Tag: crimes

  • Kidnapping: Police to establish tracking machines in Lagos, Rivers

    Kidnapping: Police to establish tracking machines in Lagos, Rivers

    The Inspector- General of Police, Mr Ibrahim Idris, says the force will establish special tracking unit in Lagos and Port-Harcourt to check kidnapping and other crimes.

    Idris made this known when he was interacting with civil society groups and crime reporters in Lagos on Friday.

    He noted that kidnapping was becoming more serious than other crimes in the country.

    The IG said that the tracking machine established in Abuja had helped to resolve about 90 per cent cases of kidnapping with victims rescued and suspects arrested.

    ”Already, tracking machines have been deployed to states and will start functioning in few weeks’ time, so as to reduce pressure on those in Abuja.

    ”This will enhance the police anti-kidnapping drive.

    ”The machine in Port Harcourt, Rivers will cater for the South-South and South East zones, while the one deployed to Lagos would focus on the west,” he said.

    The police chief also said that there were plans to reinvigorate the force forensic laboratories, noting however, that funds constraints were hindering its implementation.

    Idris urged Nigerians to assist the police in tackling armed crimes, reiterating that the fight against kidnappers was a community fight.

    According to him, it is not what the police alone can handle. It has become a community fight and can only be solved with the help of the people.

    “When I assumed duty, one of the plans we came up with was to rehabilitate our forensic units. I outlined the challenges of the police and how to handle them.

    ”The thing is that we have been having funding challenges.

    “We are trying to address it in a holistic manner. Very soon, we are going to have National Security Summit. Kidnapping seems to be a community problem.

    “Over 90 percent of victims have been rescued. I agree that it is becoming a major challenge. It cuts across the entire country. It has to be addressed in various forms.

    “It is not just the police or security agencies. Take for instance where the Turkish School students were kidnapped. That school is situated at the foot of a swamp.

    ”Despite that parents pay huge amount of money, the school did not invest much in security.
    “So, we are going to use the summit to address these issues as well as others like the herdsmen and farmers issues.

    ”These issues are further dividing us as a nation and we need to solve them.

    You cannot have the maximum support of security in an area without the support of the public.
    ”Everybody has one thing or the other to make our society safe,” Idris said.

    He expressed the need for the media and civil society to be advocates of improved funding for the police through the Police Trust Fund.

    “The funding of the police is costly. What we are trying to do is to pursue 50 percent of our budgetary requirement from other sources.

    ”We are also looking for other avenues where we can address the problem of the police.

    “At the same time, we are hoping that the National Assembly will pass the bill establishing Police Trust Fund, by so doing, open up other sources for the police to generate money.

    ”It is already happening in Lagos (Security Trust Fund) and has been working wonderfully.

    “We are aware that the Federal Government is financially constrained and so, we do not think it is right to over burden the system by creating other agencies.

    ”These agencies would require funding and create rivalry. But if more money is available for the police and more people recruited, we can achieve so much more,” he noted.

    Idris also stated that there were plans to professionalise the police by establishing specialised schools such as Finance, Marine, among others for training.

    He urged civil society organisations to support the police in training its personnel on professional conducts.

    The IG expressed satisfaction at the scorecard of the rebranded Special Anti-Robbery Squad (SARS).

    “We are working hard to restore the integrity of the police. Earning the confidence of the people is important to us and we can only achieve that by changing the attitude of some of our policemen.

    ”By the time we achieve that, the people’s trust will be regained and things will be better.

    “This is one of the reasons we make it compulsory for officers from the rank of Assistant Commissioner of Police (ACP) and above to declare their assets.

    ”My management team and I declared our assets when we came on board,” he said.

    On the strength of the police, Idris said that the service was understaffed and would need over a million policemen to meet United Nations standard.

    ”Thankfully, the government has given approval for yearly recruitment of 10,000 policemen. For so many years, there was embargo on police recruitment.

    “Besides, the police lost so many personnel in the course of the Boko Haram insurgency. We were the worst hit and still we were not recruiting.

    ”All these affected the strength of the police,” the police chief said.

    He revealed that of the N300 billion budgeted for the police in 2016, only N4 billion was eventually released.

     

     

  • Women, girls are two-thirds of trafficked victims, one-third children – UN

    No less than two-thirds of trafficked victims are women and girls while one-third of the victims of human trafficking are children, the UN Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC), said on Wednesday.

    UNODC Executive Director, Yury Fedotov, disclosed this on Wednesday at the launch of the 2016 UNODC Global Report on Trafficking in Persons.

    According to a new report from the UNODC, the vast majority of all human trafficking victims – some 71 per cent – are women, girls and children.

    “Trafficking for sexual exploitation and for forced labour remain the most prominently detected forms.

    “But victims are also being trafficked to be used as beggars, for forced or sham marriages, benefit fraud, or production of pornography,” Fedotov said.

    According to him, the 2016 UNODC Global Report disaggregates data on the basis of gender and found that women and girls are usually trafficked for marriage and sexual slavery.

    “Men and boys, however, are trafficked into exploitative labour, including work in the mining sector, as porters, soldiers, and slaves.

    “Worldwide, 28 per cent of trafficking victims are children, but children account for 62 per cent in Sub-Saharan Africa and 64 per cent in Central America and the Caribbean.

    “Sixty nine countries detected trafficking victims from Sub-Saharan Africa between 2012 and 2014.”

    Fedotov emphasised the link between armed groups and human trafficking.

    He noted how armed groups often engaged in trafficking in their territories of operation, coercing women and girls into marriages or sexual slavery.

    According to him, armed groups also pressed men and boys to act as forced labour or combatants. (NAN)

  • Criminals will not escape Justice – IGP

    Criminals will not escape Justice – IGP

    The Inspector-General of Police (IGP), Ibrahim Idris, has assured Nigerians that the Nigeria Police Force is ever ready and more determined to ensure that all those who engage in vicious crimes do not escape justice.

    A statement signed by the Force Public Relations Officer, DCP Don Awunah, said the IGP listed the crimes as: kidnappings, armed robbery and other criminal activities.

    Awunah said this stance was what made the operatives of the Intelligence Response Team (IRT) to swing into action to check such crimes.

    He said the team had on Oct. 12 launched a massive onslaught on the kidnappers of some residents of GRA Phase II, Port Harcourt main town, Borikiri General Area and YKC axis of woji in Rivers.

    “This feat yielded prompt outcome as the hoodlums were arrested as a result of due diligence and intelligence exhibited by members of the Police Force complimented by public spirited citizens eager to curb crimes in the society.

    “The suspects who were responsible for most kidnappings in Port Harcourt, were arrested at different locations in Rivers,’’ he said.

    Awunah said the suspects arrested during the operation were: Daniel Gabriel, the gang leader, Alaso Igodo, Akeodi Aselemi and Ayibinmoter Livinus, among others.

    He said items recovered from them were: One 1 AKA 47 Rifle with bridge NO. 0731, Four 4 AKA 47 Magazines with 42 live ammunitions, Four Face Masks and One Green Mazda saloon car used by the syndicate as operational vehicle.

    The Force Spokesman also recalled that some residents of an Estate in Isheri area of Lagos State were kidnapped on Sept. 27 and that the Intelligence Response Team swung into action and arrested four of the kidnappers.

    “The spirited effort of the team led to the arrest of the fifth gang member, Temmi Enormi, 31. The suspect was arrested in Lagos State on Oct. 7 and confessed to being a member of the Isheri Landlord kidnapping and was confirmed by other gang members earlier arrested.

    “The I-G wishes to restate the commitment of the Nigeria Police Force in ensuring that all forms of crimes, particularly kidnapping for ransom and other violent crimes are brought to a bearable and tolerable state throughout the country.

    “He urges Nigerians to always be law abiding and regard themselves as stakeholders in the fight against crime and criminality,’’ Awunah added.

  • Crimes in jail

    •In an age of insecurity, it is strange that a Boko Haram inmate possesses 25 cell phones

    Reasons adduced for the riot that broke out at the Kuje Prisons, Abuja, on Monday suggested that there are more to frequent protests by inmates than Nigerians know. We have always complained about the irregular and poor feeding in the prisons; we have had cause to complain about congestion in the prisons; we have condemned the inadequate medical facilities that had led to the death of some of the prisoners, we have written on the plight of awaiting trial inmates, among others, all of which had led to protests in prisons across the country at one time or the other.

    But now, we have been told that some warders even collude with inmates to bring in all kinds of items, including prohibited ones, into the prisons. According to a newspaper report, Monday’s violence was caused by the resistance of some inmates to allow warders search their cells for prohibited items, as ordered by the prison authorities.

    The report said “The incident happened this (Monday) morning. The warders, who were acting on instructions from the prison authorities, decided to search the cells and seize prohibited items. During the search, they found 25 handsets with a Boko Haram suspect. After a search of the convicts’ cells, they moved to the awaiting-trial cells. But those men, who saw the warders approaching with some ‘already’ seized items, decided to resist them.  They attacked the warders with stones and every object they could lay their hands on, and in the process, many of the warders were injured.” The report even said that substances suspected to be cannabis were found in some of the cells and were confiscated.

    Apparently, the inmates resisted the search because it was some of the warders who assisted in bringing in the prohibited items in the first place. The report added, “The rot in the Nigerian Prisons Service is serious. The prohibited items that the warders wanted to seize were brought into the yard by the same warders. The inmates had been enjoying this privilege through trafficking by the warders. It is only natural that they will fight back, and it is a bad trend for the prisons service.”

    We cannot agree less. This is bad for our prisons, indeed. Imagine the case of the Boko Haram suspect reportedly caught with 25 mobile phone sets. The logical question we would have asked is the place of intelligence in a situation where an inmate would have access to 25 mobile phone sets but that question beggars an answer because that answer has already been provided: warders are complicit in the arrangement. It is bad enough that a high-profile suspect had access to such a large number of telephone sets in prison; and who knows the kind of communication that would have been going on between him and his colleagues outside.

    Although the lapses in the prisons are only a reflection of the general laxity in the country’s public service, we call for a thorough investigation of the alleged malfeasance by the prison warders. If our prisons are this porous, then no one is safe. As a matter of fact, this type of collusion between prisoners and warders might also have accounted for the frequent jailbreaks and attempted jailbreaks in our prisons.

    We are aware that the prison authorities have had cause to carry out disciplinary actions against some warders for all manner of offences, ranging from smuggling of alcoholic drinks into the prisons to alleged complicity in jailbreaks, but it seems dismissal and suspension have not served as enough deterrence; hence, we suggest the prosecution of those of them whose offences bordered on crimes.

    In the meantime, the Federal Government should address the challenges in our prisons, including the welfare of warders. This is one sure way of ensuring that prisoners serve their sentences in a conducive atmosphere and hence reduce the incentive for jailbreaks and abominable relationships between inmates and prisoners.

  • Wike, Peterside trade words on sponsors of crimes

    Wike, Peterside trade words on sponsors of crimes

    The governorship candidate of the All Progressives Congress (APC) in the 2015 general election in Rivers State, Dr. Dakuku Peterside, has said Rivers people are tired of the lies, deceit and propaganda of the Nyesom Wike’ administration.

    He accused Wike, a former minister of state for Education, of promoting and supporting kidnapping.

    Peterside, who is the director general of the Nigeria Maritime Administration and Safety Agency (NIMASA), spoke at the weekend at APC’s Rivers East Senatorial District campaign kick-off for the October legislative rerun at Okehi, headquarters of Etche Local Government.

    The rally was attended by Peterside’s running mate, Asita Honourable; Acting Managing Director of the Niger Delta Development Commission (NDDC), Mrs. Ibim Semenitari; APC’s Deputy National Chairman, Oji Ngofa; Rivers Chairman of APC, Chief Davies Ikanya; and candidates for the rerun; among other chieftains of APC.

    Peterside, a former member of the House of Representatives, while speaking at the rally, described the Minister of Transportation, Rotimi Amaechi, as a honest man, a man of integrity and a performer.

    He expressed surprise that despite borrowing billions in a little over one year in office, Wike still owed workers six months, giving the excuse of doing biometrics.

    The NIMASA director-general also accused Rivers governor of closing schools and primary health centres built by Amaechi across the 23 councils.

    Wike, who spoke through Samuel Nwanosike, publicity secretary of the state Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), asked Peterside to apologise to Rivers people and join him to develop the state.

    The Rivers governor denied promoting or supporting kidnapping and other criminal activities in the state.

    He accused the NIMASA’s director-general and other APC leaders of living in lies, describing security as the business of the Federal Government, with governor as logistic officer not chief security officer of the state.

    Wike stressed that all loans taken by his administration to better the lives of Rivers people were approved by the House of Assembly.

    The governor insisted that many projects and programmes were embarked upon by his government, with those allegedly abandoned by Amaechi’s administration being completed.

    Peterside said: “We have another opportunity through the October rerun to correct the lies being told Rivers people. We never voted for Wike’s government and we would not have voted for this government. Rivers people are tired of their lies, deceit and propaganda. No amount of lies, propaganda and deceit can sway Rivers people. We are resolute to change Wike’s government. We want a government that will represent the interest of our people and that government is APC’s government, led by  Chibuike Rotimi Amaechi in Rivers State.

    “While NBA (Nigeria Bar Association) conference was going on in Rivers State, a woman was kidnapped in GRA, Port Harcourt. In trying to escape from the kidnappers, she bashed her car and she almost died. While the NBA conference was taking place, another woman was kidnapped in Borikiri, Port Harcourt, in front of her house.

    “We know who gave them (kidnappers) guns and who cannot withdraw the guns. With the October rerun, the end of lies, deceit, propaganda, kidnapping and criminality has come in Rivers State. Your votes will make all the difference. Your vote is your power.”

    The APC’s ex-governorship candidate also said during Amaechi’s first term as governor, while he was the commissioner for Works, many projects were delivered, while challenging Wike’s government to show Rivers people one project it conceived and completed in one year in office, despite borrowing more money than previous governments put together.

    He maintained that economic exploitation must stop in the state, with good governance needed and promised that he and other APC leaders would not rest until good governance was delivered to the people

    Peterside urged them to vote for APC’s candidates, who represent good governance, during the rerun.

    He assured them of security, asking the electorate not to be scared.

    Peterside said: “Proper elections were conducted in Tai Local Government  (of Rivers State during March 19 rerun). After the elections, the returning officer declared the results properly. Somebody, who thought he could act God and could use money to compromise everybody, decided to sit on the results, but at God’s own time, the results of Tai LGA were announced. We thank INEC for the courage.

  • Re-opening of previous crimes: Setting agenda for investigators and investigations

    Re-opening of previous crimes: Setting agenda for investigators and investigations

    In this analysis, lawyer and public affairs commentator WAHAB SHITTU suggests what should be done to make the investigations of criminal cases stress-free and how to make the prosecutions of perpetrators of heinous crimes conclusive. 

    The searchlight on all categories of law enforcement agents – Police, anti-graft agencies, Department of State Services (DSS) and other intelligent agencies have assumed lately increasing dimension given the declared war of the present administration against corruption and the urgent need to stamp out all forms of criminalities whether occurring in the past, present or the future.

    In many instances, Nigerians have expressed frustrations with the process blaming the state for not being able to bring alleged perpetrators of heinous offences to book. The blame game has shifted from the police to the lawyers with some other elements also pointing accusing fingers in the direction of the judiciary.

    This intervention is designed to highlight some of the basic elements that could deliver successful prosecutions starting of course with the primacy of effective and efficient investigations and what ought to be put in place to achieve this objective. Investigation must focus on basic tenets such as identifying who committed the criminal act and gathering sufficient evidence to secure a conviction.

    The element of effective and efficient investigation is particularly very important given the fact that investigation is the gateway to the courts and unless it performs adequately, the quality of subsequent justice will be poor.

    • No case should be taken to court without proper investigation no matter the extent of public outcry.
    • Emphasis should be placed on investigation-led arrests as opposed to arrest-led investigations.
    • Arraignment of suspects in court should be based on verifiable, conclusive and supportable findings arising from diligent investigations.
    • Investigators must be available at all times to give evidence in proof of the outcomes of the investigations.
    • Investigators must carry out all necessary steps including obtaining all relevant evidential materials in support of investigations.

    It is also important to guarantee the security and welfare of investigators including potential witnesses as well as sensitive documents in aid of the trial process.  More importantly, that the investigation process is adequately monitored to forestall compromise and severe sanctions should apply in the event of breaches.

    The other element that should be guaranteed is the security of evidential materials recovered during investigations, if possible, ensuring that such materials do not fall into private hands who could be subject of attacks targeting of course the recovery of those documents.

    It is also important to constantly test the character, integrity and moral standards of investigators including ensuring availability of up to date training programmes for investigators. There should also be stiffer penalties available to officers who deliberately bungled investigations for pecuniary or other vested interests. My final take on this is to call for a code of ethics to be put in place for all categories of investigators as a policy framework

    Investigations play a crucial role in our criminal jurisprudence as they form the basis for all prosecutions and trials. There is no investigative judge under the Nigerian legal system – the legal process is initiated by the prosecutor on the basis of the information received or obtained from sources, such as individuals, governments, international, inter-governmental or non-governmental organisations, or African Union (AU) qua United Nations (UN) organs.

    Once the prosecutor is satisfied that there are reasonable grounds to believe that crimes within the jurisdiction of the court/tribunal have been committed, an investigation begins.  By this token, the prosecutor is imbued with the responsibility of collecting evidence and information used for issuing indictment against suspected perpetrators; the prosecutor has the power to summon and question suspects, victims and witnesses, collect evidence and conduct on-sight investigations. In doing so, the prosecutor may seek the assistance of the state authorities concerned and such authorities are under obligation to cooperate with investigations and prosecutions.

    A fair and effective criminal justice system, an integral part of which is crime investigation built public confidence and underscores respect for law and order. In essence, crime investigation is the process by which the perpetrator of a crime, or intended crime, is identified through the gathering of facts/evidence, although it may also involve an assessment of whether a crime has been committed in the first place. Investigation can be reactive i.e. applied to crimes that have already taken place or proactive), i.e. targeting a particular criminal or forestalling a criminal activity planned for the future. In this light, an effective investigation and efficient investigator are a necessary prerequisite for the prosecution to charge a defendant.

    Prosecution can charge defendants with two types of individual criminal responsibility.  The first is for personally planning, instigating, ordering, committing or aiding and abetting in a crime. Such responsibility encompasses the doctrine of joint criminal enterprise, which has often been used to describe situations where several persons having a common purpose embark on criminal activities.

    The second is for being in the position of authority and knowing or having reason to know that a subordinate or subordinates were about to commit or had committed such crimes but failed to prevent or punish them. This is otherwise known as superior responsibility. In other words, in the commission of a crime, there are usually the principal offenders and the secondary offenders. The Principal offenders are usually the ones whose act is the most immediate cause of the actus reus. Secondary parties are usually those who aid, abet, counsel or procure the commission of a crime.

    To conduct criminal investigations effectively, an investigator will need considerable powers. These include the power to detain a suspect;  seize property as evidence;  search for evidence; both in premises and on persons;  interview suspects (and, in doing so, question their honesty and character, which in some countries, may otherwise be considered to be an act of defamation, a criminal offence);  require samples, such as fingerprints and DNA, and to take photographs; run identification procedures;  interview witnesses, including victims; ask members of the public questions;  keep and maintain personal and confidential information; use technical and personal surveillance and use other intrusive means to observe persons; work undercover (i.e. pretend to be someone else) or use informants; protect and relocate witnesses; undertake otherwise illegal activity, such as possess illegal substances, carry weapons, force entry to property, or monitor illegal internet traffic.

    Increasingly, an investigator also needs to be able to call on international assistance in order to track the activities of criminals across internationally borders. There are normally international organisations and bi-lateral agreements in existence that can offer support, but such facilities need to be accessible and viable for any investigator working at a local level.

    In addition to developing an understanding of the strengths and weaknesses of a state’s approach to the investigation of crime by police, the assessor should be able to identify opportunities for reform and development. Technical assistance in the area of police investigation in the context of a broader strategic framework may include work that will enhance drafting or amendment; implementation and monitoring of relevant legal framework, including codes of conduct and/or criminal procedure;  development of forensic science capacity; enhancement of investigation skills and standards, especially in specialist areas, such as financial investigation, cyber-crime, interviewing techniques; equipment and processes for proper and secure handling of evidence and exhibits; enhancement of identification procedures, including use of photo-fit, photo identification, and identification parades; rules, guidelines and training on use of covert surveillance and informants; transmission of good practice in interviewing suspects; relevant guidelines and training materials.

    The jurisprudence of investigations and investigators in the Nigeria political landscape appeared to have been swept under the carpets until the recent reassured declaration by the President to re-open previous crimes, this is against the backdrop of the purpose/essence of criminal law which is to punish and deter the culprits.

    The list of murder and assassinated victims in Nigeria seems to be swelling with the Police seeming lost.  I wonder whether it is a case of conspiracy or outright lousiness. Check the list: Dele Giwa, Dipo Dina, Bola Ige, Moshood Abiola, Funsho Williams, Dr. Ayo Daramola, Kehinde Fasuba, Chukwuma Ogbueli, Odunayo Olagbaju, Pa Alfred Rewane, Chief Dikibo, Harry Marshal, Suliat Adedeji, Kudirat Abiola, Tunde Oladepo, Omololu Falobi, Godwin Agbroko, Abayomi Ogundeji, Bayo Ohu and Edo Sule Ugbagwu.

    The pain of losing these Nigerians so early and so cruelly remains fresh in our memory. Its stabs us each time we remember that the vacuum they have created will never be filled again. In this wise, investigations and investigators should be at the front burner of championing the cause of justice by fetching out and prosecute the perpetrators of this illegality.

    Investigators deal with many different categories of witnesses during the investigation, including victims and survivors, experts, internationals and insiders. Victim or survivor witnesses are a crucial source of evidence as they are in a position to describe what took place and identify those involved.

    This is critical in the preparation of the indictment and can often lead to new sources of evidence. Actually finding the first witness can sometimes be difficult. Investigations often started years after the events took place, and witnesses might have moved away or died. The passage of time and the removal to a location far from where the events unfolded can dull the memory of some witnesses.

    Often, while the evidence given will show who was directly involved, those identified tend to be lower level suspects, and eyewitness evidence cannot identify where the orders came from, or who the commanding officers were. Finally, a witness may decide not to testify because they wish to forget the events that took place, or they are psychologically unable to give evidence. They may also fear intimidation or reprisals.

    Expert witnesses are connected to the investigation in some manner but were not directly involved in the events. It can include, for example, military and political analysts called to provide a background to what was taking place across the country or to interpret document collections, or scientific researchers who may have helped uncover evidence such as mass graves or examined crucial aspects of the evidence such as DNA samples.

    International witnesses include diplomats or foreign military officers who were active in the conflict area at the time and can often provide valuable information to the investigators, especially if they held meetings with the suspects or other high-ranking civilian or military officials. They may, for instance, be able to provide proof that the suspect was informed about certain atrocities or military operations. Insider witnesses can provide valuable evidence in linking the accused to the crime base through direct or circumstantial evidence.

    Insider witnesses tend to be either witnesses with “blood on their hands”, or those who have been privy to the orders given.

    Investigation is a core duty of policing. Interviewing victims, witnesses and suspects is central to the success of an investigation and the highest standards need to be upheld. Forces need to develop and maintain the valuable resource of a skilled interviewer. Interviews that are conducted professionally and quality assured realise several benefits.

    In particular, they can direct an investigation and gather material, which in turn can lead to a prosecution or early release of an innocent person, support the prosecution case, thereby saving time, money and resources and increase public confidence in the police service, particularly with witnesses and victims of crimes who come into direct contact with the police.

    Without the accounts of those who played a central role in the crime, or those who have witnessed an important aspect of the commission of a crime, other sources of material such as Close Circuit Television (CCTV) images, fingerprints and forensic material, although extremely important, may have little value. Conducting investigative interviews is, therefore, a crucial element of the process of investigation.

    The foregoing may have shown the urgent need to pay closer attention to the quality of investigations, otherwise, public outcry targeting bungled prosecutions would be meaningless as the law court, not being a charity organisation, can only act on the basis of the quality of materials placed before the judex.

  • Special Crimes Court

    This is necessary if the war against corruption is to make progress

    The Presidential Advisory Committee on Corruption’s preparation of a draft bill, tagged: The Special Courts Bill 2016, for the purpose of establishing a superior court of record to speedily try corruption and other related cases, is commendable. We believe that if the bill becomes law, it will provide opportunity for the special courts and the prosecutor agencies to acquire necessary technical proficiency in the prosecution of criminal offences. Media reports said the draft has been forwarded to the Attorney-General of the Federation (AGF), Mr Abubakar Malami (SAN), for review and transmission to the National Assembly for legislative action.

    The bill, according to its title is:”An Act to provide for the establishment of a Special Crimes Court as a superior court of record to allow for speedy trials of certain offences, including economic and financial crimes, terrorism, money laundering and corruption offences and for related matters.” The bill provides for exclusivity over cases listed in its schedule and for a transition period, upon its coming into existence. So, the bill in its section 7 provides that it: “shall have and exercise exclusive jurisdiction and power in respect of offences specified in Schedule 1 to this Act to be known as ‘scheduled offences.”

    We commend the presidential committee for its effort in preparing the bill. We also hope the AGF and the national and state assemblies which will need to collaborate to enact the bill into law and amend the relevant portions of the constitution would work hard at this important assignment. They need not be reminded that our country has been laid waste by corruption, the malignancy of which has manifested in several other sundry crimes that further aggravate the very bad situation.

    Of note, several efforts have been made to make our criminal justice system more efficient through the establishment of specialised investigation and prosecution agencies and even the enactment of the Administration of Criminal Justice Act. Perhaps the proposed specialised court will provide a platform to aggregate all these efforts, to confront corruption and other related offences, which have become intractable and an impediment to our national development.

    So, the proposed bill acknowledges existing laws against specialised crimes, which offences shall be tried in the proposed court. This is desirable as the effort to get the best out of those specialised laws, made to deter and punish modern crimes, have been clogged in the regular courts, competing with civil cases. Also, the earlier reports of plans by the commission to retrain prosecutors and judges, draft guidelines for prosecutors and generally coordinate the war against corruption, is in accord with one of the cardinal objectives of the present Federal Government.

    According to the report, the offences listed in the schedule 1 include: Terrorism (Prevention) Act (No. 10 of 2011) as amended; Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (Establishment) Act (E1 LFN 2004); Money Laundering (Prohibition) Act (No 11 of 2011) as amended; National Drug Law Enforcement Agency Act (N30 LFN 2004); Trafficking in Persons (Prohibition) Law Enforcement and Administration Act, 2015 (No 32 of 2015); Corrupt Practices and other related offences Act (C31 LFN 2004); Kidnapping offences under the Criminal Code (C38 LFN) and the Penal Code (P3 LFN 2004); Cyber Crimes Act 2015, and such other offences declared under any other Act to be a scheduled offence for the purposes of this Act.

    We commend Professor Itsey Sagay and his committee and urge the AGF to quickly review their submission and make necessary consultation with his principal and forward the bill to the National Assembly. On this, we hope the legislative assemblies will act in the best interest of our country, without partisanship.

  • Senator denies taking part in electoral crimes

    A member of the sixth Senate, Ayo Arise, has denied involvement in electoral crimes as alleged by the National Human Rights Commission (NHRC) in its report on alleged indicted electoral offenders in the 2007 and 2011 general elections.

    Arise, who represented Ekiti North Senatorial District between June 2007 and June 2011 on the platform of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), threatened to take legal action against the commission in a bid to clear his name and defend his integrity.

    The former senator, who spoke in a telephone chat with reporters yesterday, said he has instructed his lawyers to write NHRC, demanding a retraction of the report and publication of unreserved apology.

    Failure to publish the retraction, the former lawmaker said he would file an action against the agency.

    Arise, who recently defected to the All Progressives Congress (APC), wondered why the NHRC would turn in such a report without allowing him and others indicted to defend themselves.

    He said he was never indicted by the two tribunal judgments, which followed his election.

    The former Chairman of the Senate Committee on Privatisation said his election was certified by the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) and was never indicted of any offence by the electoral agency either at the tribunal or in its report.

    Arise said: “I have asked my attorney to write them for a retraction and apology. And if it fails to do that, I will institute a legal action against the commission because I cannot allow anybody to rubbish my reputation, which I have built over time.”

    Arise posited that he had always being a strong advocate of any process or reform that would strengthen the electoral system, cautioning that those saddled with the responsibility should not abused the privilege giving to them by rubbishing the reputations of innocent Nigerians.

    Reviewing what transpired in the 2007 election, Arise explained that his opponent had approached the court to challenge his victory and the appellate court, which was the highest for such cases, ordered a rerun election which he also won with wide margins.

  • Reporting economic crimes in Nigeria (2)

    Last week, this column dwelt on the need for journalists in the country to dig deep into issues while processing them as news for the reading public. It is because Nigerians know very little about goings-on in government and what public officials are doing in their name. The fact that many Nigerians get to know what went wrong after the perpetrators have left office is a failure of investigative journalism in Nigeria. Suffice to say that investigative journalism is not event-oriented, unlike routine news reporting. Though an event could trigger the curiosity of the investigative journalist, he must go beyond the event. Reporting only the event and nothing more is what could be termed situation reporting. It goes beyond this. It calls for more details, more research, and more attention to processes, trends and context.

    May I crave the reader’s indulgence to call up some personal examples to illustrate what I think good investigative journalism should entail. I wrote a story titled ‘The Axis of Evil’ which was published by Tell Magazine on August 25, 2003. The story chronicled the exploits of armed robbers, who usually invaded Nigeria from neighbouring countries, particularly the Republic of Benin and leave with a convoy of snatched cars across the border. I was able to uncover the methods used, the routes taken by the robbers each time they struck, the receivers of the stolen goods and all that. It was a diligent and painstaking reportorial work, which took me a long time and a lot of legwork through their routes which essentially constitute an axis of evil on the border between Nigeria and Benin Republic.

    The second example is the story of late Hammani Tidjani, the notorious cross-border armed robber, who was finally arrested by the Nigerian security agencies on Friday, September 12, 2003. He was brought to Nigeria in handcuffs after many years of posing a security threat to the country through car snatching and smuggling them to neighbouring West African countries, including the Republic of Benin, Togo, Ghana, Mauritania, Burkina Faso, Mali.

    Mention must also be made of Anas Aremeyaw Anas, a Ghanaian undercover journalist and crime buster, who has continued to make investigative journalists proud of his exploits in crime reporting. He uncovered the racketeering in Cocoa export in Ghana by exposing those behind the illicit deals. He also unmasked those luring unsuspecting victims into buying fake gold in the country, the electricity thieves at the Electricity Company of Ghana, ECG, and many others. Through his activities, the government and the security agencies were able to plug some loopholes in the system while the government made more money in revenue as cocoa smuggling was curtailed.

    I must quickly add that investigative journalism, which is what following up on a routine story requires, does not come cheap. Media organisations need to spend money on investigative journalism for it to flourish. An investigative journalist may be on a story for months and may require thousands of naira for accommodation, transportation and what have you. It is a task that requires patience in order to get it right. You either get it right or get yourself into a mess.

    The biggest motivation for being a journalist is the love and passion for the job. A poorly remunerated journalist might be an enemy to the society itself. He might become a watchdog that turns against its owner. There is no disputing the fact that Nigerian journalists are easily among the worst paid in the world. If you doubt this, do a simple comparison of the pay structure of the Nigerian journalists with those of several other professionals like accountants and bankers, then, you will know what I am talking about.

    In a society where only a few media organisations are truly doing well enough to pay their reporters well and timely, investigative journalists need be aware that sources of funding for their follow-up stories or 100 per cent fresh works do not have to be their employers alone. There are international organisations and foundations that support investigative works such as the International Investigative Journalism Centre. These organisations accept pitches from time to time from journalists working on investigative stories. Once your pitch is successful, you get a grant to do the work. Local organisations, such as the Wole Soyinka Investigative Journalism Centre, are also working along this line.

    Funding is, however, not the only constraint to investigative journalism. Other factors such as proprietor’s interests and even a reporter’s personal relationship with a subject of investigation play a crucial part. Not a few media houses will bury a story in order to ensure that advert flow from a client does not stop. Many stories have died such unnatural deaths because of these reasons and the society is the worse for it.

    I must also point out the fact that our laws are full of loopholes and do not encourage investigative journalism. There is so much secrecy in government that even with the Freedom of Information, FoI, Act, journalists still confront challenges in accessing government information because agents of government have found a way to beat the FoI. Be that as it may, a creative investigative journalist can still find a way around these bottlenecks and produce good investigative copies and save the society. While I will agree that, in Nigeria, as elsewhere around the globe, allegations of corruption are employed as ‘weapons of mass destruction’ in political warfare, the only way to separate genuine reports from fictional ones is to speedily investigate them.

    As we all know, Nigerians don’t have the culture of public officials whose integrity has been badly impugned resigning their offices in order to defend themselves. Rather, they sit in judgment over their own trials. The unfortunate impression that has been created in the country through the years is that anyone who is politically connected enough can get away with just about anything. Let it be noted that Nigeria cannot attain the much-bandied greatness or perhaps, even survive, if criminality and corruption are not checked or reduced to the barest minimum. That is why we must all be committed to rolling back the tide of corruption.

    The point should also be made that investigative journalism has not flourished in Nigeria as it should have been, perhaps, due to the ownership structure and control of the mass media in the country. In the 1970s, up to the early 1980s, government had an overwhelming influence in newspaper ownership while broadcasting, either through the radio or TV, was also monopolised by it. Now that there is deregulation in media business in Nigeria, those who own the media houses, whether businessmen, politicians, or even media professionals themselves, have allowed, in many cases, personal interests to override their news judgements. This, no doubt, constitutes a debilitating cog in the wheel of investigative journalism in the country. Added to this are laziness, corruption and lack of professional enterprise spirit in the average journalist.

    Investigative journalism will continue to merely mark time if we do not ensure that there are guarantees for its survival, particularly through organisations lending relevant support to it, such as funding. We should always remember that in spite of the constitutional role placed on the members of the Fourth Estate of the Realm, there are institutional and other bottlenecks that we all must help overcome.

    Let me sound a note of warning here. When we ask for accountability from politicians, banks, government agencies and others where economic crimes are rampant, it is because we recognise that men and women are capable of all manners of evil. So, we must be careful and creative in exposing them without being hurt in the process as evil men and women will not just fold their arms and watch you ruin them!

    Concluded

  • ‘UNEP Report implementation’ll reduce crimes’

    ‘UNEP Report implementation’ll reduce crimes’

    The Minister of the Environment, Mrs. Amina Mohammed, has assured that the full implementation of the recommendations in the report of the United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP) on environmental assessment in Ogoni land will reduce crimes and violence.

    Also, the Acting Managing Director of the Niger Delta Development Commission (NDDC), Mrs. Ibim Semenitari, said the Federal Government’s interventionist agency would take part in the Ogoni clean-up.

    She said this was part of its mandatory assignment to ensure the development of every community in Niger Delta.

    Mohammed and Semenitari spoke yesterday while inspecting the venue for the June 2 kick-off of Ogoni clean-up by President Muhammadu Buhari at Numuu-Tekuru Waterfront in Bodo City, Gokana Local Government Area of Rivers State.

    During last year’s electioneering campaigns, Buhari, the then presidential candidate of the All Progressives Congress (APC), visited Ogoni land and pledged that he would ensure the full implementation of the recommendations in the UNEP report, if elected.

    On August 5, last year, after 68 days in office, the President approved several actions to fast-track the implementation of the UNEP report in Ogoni land.

    These included the amendment of the official gazette establishing HYPREP to reflect a new governance framework, comprising a Governing Council, a Board of Trustees (BoT) and Project Management.

    The minister yesterday said it was a coincidence that the Federal Government decided to kick-off the clean-up at the same location, where Buhari, as Head of State, inaugurated a fish pond for the Niger Delta Basin Development Authority (NDBDA) in 1984.

    Mohammed said: “It is such a coincidence. I do not imagine that President Buhari, when he was making his promise, remembered that this is going to happen at this time, because this fish pond was working and he is the one who inaugurated it. It was about livelihood in the midst of the wealth we take from this land and you see that it is gone.

    “It is a tragedy, but we are coming back again with that hope that we can return the ecosystem to what it was, the livelihood to what it was and provide alternatives to the crimes that are going on now. It is a kind of blessing that comes along. He (President Buhari) made a promise and is trying to deliver.”

    Semenitari said the NDDC had a commitment and a mandatory assignment to ensure that it was part of the clean-up process.

    She said: “Development is a big issue for us and the commission’s assignment is to ensure development of every community. One of the biggest issues for the commission is the matter of the environment, to the extent that it was actually the reason the commission was created.

    “NDDC was created to ensure sustainable livelihood, cleaner environment and more sustainable environment in the region from where crude oil exploration and exploitation occur.

    “Clearly, the commission has a commitment and a mandatory assignment to ensure that it is part of this process, as long as it takes.”