Tag: corruption

  • Inyama carpets NRA on corruption, bad officiating

    Inyama carpets NRA on corruption, bad officiating

    Nigeria National League boss, Emeka Inyama has cried out that the Nigeria Referee Association are the one killing the game of football in the Nigerian leagues.

    The Nigeria Football Federation Board member told SportingLife shortly after NNL’s Board meeting held at the NNL’s Secretariat in Abuja yesterday that if the Nigerian leagues are to be transformed and function well the men of the whistle should have a change of behavior andn rescue the league by shunning bribes from club officials and officiate well.

    “So it is very wrong for Ahmed Maude (President of Nigeria Referee Association) to have alleged that poor remuneration as regards the payment of N14, 000 indemnities of the referees are responsible for corruption among the referees.

    “This is not the first time we are paying this sum of money. The question is who are those bribering the referees? Is it Emeka Inyama? Who are these clubs and are they the one bribering the referees?

    “I went on air last month to say that the problem of our league is referees. A top former referee official wrote me a letter and said I shouldn’t have said so. We shouldn’t support this because a corrupt person is a corrupt person. What of the billionaires and still stealing money. Is it because they are getting a little? That is not true.

    “So it is wrong for Maude to have said that. Because of the amount that it is not much we have encouraged neighbourhood officiating. So there is no referee that goes from Kwara to Maiduguri. For instance Akwa Ibom referee handles a match in Umuahia because it is close by. They don’t pay fro accommodation and feeding. So the money we pay is just allowance. We have encouraged them to have their jobs because this refereeing is just a passion and hobby.

    “A corruption does not have to do with the amount or the quantity. In any case if there is anybody that inducing corruption in the league all clubs must look at themselves. When we held a seminar I begged and begged that clubs should stop giving bribes to referees. If club A and club B refuses to give bribes to referees, we are surely going to witness fair officiating in our leagues.

    “We do not appoint referees and we do not also discipline them. We don’t appoint match commissioners ands we don’t also discipline them. Can’t you guys have pity on us and see how difficult it is to run a good league in this circumstance. You will say this referee has done badly and before two weeks you will see same referee handling another match after we have done a report that he should be dropped.

    “The league will only work 100 percent when the league body has a very big say in the appointment and punishment of referees. For control purposes it may not be given to us otherwise we will be accused of fixing referees and match commissioners. But let us have representatives in these committees for the sake of balance and information. That is the way to go” Inyama advised.

  • Corruption rising in Nigeria, says Ribadu

    THE former chairman of the Economic and Financial Crime Commission (EFCC), Mallam Nuhu Ribadu, has said corruption is on the rise in the country.

    He said the Federal Government was undermining anti-corruption war.

    Ribadu spoke in Lagos at the weekend during a public lecture organised by the University of Lagos (UNILAG) Muslim Alumni Association.

    He said the government has not built on anti corruption foundations that the previous government left behind.

    Ribadu said: “So many corrupt people get away with their acts, because of their relationships with heads of institutions that ought to counter or expose their abuse of office. Some convicts are being granted state pardon, thereby rubbishing the whole effort at corruption. These practices have turned corruption into a sort of culturally-or ethically-accepted trend. The corruption we are fighting can be won, if the leader shows the way all the other people would follow but, when the leader takes the other way, we are in a problem.

    “Before the coming of EFCC in 2003, there were very few high-profile cases of corruption that were successfully prosecuted. EFCC’s interventions led us into various networks that have previously enjoyed impunity and notoriety, from the internet scams that dent the image of the country to abuse of office at private and public sectors.”

    Ribadu said only an incorruptible leader ready to subject his cronies to processes of the law, in case of infringement, could lead the nation against corruption.”

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

  • One nation bound in corruption

    SIR: Everybody talks about corruption. Everybody laments the level of corruption

    in the country. One way or the other — consciously or unconsciously, directly or indirectly — everybody fuels corruption. We pretend to fight corruption. Sadly, everybody is in trouble.

    One doesn’t have to be a pessimist to realize that we’re all in big trouble. Even though corruption hurts the poor disproportionately, the rich are not immune to the pains and sorrows that accompany endemic corruption.

    Corruption is a virus eating away at the very fabric of society. By subterfuge, it destroys institutions and values that contradict its nature. Corruption ruins families and communities. Corruption pollutes religions of love and peace with greed and violence. Corruption turns centres of learning into epicentres of decadence. Corruption converts the judiciary from the temple of justice into a fortress for corruption itself. Corruption substitutes the virtue of honesty with the culture of impunity. Corruption prefers the cacophony of sycophancy to the strength of moral character. Corruption jettisons the tradition of meritocracy but embraces the celebration of mediocrity. Corruption turns the world upside down, for instance, by associating celebrity with indecency; and so on.

    But who is really fighting the monster that is threatening our existence? Is it the political class that the revered Nobel Laureate Wole Soyinka aptly summed up as “The very quagmire of corruption, nurtured on corruption, sustained by corruption and dependent on corruption for its very survival”? Or, the public-private partners that occupy strategic positions in the web of corruption! Could it be the impoverished citizens who have common enemies to fight against, but are being knocked down by ignorance and deeply divided by forces stronger than the bonds of brotherhood? Maybe, the endangered species in our midst whose wisdom and genuine voices are eternally being despised!

    Corruption! We have gone abysmally down this perilous way. But why has it become so difficult to halt the country’s slide into destruction? Are we hopeless as a people?

    Whereas most of our woes are attributable to corruption, bad leadership — corruption’s closest ally — is the main culprit. Bad leadership fuels corruption, and every attempt to confront corruption is neutralized by bad leadership, and vice versa.

    At the centre of corruption is the system that breeds bad leaders. This notorious system in the remote past had irreversibly set in motion a chain reaction leading to a self-propagating, self-amplifying and self-sustaining series of crises. That explains why we have been busy all along chasing shadows and hopelessly treating mere symptoms of an ailment whose root is continuously been nourished by a pool of structural defects.

    The episodes in our “fight” against corruption in the last one year—let’s pretend we have short memories—including the presidential pardon for Diepreye Alamieyeseigha, a former Bayelsa State governor—more and more people, even born optimists, are beginning to doubt the possibility of Nigeria ever winning this battle.

    Corruption in Nigeria is like a cancer in its advanced stage. And as we watch the disease run its course, may God have mercy on our souls.

     

    • John Adebisi

    Abuja, FCT

  • Petrodollar fuelling corruption in Nigeria, say UK, UN officials

    Petrodollar fuelling corruption in Nigeria, say UK, UN officials

    Revenue from the oil and gas sector has been identified as the cause of corruption and conflicts in Nigeria.

    This conclusion was drawn by several key speakers including the United Kingdom Deputy High Commissioner in Nigeria, Mr. Peter Carter and Head of the United Nation’s Global Compact (UNGC), Ms. Olajobi Makinwa, at a dialogue on the extractive industry held in Port Harcourt, Rivers State, yesterday.

    Speakers at the one-day workshop, entitled: ‘Extractive Industry Dialogue on Corruption,’ organised by the Nigerian Economic Summit Group (NESG) in collaboration with the UNGC, urged Nigerians to exploit existing legislatures, including the Freedom of Information Act to demand answers on revenue and expenditure from their government.

    Mr. Carter noted that oil and gas mining can deliver transformational change, not only in Nigeria, but also all over the world, if revenues are judiciously utilised for the good of the people.

    He said: “Last year, Nigeria’s oil export is over total net aids to the whole of Sub-Saharan Africa. “Giving information about the sale and purchase of these valuable natural resources is vital to ensure that they are properly managed and to build open economies and society.

    “As we all know today, if people can see how much their governments receive from selling the resources that rightly belong to them, they can question how that money is being spent.”

    Ms. Makinwa, Head, Transparency and Anti-Corruption Initiatives of the UNGC, said: “Huge revenues from these industries have often fuelled corruption, economic stagnation, inequality, conflict and so on.”

    She lamented that while oil multinational companies continue to record global profits, governments in resource-rich nations, such as Nigeria struggle to stay solvent.

    “Discrepancies in reporting has led to host governments (including many African countries) not receiving full payment from the extractive and logging industries operating in their territories.

    “Many resource-rich countries are not receiving benefits from the extraction of their natural resources; wealth is not distributed evenly and local citizens are not feeling the positive and developmental impact from foreign investment in the extractive industry.”

    In his presentation, entitled: ‘Global Rulers on Corporate Disclosure in Payments/to Governments in the Hydrocarbon Industry: How Much Compliance?’ Mr. Ledum Mitee, Chairman of the Nigerian Extractive Industry Transparency Initiative (NEITI), noted that global rules alone cannot stamp out corruption in the sector.

    He said for global legislations to be successful, local laws and system must cooperate with them and go ahead to deal with local circumstances.

    The Chairman of the NESG, Mr. Foluso Phillips, said the oil industry is prime to transparency, adding: “It is the root of a lot of things we express dissatisfaction with as long as corruption is concerned.”

  • CJN to extend anti-corruption effort to non-judges

    CJN to extend anti-corruption effort to non-judges

    The Chief Justice of Nigeria, Justice Aloma Mukhtar, has pledged to extend the ongoing sanitisation process in the judiciary beyond judicial officers, to include court support staff.

    The CJN warned court support staff to desist from unethical and corrupt conduct because she will not hesitate to punish anyone found wanting.

    She urged them to abide by the code of conduct for court employees.

    Justice Mukhtar spoke in Abuja on Monday at the opening session of a workshop for judicial librarians.

    The workshop, organised by the National Judicial Institute (NJI), had as its theme: “The challenges facing court librarians in information and communication technology age.”

    The CJN also regretted the impact of poor funding on the quality of services rendered by the nation’s court system.

    She called for enhanced funding and continuous human capacity development to enable the nation’s court attain the level of competence and effectiveness experienced in developed climes.

    “Let me quickly add that the fight against corruption in the judiciary is not only targeted at the judicial officers, by also against any staff of the judiciary, who finds luxury or convenience in engaging in corrupt practices or engaged in any other unwholesome conduct.

    “As a judicial staff, you are bound by the code of conduct for court employees. Therefore, if any of you compromises himself or contravenes the code of conduct, he/she will face the full consequences of his or her action.

    “Any judicial staff that works hard and conducts himself well will be rewarded, but deviant, fraudulent and indolent ones may become irrelevant in our drive for a virile judicial system,” the CJN said.

     

     

  • The anti-corruption war in the Judiciary: How far? How well?

    At that juncture both Messrs Segun Oni and Olagunsoye Oyinlola whose elections as governors of Ekiti and Osun states respectively had been annulled by the Court of Appeal alleged that Justice Salami was in constant telephone conversation with leaders and lawyers of the Action Congress of Nigeria during the hearing of some election petitions. The National Judicial Council also decided to investigate the grave allegations of both politicians. Not convinced that the National Judicial Council would examine the matter in a dispassionate manner the Nigerian Bar Association resolved to set up its own panel of inquiry to investigate the roles of all the dramatis personae including its own members in the Sokoto governorship election petition saga.

    The reports of the NJC and the NBA were mired in controversies. While the CJN was exonerated by the NJC Justice Salami was asked to tender apology for lying on oath even though it was found that the CJN actually asked Justice Salami to change the panel that had concluded the hearing of the appeal. But as far as the NJC was concerned the CJN interfered in the case in the interest of the

    judiciary! On its own part the NBA exonerated Justice Salami, indicted the CJN and some legal practitioners. Upon the retirement of Justice Katsina-Alu CJN the matter was revisited by the NJC which

    turned round to exonerate Justice Salami, lifted his suspension and decided to recall him. However, President Jonathan has refused to allow him to resume duties as the President of the Court of Appeal on the ground that the matter is pending in court. Although the matter has been left for judicial determination by the court the crisis has done incalculable damage to the image of the Nigerian judiciary.

    Indeed, it has been said that the Katsina-Alu/Salami imbroglio is partly responsible for the increasing wave of judicial corruption in the country in the last couple of years. All manners of ex parte orders are issued by the judges while judgments totally devoid of justice are handed down by judges. Men and women of means and influence charged with theft of billions of Naira are either freed or convicted and asked to pay ridiculous low fines. The Nigerian judiciary recently became a butt of jokes before the international community when a former governor who was discharged by the Federal High Court was convicted and sentenced to a 14-year jail term by a judge in the United Kingdom on the same evidence.

    It was therefore not surprising at the swearing-in-ceremony of the Honourable Justice Musdapha, as the Chief Justice of Nigeria on September 27, 2011, when President Goodluck Jonathan expressed concern over the “widespread perception of a growing crisis of integrity in the judiciary”. While charging the newly appointed Chief Justice to address the crisis of confidence in the judiciary the President pointed out that “A partisan judge compromises his or her oath of office and acts unfairly. A corrupt judge disgraces the Bench on which he or she sits and the title that he or she wears”

    In several public statements thereafter, the Honourable Justice Musdapher condemned judicial corruption, delay in the administration of justice, criticized plea bargain and made recommendations for judicial reforms. His Lordship also intervened to stop the manipulation of the Court of Appeal in some election matters. A Federal High Court judge was directed by the Chief Justice to reverse an ex parte order which he had granted restraining Independent National Electoral Commission from conducting the governorship election in Cross River State. The illegal ex parte order was issued on the eve of the said election.

    The Emergence of Justice

    Aloma- Muktar (CJN)

     

    I first met the Honourable Justice Maryam Aloma Muktar as a High Court Judge in Kano in 1984. My client, a trade union had sued a powerful Lebanese company in the Kano State High Court for illegally withholding the check dues deducted from the wages of all the workers in its employment. The company which had boasted that it had the judiciary in its pocket was taken aback when the trial judge, Justice Muktar granted the reliefs sought by the plaintiff and ordered the company to refund and pay to the union the check off dues which it had illegally withheld.

     

     

     

     

    Since then I have watched the judge from afar and followed her impeccable judicial carrier. In a country where judicial corruption has been virtually institutionalised I make bold to say that Justice Muktar has never been associated with corrupt practices or any form of abuse of office. She is conservative but ready to take a radical stand in defence of the rule of law. She is quiet but aggressive in dealing with cases of corruption.

    Her decision to team up with Adesola Oguntade JSC (as he then was) and Walter Onnoghen JSC in writing powerful dissenting opinions in the controversial case of Mohammadu Buhari v Independent National Electoral Commission convinced the reactionary forces in the legal establishment that she could rock the boat if allowed to become the head of the country’ judiciary. The clean bill of health given to Justice Ayo Isa Salami, the suspended President of the Court of Appeal by a Committee of the National Judicial Council chaired by Justice Muktar was the last straw that broke the carmel’s back. A plot was therefore hatched to prevent her from becoming the Chief Justice of Nigeria.

    It would be recalled that the system had successfully refused to make her the Chief Judge of Kano State in 1987 even though she was the most qualified judge in the state judiciary at the material time. History was to repeat itself in April 2010, when the backward forces perfected the strategy to deny her the opportunity to assume the headship of the Nigerian judiciary. In a dubious move to promote her to irrelevance Justice Muktar was offered the post of the Chief Justice of The Gambia under a special bilateral arrangement between Nigeria and The Gambia.

    But she saw through the plot and rightly declined to take up the offer. Hence, in July 2012, President Goodluck Jonathan nominated Justice Aloma Muktar, as the most Senior Justice of the Supreme Court to succeed the then outgoing Chief Justice, the Honourable Justice Dahiru Musdapher.

    During the screening of the Chief Justice designate, Hon Justice Aloma Muktar by the Senate on July last year some Senators took her to task on the disturbing rate of corruption in the judiciary. Without any hesitation whatsoever, she was quick to admit that the situation “is very bad and I am saddened by it. I will try as much as possible to ensure that as for the bad eggs that are there, there will be a cleansing by the NJC based on petitions” .

    It is doubtful if the Senate members were convinced that she could muster the courage to rid the Judiciary of corruption. But based on her impressive performance at the screening session coupled with her solid credentials the entirety of the senate members unanimously confirmed her appointment. Having had promises of reforms made by political leaders and judicial officers broken in the past Nigerians took Justice Muktar’s undertaking to reform the judiciary with a pinch of salt. But since she took over the leadership of the nation’s judiciary she has repositioned the National Judicial Council to take up the urgent task of restoring confidence in the judiciary. Thus, in less 10 months of her tenure the CJN has made it clear to judges and Senior Advocates of Nigeria (SAN) that it is no longer business as usual.

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

    Disturbed by the total loss of confidence in the judiciary by Nigerians the current Chief Justice of Nigeria, Justice Aloma Muktar has resolved to take remedial steps to restore the image of the judiciary. The National Judicial Council under her leadership held an emergency meeting on February 21, 2013 to review the pending cases of judicial misconduct against some judges. At the end of its deliberations the NJC recommended the compulsory retirement of two judges namely, Justice Charles Archibong of the Federal High Court and Justice Thomas Naron of the Plateau State High Court for judicial misconduct. According to the statement issued by the NJC, Justice Thomas Naron, the Chairman of the dissolved Osun State Election Petition Tribunal was found to have regularly communicated with ex-Governor Olagunsoye Oyinlola’s counsel-Otunba Kalejaiye SAN through telephone and SMS messages while the election petition filed by Ogbeni Rauf Aregbesola was being tried by the Tribunal.

    With respect to Justice Archibong it was established that he dismissed the 26-count charge against Mr. Erastus Akingbola, former Managing Director of the defunct Intercontinental Bank without taking his plea; made caustic and reckless remarks on the competence of four Senior Advocates of Nigeria and refused to release a certified true copy of his ruling to the lawyers; convicted some PDP leaders for contempt when the contempt application was not served on them, gave judgment in a case commenced by original summons without written addresses filed by parties. Owing to such litany of errors the NJC concluded that Justice Archibong did not have any grasp of the law and procedure.

    Another judge, Okechukwu Okeke J. of the Federal High Court was given a stern warning three weeks to his retirement from the Bench. Mohammed Talba of the Federal Capital Territory High Court has been placed on 12-month suspension while the Chief Judge of the same court, Justice Lawal Hassan Gumi has opted to resign instead of waiting for the investigation of the allegations of misconduct leveled against him. The Legal Practitioners Privileges Committee headed by the Chief Justice has suspended a Senior Advocate of Nigeria sine die while the NJC has referred another one to the NBA for discipline on account of allegations of profession misconduct.

    To prevent judges from embarking on foreign trips at the expense of their judicial duties no judge can travel out of the country any longer without a written permission of the Chief Justice while judges cannot leave their stations without the authorization of the appropriate heads of courts. The NJC has warned judges to stop compromising themselves by issuing orders or giving judgments that cannot be defended on the basis of the available facts and the applicable law. With the sanctions imposed on erring judges a strong message has been sent to judges and lawyers that it is no longer business as usual. Even the corrupt cabal that took over the award of the rank of Senior Advocates of Nigeria has discovered that the game is up.

    The Chief Justice has asked judges who cannot deliver at least four judgments in a year to be prepared to call it quits with the judiciary as the nation cannot continue to keep indolent judges on the bench. She has directed that courts the sitting of courts should commence at 9 am instead of the usual practice whereby many judges walk in leisurely to court at noon without any justifiable reason. It is hoped that the heads of courts and the Nigerian Bar Association will monitor and drive the reform agenda of the Chief Justice in order to restore the confidence of the Nigerian people in the courts. It is gratifying to note that the National Disciplinary Committee of the Body of Benchers has been reactivated to deal with erring lawyers. Last week, five lawyers were removed from the roll of legal practitioners for having been convicted of sundry acts of professional misconduct. The NBA leadership under deserves commendation for this feat. It is however hoped that the NBA will beam its search light on senior lawyers who have been linked with serial violations of the rules of professional ethics.

    In a country where impunity has become the order of the day the forces of darkness that have profited maximally from the judicial rot are understandably not comfortable with the courage and determination of the Chief Justice to clean out the angean stable in the judiciary. They have therefore decided to resort to subtle blackmail with a view to turning back the hand of the clock. But having lived above board like Ceaser’s wife the Chief Justice should forge ahead with the purge which is going to enhance the image of the judiciary and lead to the restoration of the confidence of Nigerians in the institution. Since the principalities that are behind the destruction of the judiciary are stupendously rich and well connected they are going to continue to fight dirty. In other words, the CJN and the NJC should expect a sustained attack from the forces of retrogression as corruption has a way of fighting back.

    However, the NJC should strive to give adequate time and opportunity to judges accused of misconduct with a view to confronting the allegations made against them. The manner of appointment should be reviewed to prevent lawyers of questionable character or who lack the knowledge of law from finding their way to the bench. The reports and comments of the Nigerian Bar Association on all short listed candidates for the bench should henceforth be given serious consideration because the body is well suited to recommend those among its members that are qualified to be appointed judges. The NJC should refrain from applying illegal laws and policies capable of frustrating the elevation of competent lawyers to the higher bench.

    Happily for the legal profession and the country, concerned judges and progressive lawyers have declared their unalloyed solidarity with the CJN. A few days ago, Justice Akanbi spoke glowingly of the Chief Justice when he said “Corruption, talking frankly, is endemic. It has gone to a level that it has affected the judiciary. There was a time you would never talk anything against the judiciary. I am glad to say this is a great moment when Maryam Aloma Muktar, the Chief Justice of Nigeria, is doing quite a lot in fighting the menace. We should support her in fighting the battle to see that we get a better Nigeria. I know Muktar, she served under me. She is a courageous woman and a core professional with high integrity and commitment to uprightness and justice. She is a person who abhors corruption and is determined to rid the country of corruption. Nigerians should support her in her efforts to sanitize the judiciary and rid Nigeria of corruption.”

    However, a foremost legal practitioner and a former President of the Nigerian Bar Association, Chief Wole Olanipekun SAN has called for the setting up of a judicial commission of inquiry to purge the judiciary of alleged corruption. According to the learned Senior Advocate “unless and until a commission of inquiry is set up to look into all these corrupt and bribery allegations against judges and lawyers alike, where names will be named and particulars supplied, where reservations will be expressed openly, where instances will be given etc I doubt if our judiciary will ever be cleansed”. With profound respect, there is no basis whatsoever for the setting up a commission of inquiry which is going to usurp the constitutional functions of the NJC.

    In the case of Chief Gani Fawehinmi v General Ibrahim Babangida it was held by Uwais CJN (as he then was) that “though the Tribunal of Inquiry Act is an ‘exiting law’, its application is limited and has no general application” outside the Federal Capital Territory. The effect of the judgment is that President Jonathan lacks the vires to institute a commission of inquiry to probe judges in the Federal and State public service. In any case, the National Judicial Council is currently dealing with all allegations of corruption and other complaints of misconduct raised against judges while the Nigerian Bar Association has revitalized its own disciplinary machinery to bring erring lawyers to book. In the circumstance, there is no legal or moral justification to opt for the establishment of a judicial commission of inquiry to probe corrupt judges.

    It is pertinent to note that in spite of the on-going efforts to sanitize the judiciary a few judges have continued to issue frivolous and illegal ex parte orders and deliver judgments that are totally devoid of justice. Last month, a Federal High judge in Lagos prohibited the police from arresting, investigating and prosecuting a criminal suspect accused of economic sabotage. The trial judge went as far as quashing the report of the police investigation into the crime. A few days later, a judge of the Abuja judicial division of the Federal High Court issued an ex parte order restraining the EFCC from proceeding with the investigation of the same suspect over his alleged involvement in the fuel importation scam. It is hoped that the NJC will move speedily to put an end to such abuse of judicial powers by a few judges who are in the habit of conferring illegal immunity on some rich criminal suspects.

     

    Conclusion

    While saluting Chief Justice Aloma Muktar for the on-going cleansing in the judiciary she should ensure that effective measures are put in place to institutionalize the reforms. This is of urgent importance as she is due to retire late next year. The vested interests who have sworn to destroy and discredit the judiciary should not be made to believe that what is unfolding before our eyes is a passing phase. It is therefore pertinent to call on the Nigerian Bar Association to collaborate with the NJC to save the legal profession from perdition.

    In particular, the NJC should mobilize our judges to deliberately extend the frontiers of justice to the majority of Nigerian citizens who have no access to the temple of justice due to poverty, ignorance and fear. If our judges are not prepared to re-event the wheel like their Indian counterparts have done by making socio-economic rights justiciable through judicial activism they should be prepared to discard the reactionary doctrine of locus standi in order to allow public interest litigators to enforce the very many welfare laws that have been enacted by the Parliament but which are not breached with impunity by the government.

    Finally, members of the legal profession who fail to support the reforms and the internal cleansing in the judiciary may be exposing Nigerian judges to the revenge of litigants . Those who think that English judges have always been models of judicial integrity may wish to read David Pannic’s book, Justice, where he writes:

    “Some judges have received more than their just deserts for injudicious behavior. In the thirteen century, Andrew Horn alleged that in one year (four centuries earlier) King Alfred caused forty-four judges to be hanged as homicides for their false judgments. In 1381 a mob pursued the Lord Chancellor, Simon de Sudbury, and cut of f his hand. One year later, Lord Chief Justice Cavendish was killed after being apprehended by a mob and subjected to a mock trial in which he was sentenced to death. In 1688 the infamous judge Jeffreys, by then the Lord Chancellor, went into hiding when James II fled the country. Jeffreys was captures in Wapping when he was recognized in a tavern by a man who had been a dissatisfied litigant in his court. (The man had won his case but Jeffreys had been rude to him and kept him waiting). Jeffreys was put in the Tower of London, where he dies in 1689.”

  • Jonathan: we’ve raised bar against corruption

    President Goodluck Jonathan has said his administration has raised the bar against corruption, compared with past administrations.

    In his mid-term report presented to the public, the President said his administration pursues a more strategic, comprehensive and effective campaign against corruption.

    He said his administration had gone beyond popular sentiments to address the root causes of corruption and enhance the capacity of the institutions to resist and overcome corrupt influences.

    The report reads: “President Jonathan’s approach in fighting corruption is to focus on building strong institutions that have the capacity to overcome corrupt influences and not just to sermonise about corruption.

    “This approach uses the rule of law as a framework to fight corruption since corruption is a feature of weak rule of law and weak institutions.”

    The report said the widespread international perception of Nigeria as a corrupt country has caused damage to the dignity and honour of many honest and diligent Nigerians and to the country’s global competitiveness.

    Some of the achievements of the administration against corruption, the report said, included: Signing the Freedom of Information Act into law, the uncovering of fraud and deletion of over 73,000 ghost/fake pensioners from the Head of Service/Police Pension Office.

    Others were recovery and savings of over N225 billion from the two pension offices, halting the monthly theft of over N4 billion from the national treasury and reducing fraud by saving over N500 million monthly through the police pension releases.

    “Another giant stride is the suspension of Justice Abubakar Talba of the FCT High Court, Gudu. The 12 months suspension follows the controversial judgment he delivered in respect of John Yusufu, who was prosecuted by the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) over an alleged N32.8 billion Police Pension Fraud,” it said.

    The recent dismissal of three judges found to have compromised their offices, the report said, is a signal of zero tolerance for corruption in the judiciary.

  • Minister warns council chairmen against corruption

    Minister warns council chairmen against corruption

    Minister of the Federal Capital Territory (FCT), Senator Bala Mohammed has vowed that he will ensure that the area council chairmen in Abuja accounts for any misappropriation while in office.

    Mohammed stated this during the inauguration ceremony of the newly elected chairmen of the FCT area councils at the Banquet Hall of the FCT Minister’s official residence.

    He also charged them to put the security of lives and property on the front burner of their administrations as the era of politicking is over.

    Senator Mohammed emphasised that security remains a major concern and all efforts must be put into ensuring security of lives and property within their domains.

    His words: “Security remains a major concern and as you take office, you must hit the ground running to ensure security of lives and property within your domains.

    “This administration has set up machinery for effective surveillance of the FCT and you will be expected to immediately commence effective security monitoring of your area councils as well as collaborate with the FCT law enforcement agents to achieve a round-the-clock watch over your domains.

    “I will ensure that you account for any misappropriation in your area council.”

    The minister assured that the FCT Administration, as usual, would continue to ensure that all the area councils receive all funds due to them from the statutory allocation.

    Mohammed, therefore, called on the new chairmen to reciprocate the FCT gesture by avoiding waste, ensuring accountability in the management of public resources and complying fully with the Procurement Act.

    He reiterated that his administration will not shirk its responsibility for effective supervision of their operations and warned that ‘any chairman found wanting would be made to account fully for his commission or omission.’

    The FCT Minister of State, Oloye Olajumoke Akinjide hoped that the new chairmen would complement the efforts of the FCT Administration to fast-track development at the grassroots.

    Oloye Akinjide advised that the “welfare of the people remains the greatest law and the greatest manifesto above political party, section or creed.”

    She reiterated that election is over and the forest fires are over; adding that what remains is the challenge of development, which neither turns in winner nor loser, neither victor nor vanquished.

    “We will remain committed to building a plural and inclusive society in the FCT in particular and Nigeria in general,” the Minister of State stressed.

    Those sworn-in included Yahaya Garba Gawu-Abaji Area Council; Micah Y. Jiba-Abuja Municipal Area Council; Yohanna Peter Ushafa- Bwari Area Council; Abubakar Jibrin Giri-Gwagwalada Area Council; Ishaku Tete Shaban-Kuje Area Council and Daniel Ibrahim-Kwali Area Council.

    The chairmen were sworn in by the Acting FCT Chief Judge, Justice Ibrahim M. Bukar who was represented at the occasion by Justice Hussaini Baba Yusuf of FCT High Court, Maitama District Abuja.

    The chairman of Bwari Area Council Mr. Yohanna Peter Ushafa who responded on behalf of other chairmen, appreciated the kind gesture of the FCT Ministers and promised to co-operate with the FCT Administration in achieving its policies and programmes.

    The event was witnessed by important personalities in the Federal Capital Territory including the Senator representing the FCT, members of the House of Representatives representing the FCT, traditional rulers, leaders of political parties, youth leaders as well as community leaders.

  • Mr. President, when is corruption in Nigeria enough?

    Mr. President, when is corruption in Nigeria enough?

    Our battalion of presidential spokespersons are ever so eager to exculpate the President from responsibility for the broken down anti-corruption war 

     

    In the First Republic, the Prime Minister earned five thousand pounds, the minister, three thousand, same as that of a permanent secretary and a university professor. The legislator earned eight hundred pounds and his job was not full time. They came for two months to debate the appropriation, recess and came back four or five months later for another two months. Today in the National Assembly, there is obviously nothing to keep them engaged full time, all the year round. You only have to watch their scanty numbers at the plenary on television. In the First Republic there was decency and discipline. When the first post independent national development plan was introduced in 1962, despite the political differences between the NPC, NCNC and the Action Group, Prime Minister Balewa, the regional premiers and their ministers all took a ten percent cut from their salaries to trigger the need for domestic savings to finance our plans. Now, what do we have? You suddenly see somebody who did not own even an ordinary bicycle before becoming a Local Government Chairman but who after two years will now have a string of houses and exotic cars without a single agency of government, either of internal revenue or anti-corruption, asking questions. You will see somebody who was not known to be a millionaire but who, after three years in the House or at the National Assembly, will now invite people to come and see him donate two hundred motorcycles and a hundred cars or buses as ‘dividends of democracy. Or, you wake up to see forty pages of a newspaper advertisement, congratulating somebody, because he is forty or fifty as governor or senator. It is nothing short of a national disaster. And I keep asking, have you ever seen a page of the London Times, the Independent, the Telegraph or the Times of India, to name only a few, in which a minister is congratulating the president or the governor? What model of government is Nigeria practicing for God’s sake?

    The above is the slightly edited, recent jeremiad of Chief Philip Asiodu, a distinguished former Nigerian Permanent Secretary, who is no doubt extremely tortured at what nonsense today passes muster as governance in a country which he served to the best of his abilities.

    You will not but pity Nigeria, and, of course, ordinary Nigerians, when you now read that the country ranks with the likes of Nepal, Azerbaijan, and Pakistan on the global corruption perception index. That was as at the Transparency International’s last report in December, 2012, and could, in fact, now be far worse when you factor in other incidences of public service corruption, especially the humongous oil subsidy racket at the lead of which you find mostly, scions of the topmost chieftains of the ruling party who, on the long run, are far beyond the long arms of the law, whatever the make-belief antics of the EFCC. Or won’t their cases also go before Nigerian courts?

    For moving up a measly four places on the Transparency list, scoring 27 out of a possible 100 and placing 139th out of the 176 countries surveyed, officials of the Jonathan administration are yet to stop gloating, attributing the pitiable upward movement to President Jonathan’s fierce anti- corruption efforts when the world knows better. Those who advised the President to have a Face book account should also have told him that employing the new media is like walking naked into a cocktail party. The entire world now daily reads us like a book.

    In spite of the fact that there is no more a hiding place, Mr President has gone on a self-congratulation binge regarding how intangible corruption is in Nigeria. He has even pointedly told the U.S to mind her many problems, man- made and natural, and stop getting unnecessarily exuberant about the minuscule corruption in his dear country.

    If Mr President, for very understandable reasons, cannot be persuaded to see Alamiesiagha’s state pardon as a corruption of the process by the mere fact of grafting totally inappropriate names to the list in order to fake a semblance of an even-handed ‘pan-Nigeriana’, then let us quickly remind him of other acts of putrefaction which have no other name besides corruption. Indeed, it needs be mentioned that Alamiesiagha’s pardon was so badly received by the outside world that the U.S could not hold back from issuing the following statement: ‘The US views this development as a setback for the fight against corruption, and also for our ability to play the strong role we’ve played in supporting rule of law and legal institution-building in Nigeria, which is very important for the future of the country’.

    Not only did Britain come out to say Alamiesiagha has a pending criminal case in the U.K, Mr Bill Gates was so pissed off, he cancelled a scheduled visit to Nigeria even when he was already in Ghana, citing the same issue.

    Earlier in this self-propelling blitzkrieg, the President had, at General Owoye Azazi’s obsequies in Yenegoa on December 30, 2012, said the following: “Corruption is not the cause of our problems. Nigeria has more institutions that fight corruption. Most of the issues we talk about are not corruption. If we do things properly, if we change our attitude of doing things, most of the things we think are caused by corruption are not’.

    In one respect, that is what decent Nigerians are saying: ‘change our attitude of doing things’: banish impunity, follow the due process and allow both the anti-corruption agencies, the police and the courts, do their work without trying to hamstring them because of the next election.

    A case in issue, eloquently showing that under this administration anti-corruption war has gone down the drain, is the issue involving the Minister of Communications Technology and a certain Dr. Gwandu who was, December last year, fired by President Goodluck Jonathan allegedly over controversial secret spectrum allocations to some favoured companies at some ridiculous prices.

    Since issues relating to the matter are already before a court, we would merely sketch the story here.

    As the story goes, Dr Gwandu did nothing more than expose corruption but rather than be commended, he had to go because he had, in the process, roughened some feathers. He was said to have exposed the lopsidedness in federal government’s sale of a 450 MHz Spectrum to an unlicensed company – reportedly owned by a close friend of a very senior government official – in which they paid a ridiculous $6 million for a license that should have fetched the nation over $50 million. Second is the waiver granted to a company linked to a top official at the NCC at the expense of other companies operating in the industry, while the third revolves around his expose of the selling of 800 MHz spectrum to a company for about 13 million Euros when equivalent spectrum sells in Germany, Italy and France for 1.153 billion, 992 million and 891 million Euros respectively.

    Therefore, for allegedly ‘undermining the interest of the country in relation to the operations of a UN body’, the minister in a letter with ref no: MC/ST.01631T4, dated April 12, 2013, and addressed to the Secretary General of the ITU, wants the union to sack Dr Gwandu, not only as the chairman or vice-chair of the two organs but also as a representative of Nigeria.

    The above is symptomatic of the anti-corruption battle under President Jonathan. For ages, top officials of the office of the Secretary to the Government of the Federation sat on billions, in their homes, of pension funds, monies belonging to old men and women who had served the country in their prime and some of who are now dying wretched deaths on queues for their pension peanuts which remain unpaid for years. When, for once, the National Assembly acted pro-actively and ordered that the prime pension fraud suspect be presented before it, the police, which provided the man with 24-hour guard, claimed it did not know his whereabouts until he reportedly bolted out of the country.

    Only this past week, a former EFCC Chairman was heard complaining about the useless laws with which the anti corruption agency operates. But since updating these will involve serious work, you can trust the National Assembly not to touch that much needed review with the longest spoon.

    And in all these, our battalion of presidential spokespersons are ever so eager to exculpate the President from responsibility for this broken down anti- corruption war hiding under the distinction between the Executive, the Legislature and the Judiciary, and, forgetting that there is something called moral leadership and that the buck stops at the President’s table.

  • State pardon not an excuse for corruption

    On the CAMPUSLIFE’s section of April 25, 2013, a fellow writer from the Benue State University (BSU), Makurdi, Msonter Anzaa, wrote an article titled: Presidential pardon as an excuse for corruption.

    In the piece, the writer noted that after the jail term of Dieprieye Alamieyeseigha had elapsed, the former governor of Bayelsa State was reported to have been helping the Federal Government maintain peace in the creeks of the Niger Delta. He said President Goodluck Jonathan cited Alamieyesiegha’s personal undertaking as reason for granting him presidential pardon. My colleague described the pardon as “dubious”.

    My grouse: why should a writer use such language to describe presidential action? Why did Msonter choose to write and narrow his points to reflect sentiment? Why did he not tackle the issue dispassionately?

    The state pardon granted Gen. Oladipo Diya, the late Gen. Shehu Musa Yar’Adua, the late Gen. Abdukareem Adisa, Gen. Tajudeen Olanrewaju and others did not generate ‘national outcry’ except that of Alamieyesagha. Why should we fuss over Alamieyeseigha’s pardon; why did we not address if the pardon granted Diya, who called a press conference and demanded that Federal Government should re-open Oputa Panel report?

    It should be noted that Alamieseigha was convicted on cases of corruption but all the army generals pardoned were tried for treason, a grievous crime against the state, which is more harmful than sleaze. Even to some political forces and opponents of Jonathan’s administration, the state pardon was condemnable and glorified corruption.

    As the president is being called all sorts of names because of the state pardon, if those, who believed there was no cogent reason for the pardon were to be in position of authority, we wonder what they would have done.

    Most time, I keep on asking myself, why so much hatred by most Nigerians towards the presidency? Jonathan granted a state pardon, what is wrong with that? Are they saying that the president should not exercise his constitutional duty to grant amnesty? Even the Lucifer sometimes has mercy on his servants.

    Those who are against state pardon of Alamieyeseigha are only out to score cheap point, which will not take them anywhere.

    My colleague, who referred to the state pardon as “dubious”, is ignorant of the precedent of such action in history. Msonter must know that former President Bill Clinton granted state pardon to 456 to Americans citizens while he was at the helm. Just to mention a few, Chris Harman Basley and Scott Lynn Banne, convicted on drug-related issues, were duly pardoned without much fuss from the Americans.

    Gen Yakubu Gowon said that the presidential pardon granted to the convicted former governor was facilitated by the Council of States, which took the decision based on the premise that Alamieseigha had finished his jail term for the offence he committed and had promised not to commit such an offence again. Also, the former Head of State pointed out that it was within the constitutional powers of the president to pardon any person he so wishes. I agree with Dr Rueben Abati, who said that most Nigerians were ignorant of the state pardon, because the pardon was done within the constitutional right of the president.

    If the president had gone out of the constitution, the criticism would have been torrential. They would have said he did not respect the constitution. Now, he exercised his constitutional power, they said he “over-exercise” his power.

    Let us not attach constitutional issue to emotional matter. For me, to err is human but to forgive is divine. In so far nobody is beyond mistakes, there should be ways to make amendment. That is what the president has done for Alamieseigha and others granted pardon.

    Is it not John 8:3-11 that Jesus set an adulterous woman free, and told her: “Woman, as any one condemned you, neither do I condemn you to go and sin no more?” Even Qu’ran 39 vs 53 tells us: “My slaves, who have transgressed against themselves by committing evil deeds or sin, despair not of the mercy of Allah. Verily, Allah forgives all sins. Truly He oft forgiving and most merciful.”

    Therefore, all those who have condemned the president’s action cannot be proven to have no stain of corruption. Let them be aware that no man is sinless on earth. Let Nigerians drop their sentimental garb and free themselves from misguided utterances that are capable of dividing this nation the more. The state pardon to Alamieyesiegha did not in any way stop the fight against corruption or an excuse for corruption.

     

    Mark, 300-Level Business Education, Sch. of Technical Education, YABATECH