Tag: Prof. Bolaji Owasanoye

  • New ICPC chief pledges to live above board

    Prof. Bolaji Owasanoye, the newly appointed Chairman, Independent Corrupt Practices and other related offences Commission (ICPC), has pledged to live above aboard in the discharge of his responsibilities.

    He made the pledge during his interaction with journalists in Abuja on Tuesday.

    Owasanoye, who is the fourth chairman of ICPC, was sworn-in by President Muhammadu Buhari on Feb. 4.

    Until his appointment by the then Acting President, Prof. Yemi Osinbajo on Aug. 2, 2017, Owasanoye was the Executive Secretary of the Presidential Advisory Committee Against Corruption.

    He replaced Mr. Ekpo Nta, who was redeployed to the National Salaries, Incomes and Wages Commission.

    He said that the chairman and board members of ICPC would not push past their limits, but would live above board.

    “We won’t be the ones frustrating the efforts of the commission.

    “We will provide leadership. We will work within the confines of the law.

    “We will not be ambiguous in our statements and we will be an example to the staff members of the commission.

    “We will also work with integrity, absolutely,” Owasanoye said.

    He added that as chairman of ICPC, he would ensure that staff members were motivated.

    According to him, a mechanism is already put in place to achieve that.

    READ ALSO: ICPC recovers N594b from civil servants

    On divulging information to the public, the chairman said that a provision in the ICPC Act prohibited discussion on issues being investigated.

    “We are only allowed to make a public statements when we have done an arrest and have charged someone to court.

    “Sometimes some of our investigations are jeopardised when you expose them on the pages of newspapers.

    “I appreciate it that the media have a right to know and so every now and then we will let you know measure and steps we are taking.

    “But in terms of specific things about who, what – until we formally arrest the person,  charge them to court, we will not put a name to what we are doing,” he said.

    He further said that coordinating what the new management met on ground was one of the challenges.

    “The commission has been talking on some cases that in my view, could be easily dealt with by other agencies or by other methods.

    This, he said, included civil contract issues and land cases.

    “I do not think we have any business with those issues,” Owasanoye said.

  • ‘Why criminal cases are poorly investigated’

    ‘Why criminal cases are poorly investigated’

    Major stakeholders in criminal justice administration have identified poor funding as the reason why most criminal cases were poorly investigated by investigating agencies.

    President of the Court of Appeal, Justic Zainab Bulkachuwa, Inspector General of Police, Ibrahim Idris, Executive Secretary of the Presidential Advisory Committee Against Corruption, Prof. Bolaji Owasanoye and Law Professor, Yemi Askinseye-George (SAN), argued that without adequate funding it was impossible to expect success in criminal investigation and prosecution.

    They spoke at a training session for officers of the Nigerian Police on the theme: “Towards Effective Implementation of the Administration of Criminal Justice Act (ACJA) 2015,” organised by the Centre for Socio-Legal Studies (CSLS), headed by Prof. Akinseye-George.

    About 350 policemen participated in the training.

    Represented by a Justice of the Court of Appeal, Justice Emmanuel Agim, the Appeal Court President noted that the quality of investigation often determines the outcome of any criminal case in court.

    Justie Bulkachuwa said: “Unless the pre-trial process is fair and transparent, the end, which is the trial, will fail. Investigation is the foundation of what is going to happen in future, that is the trial.

    “We must spend more on police and more on investigation. There is still a huge problem with investigation. Investigation does not mean detaining a suspect for long before taking his statement.

    “It does not require just taking the suspect’s confessional statement. All these must happen before the arrest. You have to have funds in order to deal with the facts. Investigation requires logistics. It requires funding.

    “It requires you to provide vehicles and stationery to take the statement. To be able to arrest they need vehicle and they need stationery to be able to take the statements of suspects.

    “Lack of funding for investigation will make police officer to sit back in the office and compile the file only the extent that he can.

    “You need the moral will to do what is right. If you do not have the moral will you cannot effectively enforce the law. What is your moral standard and professional ethics?

    “If you do not have the moral will you cannot effectively enforce the law by arresting a suspect or in taking his statement.”

    Ibrahim, who declared the event open, said he was committed to the concept of “policing with integrity,” with emphasis on continuous training for members of the police force.

    The IGP assured the gathering that he would not relent in ridding the force of bad eggs.

    He said the dedicated and upright ones will be rewarded.

    Owasanoye contended that without adequate funding, the country would not record success in crime fighting.

     

  • Ekweremadu seeks public hearings for national budgets

    Ekweremadu seeks public hearings for national budgets

    Deputy Senate President Ike Ekweremadu Wednesday said national budget proposals should be subjected to public hearings.

    He said public scrutiny would reduce the corruption associated with the budgeting process and will improve transparency.

    It will also enable the citizens make direct input on areas in need of attention, he said.

    Ekweremadu spoke in Abuja on the second day of the national conference on “Role of the Legislature in the fight against Corruption”, organised by Presidential Advisory Committee Against Corruption (PACAC) and the joint Senate and House of Representatives Committee on Anti-corruption, in collaboration with the European Union, United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC) and the Africa Development Studies Center.

    Ekweremadu, who chaired a session, said Nigeria is perceived as a corrupt nation partly because its budgeting processes are not transparent enough.

    He said: “We are one of the few countries that don’t subject our budgets to public hearings. I don’t see why Appropriation Bills should not be sent in early by the executive so that the public can contribute.

    “The problem has always been that the executive brings budget proposals at the last minute, usually at the end of a financial year, leaving no room for public input,” he said.

    PACAC’s Executive Secretary, Prof Bolaji Owasanoye, urged the National Assembly to make its budgets public for the sake of transparency and accountability.

    He said the lawmakers should justify to Nigerians the fact that there has been over 2,220 per cent increase in National Assembly’s budget between 1999 and 2014.

    Owasanoye said the number of lawmakers has not increased, nor has the salaries of other workers increased, yet their budget rose from N6.9billion in 1999 to N150billion in 2014.

    According to him, National Assembly’s budget was N6.9billion in 1999, N9.9billion in 2000, N19.8billion in 2001, N21.6billion in 2002, N24.3billion in 2003, N34.7billion in 2004, N55.4billion in 2005, N60billion in 2007, N106billion in 2009 and N154.3billion in 2010.

    Owasanoye accused the lawmakers of competing with the executive rather than focusing on their core mandates of lawmaking and oversight duties.

    “The National Assembly, just like the judiciary, does not account to anybody for how it spends money. It’s a big problem. The arm of government to help us deal with that is the legislature.

    “But for several years they’ve been collecting over N100billion, they’ve not accounted to anybody. They have to justify it to us. That is the only way to remove the negative perception that that the National Assembly is corrupt.

    “On constituency projects, which I have no aversion for, in the majority of cases, unless we want to live in denial, a legislator wants to nominate or succeeds in totally hijacking the contract.

    “So, the National Assembly should stop competing with the executive for budget increases,” Owasanoye said.

  • Sagay: A corrupt judge commits crime against humanity

    Sagay: A corrupt judge commits crime against humanity

    • PACAC reviews activities one year after
    Chairman of the Presidential Advisory Committee Against Corruption (PACAC), Prof Itse Sagay (SAN) on Monday came hard on those condemning the arrest of two Supreme Court justices and other judges by the Department of State Services (DSS), saying such critics ignore the implications of judicial corruption.
    According to him, it is as if a corrupt judge is committing a crime against humanity because he holds the power of life and death and is expected by the society to be above board.
    Sagay said where a society loses confidence in the judiciary, it would resort to self-help,
    He spoke in Abuja at a news conference by PACAC to review its activities since it was established last August by President Muhammadu Buhari.
    Sagay thinks many Nigerians do not appreciate the sincerity of the Federal Government’s anti-corruption battle, saying it was as if many preferred the old order, which he said would have turned Nigeria to country worse than Zimbabwe
    He said: “I think that those who have criticised the DSS and the manner the search was conducted or even criticized the whole idea of a search being conducted seem not to have looked at the implications of judicial corruption.
    “At the end of the day when there is corruption anywhere, who do you take the matter to? It is to the judge. The judge is the ultimate and in fact, the buck stops at his court. So, if that judge is complicit in the corruption then that is the end of the fight against corruption. That is the awful implication!
    “So, any judge who is corrupt is committing a crime – in fact, one can even say it’s a crime against humanity because it just destroys our confidence in a system which should sustain the state in law and order. It encourages people to resort to self-help because there is no hope in taking a matter to court.”
    Sagay said the judiciary became so corrupt that it endorsed violent elections in which thousands lost their lives.
    “Today, just to give an example, we have some sitting governors whom we all knew that they did not win an election. Because they killed their way into office, people are still dying in those states, for them to sustain themselves in that office.
    “Yet some courts at the highest level gave approval to the process that brought those people to what I would call their bloody seats on which they are sitting. These are some of the things we are talking about. If the judiciary is corrupt, the only body, the only arm of government that has the power of life and death over Nigerians, if they are corrupt, then it is frightening,” he said.
    Sagay believes many commentators ignored the monies allegedly found on the judges, saying: “The other thing that surprises me is that a lot of people have made commentaries criticising what has been happening and have ignored the outcome of these searches completely.
    “Isn’t it enough that billions of Naira were found in private residences? Don’t you associate these billions of Naira with the fact that your roads are in a state of disrepair, that your hospitals are under-equipped or ill-equipped, and that schools are dilapidated and that it affects your daily life? What of those in the public service today who cannot get salaries paid because all these monies came from the public purse?
    “The point I am making is that we seem to want to eat an omelet without breaking eggs; that is what Nigerians want. There are Nigerians who say ‘Ooh, we are suffering a lot of hardship since the Buhari government came and that we are better off under corruption’.
    “Isn’t that the most terrible thing for anybody to mouth, without considering what would have happened if Buhari had not come? If that had been the case, I don’t think that there would have been a country today; I think that Zimbabwe would have been better because this is a government that is operating on little or no budget because by the time they came in, what was existing had been squandered completely and shared among those now being defended with cries of ‘human rights’.
    “What I am saying is that it is very discouraging because if you are struggling for the masses of this country, for the welfare of Nigerians, for improvement of the standard of living and then you are not encouraged, the tendency is for you to give up. For people to prefer corruption to the integrity that we are seeing in government today is very shocking. And I can tell you that if I were in government, I would have been extremely discouraged.
    “We cannot have it both ways! We need the judiciary but we need an upright judiciary; without that, one arm of government would collapse, democracy would collapse. Let us think of the implication of what is going on. If we don’t put the judiciary right and we don’t have a judiciary in which we have confidence, a judiciary with integrity and honour, a judiciary with moral authority; then, we have no government and we have no democracy.”
    Sagay said it would have been unthinkable for the DSS to raid the homes of judges even under military rule when courts gave several verdicts against the government, all because of the high level of integrity the judges had.
    “You people remember the era of Justices Eso, Oputa, Aniagolu, Nnamani, Idigbe, Mohammed Bello, and Obaseki? Which DSS would have dared to even question any of those people? Nobody! No agency of government would have dared it. They gave a lot of their judgments against the military government. I can cite over 20 judgments which they gave against military government.
    “They gave a judgment against Buhari’s military government, saying he had no power to retire some people, the Manager of the Fire service in Lagos, Garba. It was held that his retirement (by the military regime) was illegal.
    “I can cite so many! There was also Ojukwu’s case and everybody knows that. It (Supreme Court) held that the powers that be, the military government could not engage in self-help by preventing Ojukwu from living in his father’s house. Ojukwu got judgment and instead of appealing, they went and threw him out.
    “Then, the Supreme Court held that for throwing him out and preventing him from accessing his father’s house, rather than appealing that judgment, they (military) are deprived of the right to come to this court.
    “That moral authority has crashed and therefore, having crashed, like a tree that has fallen, ants, lizards and all sorts of things can climb over it. You bring yourself down and then, whatever happens after that is your own fault.
    “The ordinary man like you and I could be guilty of corruption but a judge should never be guilty of corruption. Once a judge does that, he brings himself to our level and so, cannot complain if he is treated the same way that you and I are treated. That is what has happened. Let us be objective and be fair to this country with our commentary and not be narrow-minded,” Sagay said.
    PACAC Executive Secretary, Prof Bolaji Owasanoye said the arrested judges should be suspended while their trial lasts and until they clear their names.
    He noted that a member of the committee had to step down when serious allegations were made against him.
    Owasanoye said: “The National Judicial Council (NJC) did not suggest in their respond that they’re suspending the judges. But what should be the proper thing? The proper thing of course is for the judges to be suspended. The reason is because all over the world, if a judge is going to be appearing before a court on criminal charges, you ask yourself, is it appropriate for the judge to continue to sit in another respect?
    “I’m talking about best practices here. After all when other people are being tried, we argue that they should step down. We’re not talking of an administrative issue here; we’re talking about a crime. I think that the proper thing to do is actually for the judges to be given that charge to defend themselves.
    “In other climes, when a policy that somebody initiates does not even work well, they resign. David Cameron resigned simply because Britain voted to leave the European Union (Brexit). He didn’t do anything wrong.  Clearly, the honourable thing is for the NJC to give those judges an opportunity to go and defend themselves and then if they’re cleared they can take back their jobs strengthened.
    “Again, there are situations in which NJC has been investigating the judges behind the scene and technically has not allowed them to preside over cases, even though those allegations may not be criminal in nature. So is this not even much more sensitive and a more compelling reason to suspend them?”

    A PACAC member, Prof Femi Odekunle, said those faulting the judges’ arrest missed the point.

    “There are those who are making arguments that amount to shenanigans, to shield people. Corruption in the judiciary is not the same as corruption in the marketplace; the judiciary is the soul of our nation. Therefore, anything that could be done with it should be done.
    “Concerning the legality of whether the DSS has power to do what it did or not, we have evidence and it is even commonsensical to realize that corruption is a security issue by the nature of its volume, character and seriousness in Nigeria.
    “It is a security issue. Take the direct example, the Dasuki case; when people who were supposed to defend the territorial integrity of the country actually took the money meant to buy arms and ammunition and distributed it anyhow. Is that not a security issue? When you steal the money meant to build roads, accidents occur, people die. These constitute security issues.
    “My argument in papers I did before is that the DSS should, in training their staff, particularly the senior officers, ensure they have the perception to see corruption as a security issue,” he said.
    Another PACAC member, Prof Sadiq Radda, while justifying the judges’ arrest, said less emphasis should be laid on legal justice.
    He said: “Journalists should make it abundantly clear to all Nigerians that there is a world of difference between legal justice and social justice. What we seem to be emphasizing in Nigeria is legal justice; we use all technicalties, all the little rules and all the techniques of making sure that people go scot-free but we could as well look at the issue of social justice.
    “Social justice connotes that people who have been in government positions, have amassed wealth that is quite visible; therefore, there is need to develop methodologies to ensure that they are exposed such that those who aspire to be in such positions are discouraged. The less we rely on technicalties that’ll be to the detriment of the country, the better it would be for us all.”
    Another member, Prof Etannibi Alemika called for new standards of behavior, which he thinks should start at the level of the individual .
    “We must behave with an understanding of the philosophical foundation of the law because that is the only defence. We need to set new standards of behavior for our country; the law alone will not help us. The state should not be lawless but citizens should not also be lawless in order not to evoke the wrath of lawless state agencies,” he said.
  • Anti-graft war: ‘Big fish’ must be jailed – Owasanoye

    Impunity and abuse of public trust will persist despite Federal Government’s anti-corruption efforts unless a “big fish” gets convicted, the Secretary of the Presidential Committee on Anti-corruption, Prof. Bolaji Owasanoye, has said.

    Owasanoye, who noted that anti-graft agencies, particularly the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) have only secured convictions of “small fries” in the past one year, argued that such pattern of conviction was inadequate to serve as deterrent to others.

    “If big fish do not go to jail, impunity will continue to rise. We must send a big fish to jail. It is important to make this point, because it encourages impunity when a category of people present themselves as if they are above the law.

    “So, imposing sanction and enforcement is very important, and that involves the cooperation of everybody, who is a player in the system: including the prosecution, the defence, the judiciary and the prison authorities,” he said.

    Also, the Chief of Army Staff, Major Gen. Tukur Buratai, has ruled out negotiation with Niger Delta militants, arguing that the government’s strategy was first, to smoke them out of hiding.

    Owasanoye and Buratai spoke at the state of the nation conference organised by the Nigerian Bar Association (NBA) in Abuja on Tuesday.

    Owasanoye, who gave details of federal government’s anti-corruption efforts, said the government was currently emphasizing on assets recovery and putting in place measures to prevent leakages.

    “In Nigeria’s case, the priority is to return the stolen assets. And this is where the logics are. If you inherit a government that is very broke and your revenue source is going down and yet, you have some individuals within the system, who are virtually richer than the state, what are you going to do? You have to go after them and retrieve the money they have stolen. And so, that is the strategy.

    “That is, of course, the strategy that the government is pursuing. It is not just by taking stock of the looters, but also by blocking leakages and haemorrhage in the system, which hitherto allow outflow of public funds,” he said.