Tag: Osinbajo

  • Agenda for Osinbajo   

    The well-respected man of God and General Overseer of the Redeemed Christian Church of God (Worldwide), Pastor Enoch Adejare Adeboye, once shared a story while ministering during a Bible study session at the National Headquarters of the Church in Ebute Meta, Lagos, in the early 1990s. The Pastor said his late father once told him that opportunity is  an old man who is bald at the back of his head and not in front. According to him, once opportunity turns his back, there may be nothing to grab again since he is bald at the back of his head.

    We deem it fit to let the Acting President, Yemi Osinbajo, know that he should make use of the opportunity given to him by his principal, President Muhammed Buhari, to continue to pilot the affairs of this nation while the President is on an extended medical leave in the United Kingdom. For now, no one knows how long or short the extended medical leave may last. But as a good steward, the Acting President should continue to work assiduously so as to give a good account of himself to his principal whenever he comes back to the country, by God’s grace.

    Another word for Opportunity is Chance as the Holy Bible in the above quoted Scripture puts it. And so the Acting President knows quite well that it was chance and time that worked in his favour, for him to have been selected to run on the same ticket with President Muhammed Buhari in the first instance before God eventually crowned their efforts with good success to win the 2015 Presidential Elections on a platter. Already, the good reports about him show that the hand of God is obviously with him for good. A national newspaper- Daily Trust on Sunday has even reportedly scored him 25 marks within 38 days (Daily Trust on Sunday, February 26, 2017, front page). I am sure the paper must have reckoned with how the local currency has appreciated significantly against the dollar and other major foreign currencies.

    This perception is further reinforced by the relative calmness in the Niger Delta Area that has been the hotbed of confusion and destruction of the economic base of the nation as a result of the violent activities of the Niger-Delta militants with possible hijacking by some criminal elements.

    While the President is still being attended to by his doctors in London, we wish to present a 3-point Agenda before the Acting President.

    (1)The reduction/ alleviation of the prevailing acute hunger/abject poverty in the land; (2) Improved National Security with a view to checkmate the activities of the Fulani herdsmen and pipeline vandalisation especially in the Northern and the Southern parts of the country respectively and  (3) Strengthening of the Naira so that less than N100 can exchange for $1, by God’s grace.

    These aforementioned 3-Point Agenda may seem like a tall order to some people but with God nothing shall be impossible. Once there is a Will, there will surely be a way in Jesus name.

    First and foremost, the Acting President should do everything within his powers to reduce hunger-related deaths and diseases in the country. The money or the funds that have been recovered from the alleged treasury looters should be ploughed back into fighting hunger in the land. Recently, the United Nations projected that it will need $4.4bn by the end of March 2017 to prevent catastrophic hunger and famine in South-Sudan, Nigeria, Somali and Yemen, according to the Blueprint newspaper edition of Friday, February 24, 2017, page 23. We want the Acting President to remove Nigeria from this UN list. In case, he is not yet aware, Nigerians have been dying of hunger and hunger-related diseases. The government may therefore need to quickly rise up to arrest this ugly trend by using the proceeds of its War Against Corruption to fight the War Against Acute Hunger/Abject Poverty. Henceforth, proceeds from forfeitures should not be paid into the Federation Accounts to be shared with the State Governors who allegedly have tracked records of misappropriation of some of these funds. Instead, the money should be invested to fund some of the Social Safety Nets/Policies of the government that have direct bearing on poverty reduction or alleviation.

    Secondly, the Acting President should continue with his dialogue with the people of Niger-Delta and rekindle hope in them as partners in progress with a view to put a final halt to all forms of hostilities in the area and thus allow a very conducive economic atmosphere to prevail to the mutual benefits of the Niger-Delta indigenes and the Federal Government. Also kidnapping should be a forgotten crime in Nigeria while the Fulani herdsmen menace should be tackled headlong so that crop farmers can return to their farmlands and farming communities without any fear of further molestation.

    And lastly, the Naira should be strengthened to the point that less than N100 will soon exchange for $1 by God’s grace. As a matter of fact, the ultimate goal is for the naira to be at par with the dollar, if not stronger. Yes, we know that we are addressing a spiritual man and a Pastor, that is,  Professor Yemi Osinbajo, who is conversant with God’s Ways/Deeds as recorded in the Scriptures with a particular reference to how God brought an abrupt  end to famine in the land of Samaria within 24 hours- II Kings 6 & 7, KJV. ‘’….Thus saith the Lord, “Tomorrow about this time, shall a measure of fine flour be sold for a shekel and two measures of barley for a shekel in the gate of Samaria” II Kings 7:1, KJV “And it came to pass as the man of God had spoken to the king, saying, two measures of barley for a shekel and a measure of fine flour for a shekel, shall be tomorrow about this time in the gate of Samaria “II Kings 7:18, KJV.

    And since God is not a man that He should lie, this same miracle that God performed in the land of Samaria can still be repeated in Nigeria. He is the God of all flesh, is there anything too difficult for Him? ‘’Behold I am the LORD, the God of all flesh, is there anything too hard for me? – Jeremiah 32:27, KJV. I make bold to say nothing is too difficult for our God to do in our land provided we believe in the LORD our God and believe His prophets. ”…. Believe in the LORD your God, so shall ye be established, believe His prophets so shall ye prosper “-II Chronicles20:20 KJV.

    And so Mr. Acting President, with these Scriptures, I rest my case on a spiritual note and pray that the Lord will strengthen your hands to perform and be in a better position to give a good account of your stewardship not only to Mr. President when he comes back, by God’s grace, but to the whole nation in general when the due time comes in Jesus name.

     

    • Olakunle, JP, is General Secretary, National Prayer Movement
  • Osinbajo urges stakeholders to promote MSMEs

    Acting President Yemi Osinbajo on Thursday in Sokoto urged stakeholders in the country to promote Micro, Small and Medium Enterprises (MSME) to stabilise the economy.

    Osinbajo made the appeal when he declared open a two-day nationwide MSMEs Clinic.

    He said,” being one of the cardinal points of the present administration, it is important to deepen all of our engagements into agriculture which is what the government is focusing on.”

    Osinbajo implored federal agencies like the Small and Medium Enterprises Development Agency of Nigeria (SMEDAN) to partner the small and medium business owners.

    This, he said, would ensure that those making local products got to the formal market.

    “The small and medium business owners should partner with all the government agencies by registering their businesses so as to get their products to the formal market,” the acting President said.

    “This country will soon pull out of recession; we have resources of every kind – gypsum, potassium – and there is no reason this country should not be the wealthiest in the world.

    “We must grow what we eat and wear what we produce.”

    NAN

  • Osinbajo visits NAF Base, meets Guinea Bissau PM

    Osinbajo visits NAF Base, meets Guinea Bissau PM

    Acting President Yemi Osinbajo on Thursday morning landed at the Nigerian Air Force (NAF) Base, Kaduna, where he received Prime Minister of Guinea Bissau, Gen. Umoru Sissco Embalo to discuss how to end political upheaval in that country.

    The prime minister said he came to Nigeria to visit the acting President and seek advice on how to address his country’s political crisis.

    Embalo said, “You know that our relationship with Nigeria didn’t begin today, it started during our struggle and liberation. Nigeria is always supporting us and that is why I am here to explain to the acting president about the political situation in Guinea Bissau. And with Nigeria leading the crisis resolution group, I am happy.

    Osinbajo, who left for Sokoto shortly after meeting the Guinea Bissau PM, promised the visiting team that Nigeria as a “big brother” will continue to be supportive until the political situation in that country improves.

    He said, “I am sure you are familiar with Nigeria’s engagement with Guinea Bissau. We will continue to engage until this issue is resolved.

    “And we think that ECOWAS will be able to resolve it very soon as active stakeholder. And we hope that in very short time, we will resolve that with other parties involved.

    “We are collaborating in every possible trend. As I said, Guinea Bissau and Nigeria have been partners and friends for a very long time and we are very actively involved. We also collaborate with Guinea Bissau on economic, security and even political issues as you can see. And that’s why this consultation has taken place.”

     

  • FG vows to protect women’s rights

    The Federal Government on Wednesday promised to protect the rights of women in the country.

    The assurance was given in a message by Acting President Yemi Osinbajo as part of activities marking the 2017 International Women’s Day.

    A statement issued by his Senior Special Assistant on Media and Publicity, Laolu Akande, reads: “On International Women’s Day, I would like to, on behalf of the President, Government and people of Nigeria, recognise and appreciate the very valuable work done, and role played by women in our country, over the years, since the struggle for independence.

    “We acknowledge and value the contributions women are making to national development. They do this daily working within and outside the home as well as in public life. Indeed they sometimes are the sole providers for their families.

    “To strengthen the economic capacity of Nigerian women, President Muhammadu Buhari personally ensured that the sum of N1.6 billion was set aside for the National Women’s Empowerment Fund – the Jarin Mata fund.

    “This administration also established, as part of its Social Investment Programme, the Government Enterprise and Empowerment Programme (GEEP) which provides interest-free soft loans to artisans and traders. At the moment, 60 per cent of beneficiaries under the GEEP programme are women.

    “While we have made some progress over the years connecting women and girls with opportunities, there is still so much more to do. We must strive to use our laws, cultural and religious institutions as well as our resources to empower women, give them opportunity, and protect their rights to a safe, healthy and stable life in our country.

    “This administration remains committed to ensuring the protection of all women including from all forms of gender-based violence especially those living in parts of our country where the security situation is difficult and living conditions are challenging. We are determined that Nigerian women will live to fulfill their aspirations in a peaceful and prosperous country.”

     

  • I feel so blessed at 60- Osinbajo

    I feel so blessed at 60- Osinbajo

    What has the Acting President; Professor Yemi Osinbajo got to say about his 60th birthday anniversary?

    Below was his response when the question was put to him by state house correspondents after the Federal Executive Council meeting on Wednesday.

    “I think I am frankly not different from yesterday but I must say that it’s the work of grace and I just feel so blessed: first, that I am
    sixty and secondly that one is in good health and able to serve one’s country.

    “I think it’s just grace and a great deal of blessings from the Almighty God. So I really feel very happy, very fulfilled and frankly very thankful to God.  I am very very thankful to God.

  • Osinbajo a true man of God – Daniel

    Osinbajo a true man of God – Daniel

    Former Governor of Ogun State, Otunba (Engr.) Gbenga Daniel has described the Acting President, Professor Yemi Osinbajo as a true man of God and thoroughbred professional, imbued with exemplary leadership qualities. 
    In his goodwill message on the occasion of the 60th birthday anniversary of the Acting President, Otunba Daniel stated that the landmark achievements of Professor Osinbajo both in private and public life are pure testimonies of a selfless statesman, dedicated democrat and nationalist whose service are much needed especially at this crucial period of our nation’s history. 

    Gbenga Daniel
    Daniel
    This is contained in a statement issued on Wednesday by Ayo’ Giwa, Media Assistant to the former Governor, observing that the relation with the Acting President started a long time ago.
    “My relationship with Professor Osinbajo dates back to our university days during the time which he has been exhibiting qualities of a born leader which earned him much respect and admiration. Definitely, his best is yet to come.
    “As he celebrates this milestone, my family and I wish him many more years of robust health and divine wisdom in the service of our dear Fatherland.”
  • Osinbajo to Onnoghen: be just

    Osinbajo to Onnoghen: be just

    •Ayade hails CJN

    Acting President Yemi Osinbajo yesterday swore in Justice Walter Onnoghen as the 17th Chief Justice of Nigeria (CJN).
    Onnoghen was sworn in as acting CJN by President Muhammadu Buhari November 10, 2016 following the recommendation of the National Judicial Council (NJC).
    He took yesterday’s oath on substantive basis following his confirmation by the Senate.
    By virtue of the position, Onnoghen automatically gets the second highest national award of Grand Commander of the Order of the Niger (GCON). Osinbajo decorated him with the badge and the sash for the award, yesterday.
    Osinbajo, said: “From this day March 7th, 2017, Justice Onnoghen becomes the custodian and protector of the highest duties that society owes its people, fairness, Justice and truth. The responsibility is an awesome one.
    “It is the closest that man serves as the Almighty God having powers of lives, livelihoods and futures, having power to give and indeed to take away power, and authority to supervise all men and women to whom our law and constitution given the position of judgeship.
    “Since we do not force men and women to be judges, they voluntarily take on the position of high priests in the temple of Justice. They will of course be held to a much higher standard, a much higher moral and ethical standard than the rest of us. They must not only be seen to be just they must be just indeed. The mere perception of judicial malfeasance poisons the waters of Justice let alone the reality. While delays in the administration of justice often defeats the ends of Justice.” he said
    Saying that Onnoghen assumed the position at a crucial time in the history of Nigeria, when all arms of government had suffered a loss confidence, he added: “I pray that your tenure will revive and sustain that confidence.” he added
    He added that President Muhammadu Buhari through a telephone call on Monday extended his congratulations to Onnoghen.
    Onnoghen urged all arms of government to adhere to the rule of law.
    He said: “On my part as the head of the judiciary, I assure you that from the past experience, the key to everything in a democratic setting is adherence to the rule of law. There lies the solution to our problems.
    “Let us try to encourage the independence of the judiciary so as to ensure the rule of law. If everyone realises that they are subject to the rule of law and that there are certain things that are tackled according to the rule of law and behave accordingly, it will benefit all of us.” he added
    He thanked President Buhari, the Senate and Nigerians for the appointment and pledged his loyalty to the Federal Republic of Nigeria.
    Speaking with State House correspondents at the end of the ceremony, Onnoghen said.
    “I have already initiated measures, I have my reform agenda, and that is my blueprint.”
    Cross River State Governor Ben Ayade, described Onnoghen’s appointment as putting a round peg in a round hole.
    In a statement by his spokesman Christian Ita, Ayade said: “We the people of Cross River State rejoice with you on your appointment as the Chief Justice of Nigeria. For us, this is another well-deserved honour and recognition of your deep intellect, integrity and experience. There is no doubt that you will bring your expertise and ingenuity to bear on the administration of the justice system in Nigeria.
    “Given your antecedent, Nigerians can be rest assured that the much needed reforms in the judiciary will take place during your time as CJN, even as you strive to uphold its independence.”
    While lauding President Mohammadu Buhari for considering yet another Cross Riverian for an appointment to such an exalted position as CJN, Ayade said: “I want to thank r. President Mohammadu Buhari for finding our son, Justice Walter Onnoghen worthy of the exalted office of the Chief Justice of Nigeria. Once again, His Excellency has demonstrated that he is indeed a President for all.”

  • N458b Lagos- Ibadan rail to be completed in 2018, says Osinbajo

    N458b Lagos- Ibadan rail to be completed in 2018, says Osinbajo

    ACting President, Yemi Osinbajo, has flagged off the N458 billion Lagos – Ibadan segment 11 modern rail way project, assuring that the project would be completed within the time frame of December 2018.
    Osinbajo who spoke at the ground breaking ceremony held at Nigerian Railway Corporation premises Ebute Metta, Lagos, yesterday described the development as a reflection of the Federal Government plan to build a globally competitive economy with first grade infrastructure.
    He said the development of a functional railway system in the country is very dear to President Muhadu Buhari, adding that the ground breaking of the Lagos-Ibadan project further signifies the determination of the president to modernize the national railway system.
    “The president in his January 2016 visit to China reopened negotiation on the Chinese support for this project, secondly this ceremony also mark the commencement of our plan to move speedily to improve links with Lagos which is the national economic nerve centre and major port to other state capital across the country.
    “We made provision for matching funds in 2016 budget to complement the concession loans obtain from the people Republic of China. We have the entire Lagos- Kano rail track as well as the Lagos-Calabar railway track in the 2017 budget.”
    The Acting president said negotiations has been completed on the next phase of Kaduna –Kano portion , said the government has provided the counterpart funding for the Lagos-calabar routes adding that negotiations with the foreign counterpart funding will be finalized within the next three months.
    According to him, “an active and vibrant railway system conferred many benefit on the society. Our ultimate goal is to restore a railway using culture for both commercial and personal transportation. We are confident that the national rail project will create up to half a million jobs and facilitate the movement of up to 3.2 tons of cargo per annum.
    “It will also reduce the burden on national high ways thus reducing deterioration of the road network and increasing the life span of our roads.”
    He stressed that railway network will support efforts to diversify the economy and enhance the country export potentials.
    “Just as several of our cities became known as railway towns in the past we expect to boost economic activities within the railway lines that will eventually cut across the entire country.”
    Osinbajo said the Federal Ministry For Transportation has completed feasibility study for up to 13 routes identify for connecting state capital and major commercial centres to the rail network .
    “We should begin to see significant activities in this regards very shortly. It is important however to have a viable self sustaining and vibrant rail system it should be one that is not reliant on government funding which many not be available all time it should be one that can be upgraded at all time and not left to decay to management or lack of attention.
    “This is why the FG supports the replacement of the 1964 railway acts with a legal frame work that open railway projects in the country to greater private sector participation” He said.
    He expressed confident in the ability of the construction company to deliver the project within the time frame work stating that Nigerians are looking forward to a fast and efficient railway services.
    Also speaking, Lagos State Governor Mr. Akinwunmi Ambode, said Lagosians are excited about the project because it would further open up economy of the South West region and facilitate regional integration and growth.
    “The agricultural sector will receive the long awaited boost as the rail line will be a fast and convenient means of transporting farm produce from the hinterland to the city thereby increasing the economies of these places.
    “In addition, our proposed Red Line Project will breathe a new lease of life into our roads and highways. A direct benefit of this project is that containers and goods from the Apapa Port will now be transported by rail thereby reducing the number of trailers and other heavy duty vehicles on our roads.
    “A direct consequence of this project would be less productive man hours wasted on the roads due to traffic gridlock and bad roads due to heavy duty vehicles. In addition, we expect government to expend less-resources on road repair and maintenance once the rail line takes off and reduce the pressure of articulated vehicles on our roads,” Ambode said.

  • Update: We are committed to modernizing train system – Osinbajo

    Acting President Yemi Osinbajo on Tuesday restated the Federal Government’s determination to fully develop and modernize the nation’s rail system as a way of stimulating railway culture in Nigeria.

    He spoke in Lagos at the ground breaking ceremony of the Lagos-Ibadan Standard Gauge rail line, which is the second segment of the Lagos-Kano Standard Gauge Rail line.

    Osinbajo formally unveiled the plaque signalling the official commencement of work on the project at about 2:30 p.m. on Tuesday.

    Those at the event included the Senate President, Bukola Saraki, who was represented by the Senate Chief Whip, Prof. Olusola Adeyeye, Speaker of the House of Representatives Rt. Hon Yakubu Dogara, represented by the Chairman of the House Committee on Land Transportation, Hon Aminu Isa, some state governors notably Akinwunmi Ambode (Lagos), Ibikunle Amosun (Ogun), Abiola Ajimobi (Oyo), the National Chairman of the All Progressive Congress (APC), Chief Odigie Oyegun, the party’s Deputy National Chairman (South West), Chief Segun Oni, the Oba of Lagos, Oba Riliwanu Akiolu, members of the Federal Executive Council (FEC) and managing directors of government parastatatals and agencies, among others.

    Osinbajo assured that the project will be delivered by December 2018.

    He hinted that the federal government through the Ministry of Transportation has completed work on feasibility studies of about 13 new train routes that would see the train connecting virtually all the state capitals in the country.

    The acting President said the project will create about four direct jobs, stimulate the expansion of agro allied industries along the corridor and boost economic activities in towns along the corridor.

     

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

    How to ‘kill’ corruption, by Osinbajo, others

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

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

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

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

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

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

     

    Osinbajo: We must work together

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

     

    Judiciary’s role

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

     

    Reverse presumption of innocence

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

     

    Role of religious organisations

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

     

    Eliminate obstacles

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

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

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

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

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

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