims are enjoined to embrace the spirit of repentance, sacrifice and piety, the government’s message that business transactions should be done with honesty and integrity should sink deep into hearts and minds, just as the Holy Quran enjoins “And give full measure when you measure, and weigh with even balance, that is good and the best interpretation”- Quran 17 vs 35. Christians are in like manner reminded that “a false balance is an abomination to the Lord: but a just weight is his delight-Proverbs 11 vs 1. Now is the right time to end the perverse tradition of deceitful bargaining in our daily life, a throw-back to the age of the Barter Trade with all its disadvantages and embrace a new era of progress when we can be confident that transactions come with integrity because the standards of measurement and weights are the same everywhere.

    The pervasive habit of dishonesty and cheating in Nigeria is well known and a  daily habit- at home, on the streets, on the road, in the market, in offices, schools and even in places of religious worship. No amount of preaching is able to deal with the problem because habits are more caught than taught, and humans are programmed by example, not precepts. To change this nationally damaging habit, there is a need to institute and enforce the strict use of Standards, Weights and Measures, and enforce price control for all goods traded in Nigeria, imported and locally made. All things are learnt and remain only by habit.  We can reprogramme the behavior of Nigerians only when we cultivate and enforce new habits of honesty, integrity, love and care for our neighbours. Introducing standards, weights and measures into daily transactions will help to educate our people and practically translate the theoretical mensuration mathematics taught in schools to daily life realities. Settling the issue of quantitative integrity will free us to concentrate on the more substantial issue of Quality, the final basis of integrity on our way to getting rid of substandard products that are soon spoilt and end up as pollutants and litters everywhere in Nigeria causing us yet unknown and un-estimated harm to our health, environment and economy. Keeping to the strict use of Standards, Weights and Measures will enable citizens get value for money and help the Naira to appreciate in value over time as Nigeria and Nigerians get used to this new way of life and acquire a new image and reputation of being trustworthy partners.

    By instigating and initiating this effort, the Ministry of Industries, Commerce, Cooperatives and Empowerment of the State of Osun has pioneered a major grassroots effort to change the thinking of Nigeria by first changing our deeply ingrained habits that is what Ogbeni Rauf Aregbesola originally set out to do with the Osun Youth Empowerment (OYES) Programme, whose cadets are in fact the main instruments for enforcement and education on the use of the new Omoluabi Scale. It is a longer-lasting and deeper sinking way to deal with the problem of endemic corruption in Nigeria, to prevent another generation from the evil.

    • Daniyan, an engineer, sent this piece from Osogbo.