Tag: Prof Itse Sagay

  • Lawyers, judges frustrating anti-graft war, say SGF, Falana, Sagay

    Lawyers, judges frustrating anti-graft war, say SGF, Falana, Sagay

    The Secretary to the Government of the Federation (SGF), Babachir David Lawal, Chairman, Presidential Advisory Committee Against Corruption (PACAC), Prof. Itse Sagay (SAN) and rights activist, Femi Falana (SAN) said on Thursday that activities of professionals, particularly lawyers and judges were frustrating efforts by the Federal Government to curb acts of corruption and impunity in the country.

    Lawal, Sagay, Falana and others, who spoke in Abuja at a workshop on the “Role of professionals in the fight against corruption,” were unanimous on the need for professionals to put societal interest above individual preferences, uphold professional ethics, and support government’s efforts to enthrone transparency in the conduct of state affairs.

    The workshop was put together by PACAC, Association of Professional Bodies of Nigeria (APBN) and the Convention on Business Integrity (CBI).

    Lawal said the role of lawyers and some compromised judges, who offer their expertise to indicted individuals and deploy delay tactics and other underhand methods to frustrate the successful prosecution of criminal cases, was particularly injurious to the federal government’s anti-corruption campaign.

    Represented by the Director, Nigerian national Volunteer Services (NNVS), Tor Tsavsar, the SGF said there was need for professionals to see themselves as stakeholders in government’s anti-graft efforts if the country was to grow and attain needed development.

    He said, “From recent revelations, corruption is usually aided and facilitated by conniving civil servants and professionals in the public and private sectors. It is no news that most stolen funds are laundered through our banks and other offshore entities that are owned and managed by professionals.

    “A recent case of the ‘Panama Papers scandals’ is an example of how politicians, criminals and rogue industries were assisted by professionals to launder stolen funds. It is equally regrettable that some of the professionals do not stop at aiding, abetting and facilitating the stealing of public funds, but more often than not, go further to offer direct and indirect support to indicted officials to beat the law.

    “It is no more news that corrupt officials are able to engage some of our seasoned lawyers, who employ negative tactics ‘in or out of court’ to frustrate trials of indicted officials. The retinue of frivolous interlocutory applications, which are pursued up to the apex court, while action on substantive matters are stayed, are common examples of how professional lawyers frustrate the fight against corruption.”

    Sagay, who deplored the conduct of professionals who aid corruption and fraud, said the federal government was looking at ways of ensuring that those, who aid acts of fraud and corruption, are also prosecuted.

    He said the workshop was intended to seek the support of professional bodies, and draw their attention to their responsibilities in this regard.

    Falana urged the federal government and anti-graft agencies to look beyond public officers and politically exposed individuals to include professionals, drug dealers and human traffickers in their activities.

     

  • Anti-graft war: Plea bargain inevitable for EFCC – Sagay

    Anti-graft war: Plea bargain inevitable for EFCC – Sagay

    The Chairman of the Presidential Advisory Committee on Corruption, Prof. Itse Sagay (SAN), said plea bargain is inevitable for the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFFC) and other agencies in order to recover looted funds by past public officers.

    He said it is easier to convict a man who steals a goat in Nigeria than a bigwig who had stolen billions from government coffers.

    He also said corrupt public officers deserve about 15 to 50 years jail terms.

    He disclosed that his committee will propose to the National Judicial Council (NJC) the removal of any judge who issues a perpetual injunction against interrogation, investigation, arrest or prosecution of corruption suspects.

    Sagay, who bared his mind in an interview with the in-house magazine of EFCC, “Zero Tolerance,” said without plea bargain, the anti-corruption agencies will just be prosecuting cases endlessly.

    He said: “Oh definitely. There has to be plea bargain or otherwise your agency will just go on prosecuting endlessly. If you have a case in which the person who is being charged quickly says ‘look, I am guilty, what sort of mitigation can I enjoy? I am going to return the money’ you need to look at it. That way in six months the matter is over and you can go on to the next case.

    “But where you don’t have plea bargaining, you have to fight, bring all the evidence and prove the case beyond reasonable doubt before the court. This will cost time, money and energy. What you could achieve with plea bargaining in three to six months, you may spend three to five years at great expenses to the state.

    “ Plea bargain for me is inevitable provided there are very strict guidelines so that you don’t have a situation where somebody pays N3million and takes N20 billion away without a term of imprisonment.

    “There is a lot of validity in that opinion because, as we always say, there is a tendency for the man who steals a goat to be easily arrested and convicted and sent to prison for three years and the man who virtually steals billions gets his bail and never sees the walls of the prison. That is the major difficulty in the anti-corruption struggle.”

    On punishment for corrupt elements, Sagay however admitted that he was no longer keen on death sentence.

    He recommended jail terms between 15 and 50 years for corrupt public officers and others.

  • Corruption, obstacle to economic growth – Sagay

    Corruption, obstacle to economic growth – Sagay

    Prof. Itse Sagay, Chairman, Presidential Advisory Committee Against Corruption says corruption is an obstacle to economic growth, development of the country.

    “It is also an obstacle to the eradication of poverty, improved life expectancy and improved livelihood of all Nigerians ‘’.

    Sagay said this at the 2nd Public Interest Symposium titled: “How to Fight and Win the War against Corruption; Challenges and Prospects”, at the Island Club, Lagos.

    According to him, corruption is the cause of the country`s low human development, as well as responsible for poor policy choices.

    He noted that the direct result of this was the execution of white elephant projects, mass unemployment and general misery and wretchedness of the masses.

    “Nigeria has been turned into the butt of jokes at the international community, for declaring itself the largest economy in Africa, while harbouring the poorest population in Africa.

    “So, we live in this paradox. Nigeria is rich; Nigerians are poor,“ Sagay noted.

    He said that President Muhammad Buhari had marked a turning point in the fight against corruption, whereas, previous administrations seemed to be have paid lip service to it.

    “The eradication of corruption is a major plank in President Buhari`s camp and as soon as he assumed office, he became the indicator for public conduct in the management of our resources.

    “Apart from Buhari`s unimpeachable integrity and known intolerance of corruption, which he has demonstrated since 1983, the various Anti-Corruption Agencies that had earlier had gone to sleep, have suddenly `roared back’ to life.

    “We are presently witnessing the dynamism of the EFCC under a new leadership and that of the Code of Conduct Bureau in recent months. The ICPC is also manifesting some resurgence in its activities,’’ he said.

    Sagay said that the major weapons established for the war against corruption were the Anti-Corruption Agencies (ACAs), — the ICPC, EFCC, the Code of Conduct Bureau and the Code of Conduct Tribunal.

    “However, there are other anti-corruption bodies like the Nigeria Police Force, the Nigeria Drug Law Enforcement Agency and the Bureau of Public Procurement, who are also engaged in combating corruption”.

    He said that the fight against corruption were numerous, however, some of these arise from poor standards of investigation and prosecution.

    “The prospect of effectiveness in the prosecution can be improved upon by prosecuting any person or persons who have compromised the process, be it a judge, a prosecutor or an investigator.

    “By identifying and selecting judges of the highest integrity, who have passion for justice and can never be compromised by financial blandishments, to form the core of judges,’’ he said.

    Earlier, the Chairman of the occasion, Oladipo Okpeseyi SAN and current Chairman of the Island Club said that they floated the public lecture series in order to identify specific areas of interest in the society needing urgent individual and government attention.

    He also noted that maiden edition, which was held in September 2015 had a theme, “Nigeria’s War on Terror: How to Fight and Win’’.

    The event, which was to start at 1pm on March16 had to commence later in the day.

     

  • Sagay slams S’ Court, SANs over  election petition,  anti-corruption war

    Sagay slams S’ Court, SANs over election petition, anti-corruption war

    •Says Wike, others climbed on dead bodies, human blood
    •Accuses SANs of siding with treasury looters

    The Head of Presidential Anti-Corruption Committee, Prof Itse Sagay, yesterday raised fresh concern over recent rulings of the Supreme Court on election petitions, particularly those of Rivers and Akwa Ibom states.

    Sagay, who spoke with journalists at the Palace of the Olu of Warri, Delta State, warned that the rulings, which gave victory to candidates regardless of copious evidence of irregularities and heavy human and material casualties, constituted a dangerous precedence in the history of elections.

    He said; “the judgements are very perverse, particularly relating to Akwa Ibom and Rivers. Everybody knows that there were no elections in those two states.

    “Everybody knows that people like Wike climbed into the governorship seat over dead bodies and over blood of human beings. There were no elections, they wrote the results; the evidence is there.

    “So, what the Supreme Court has done is to set the clock of electoral excellence and fairness and credibility back by, I do not want to say a thousand years, but certainly it is taking us back to where we were before Jega came in and sanitised the system. “We are going to have primitive and barbaric electoral culture; ‘kill as much as you can, destroy as much as you can, create as much catastrophe, but if you can find yourself on that seat, you are confirmed, regardless of the means by which you got there’.

    “That is a very major setback to democracy and the rule of law,” he stressed,

    Comparing the present Justices of the apex court to the past era, he said: “I remember 15, 20 years ago we had a Supreme Court that was the best in the world – better than the one you have in the US.

    “That was when you had Justices (Kayode) Eso, (Andrew) Obaseki, (Adolphous) Karibe-Whyte, Bello (Muhammed) and so on. Those people brought a culture to the Supreme Court and most of us thought when they left the culture would remain but it hasn’t.

    “New people have come, much younger people, and they have different approach to life because I don’t understand why you would have law, which is in conflict with justice and you prefer to apply that law – technical law, which is in conflict with justice, as we have seen in the case of Akwa Ibom and Rivers and a few other cases.

    “So, I think their orientations are different. I think the older ones who are gone believed that justice was number one. In such a case, you ask where does justice lie? They now interpreted the law in line with justice.

    “But now what we have is a group of people in the Supreme Court, who do not care where their legal interpretation is leading them. Once you have a divorce between law and justice, the whole legal system will break down and that is what has happened.”

    Meanwhile, Prof Sagay has also called for disciplinary actions against Senior Advocates of Nigeria (SANs) and other senior lawyers found to be encouraging corrupt politicians and looters of the nation’s treasury.

    He said: “There are some senior lawyers who have totally departed from anything that the calling of the law profession requires. They have thrown in their lot with the looters and have become, I won’t call them fellow looters, but definitely, they have started enjoying and sharing in the proceeds of crimes of these looters and because of that they are absolutely now against the anti-corruption law.

    “There is need to have these Senior Advocates thoroughly disciplined and if they would not accept discipline, they need to be removed from the profession before they bring more disgrace to the profession and at the same time drag this country down economically.”

  • ‘Wike climbed into the governorship seat over dead bodies’

    ‘Wike climbed into the governorship seat over dead bodies’

    The Head of Presidential Anti-corruption Committee, Prof Itse Sagay, has again voiced his concern over some recent rulings of the Supreme Court on election petitions, particularly those held in Rivers and Akwa Ibom states.
    Sagay, who spoke with newsmen at the Olu Palace, Warri on Saturday, warned that the rulings, which allow people who were declared winners without elections in spite of copious evidences of irregularities and heavy human and material casualties, set a dangerous precedent in the history of elections.
    “The judgements are very perverse, particularly relating to Akwa Ibom and Rivers. Everybody knows that there were no elections in those two states.
    “Everybody knows that people like Wike climbed into the governorship seat over dead bodies and over bloods of human beings. There were no elections, they wrote the results; the evidence is there,” he said.
    According to Sagay, what the Supreme Court has done is to set the clock of electoral excellence and fairness and credibility back by, ” I do not want to say a thousand years, but certainly it is taking us back to where we were before Jega came in and sanitize the system.”
    “We are going to have primitive and barbaric electoral culture; ‘kill as much as you can, destroy as much as you can, create as much catastrophe, but if you can find yourself on that seat, you are confirmed, regardless of the means by which you got there’.
    “That is a very major setback to democracy and the rule of law,” he said.
    Similarly, the erudite constitutional lawyer also flayed the present crop of Supreme Court judges, insisting that they have degraded the court from decades ago when the Nigerian Supreme Court was ranked among the best in the world.
    “I remember 15, 20 years ago, we had a Supreme Court that is the best in the world – better than the one you have in the US. That was when you had Justices (Kayode) Eso, (Andrew) Obaseki, Anyagolou, (Adolphous) Karibe-Whyte, Bello and so on. Those people brought a culture to the Supreme Court and most of us thought when they left the culture would remain but it hasn’t.
    “New people have come, much younger people, and they have different approach to life because I don’t understand why you would have law, which is in conflict with justice and you prefer to apply that law – technical law, which is in conflict with justice. As we have seen in the case of Akwa Ibom and Rivers and a few other cases.
    “So I think their orientations are different. I think the older ones who are gone believed that justice was number one. In such a case, you ask where does the justice lies? They now interpreted the law in line with justice.
    “But now what we have is a group of people in the Supreme Court, who do not care where their legal interpretation is leading them. Once you have a divorce between law and justice, the whole legal system will break down and that is what has happened,” he added.
    Prof Sagay has also called for disciplinary actions against Senior Advocates of Nigeria (SANs) and other senior lawyers who are seen to be encouraging corrupt politicians and looters of the nation’s treasury.
    He said, “There are a group of senior lawyers who have totally departed from anything that the calling of the law profession requires; they have thrown in their lots with the looters and have become, I won’t call them fellow looters, but definitely, they have started enjoying and sharing in the proceeds of crimes of these looters and because of that they are absolutely now against the anti-corruption law.
    “There is need to have these Senior Advocates thoroughly disciplined and if they would not accept discipline, they need to be removed from the profession before they bring more disgrace to the profession and at the same time drag this country down economically.”

  • The Sagay committee

    The Sagay committee

    A pragmatic approach to crack corruption

    President Muhammadu Buhari moved another step further in his government’s anti-corruption war with the constitution of the Presidential Advisory Committee against Corruption, headed by a prominent professor of law and civil rights activist, Prof Itse Sagay. Femi Adesina, the president’s special adviser on media and publicity, said the committee’s brief is to advise the government on the prosecution of the war against corruption as well as the implementation of required reforms in the country’s criminal justice system.

    Other members of the committee are Prof Femi Odekunle, a professor of criminology at the Ahmadu Bello University, Zaria; Dr (Mrs.) Benedicta Daudu, an associate professor of international law, University of Jos (UNIJOS); Prof E. Alemika, professor of sociology also of UNIJOS. Others are Prof Sadiq Radda, professor of criminology, Bayero University, Kano; Hadiza Bala Usman, a civil society activist while Prof Bolaji Owasanoye of the Nigerian Institute of Advanced Legal Studies would serve both as member and executive secretary of the committee.

    One area of the committee’s brief that interests me is that having to do with the reform of the country’s criminal justice system. Without doubt, unless something drastic is done about this, we would only be moving in circles on the anti-corruption war. As things stand, our criminal justice system appears inadequate to tame the corruption monster. Where it is not, some judges have made a mess of it in a way that gives criminals and the criminally-minded undue protection.

    The celebrated Halliburton scam is a case study. This is a scandal that allegedly involves several prominent Nigerians, including former heads of state. As a matter of fact, this seems the very reason why we are making progress in reverse on the matter. Today, the case is ordered reopened; tomorrow it is ordered closed. So, we have been going back and forth on a matter for which some of our big people should have been left to rot in jail as a result of their involvement in the $182m bribery scandal. The latest information is that the United States is insisting that the case be reopened for it to return the $130m in its coffers to the Federal Government.

    Without doubt, the judiciary has been complicit in some of the corruption cases such that it is even possible to smell a rat in some of the decisions taken on some of them. Of course judges are also part of the society; and may not necessarily be immune to what obtains in the society. But then, it is because we hardly punish corruption, especially at the top. If we do, judges who hawk injunctions would think twice before doing so. Imagine the last time, shortly before the general elections when the chief justice warned judges against unethical practices, the warning sank and that was part of what ensured the sanity witnessed in our courts in many of the cases brought by politicians, with many of them ready to bribe God if he would make himself available to be bribed.

    It is only in this country that people who are to be investigated for corruption would rush to court and ask for injunction not to be investigated and the court would grant the injunction. This is one of the few countries where the courts would waste a lot of time trying to decide whether James Ibori and James Onanefe Ibori are one and the same person, even as the substantive matter is yet to be heard.

    The point is, for the country to make progress in its anti-corruption battle, the government has to be systematic in its approach. Otherwise, those who looted our treasury would continue to flaunt the ill-gotten wealth to our chagrin and nothing can be more disheartening than that for victims of treasury looting. I could feel the tears welled up in the eyes of one of my readers a few weeks ago when he sent an sms concerning a particular oil baron in the eastern part of the country who still goes about with a retinue of official security men, with siren to boot, even when we all know the damage he has done to the nation through fuel subsidy racket and other scams. Hopefully, President Muhammadu Buhari’s directive that security men attached to important personalities be pruned will reflect on the number of security details protecting this oil baron. I can only imagine the millions of other Nigerians who are weeping silently over similar unfair and unjust protection of treasury looters.

    Apart from systematically approaching the issue for maximum benefit, there is also the need to reinvigorate the anti-corruption agencies. The way they sometimes lose important cases in the courts seems to show that they lack the requisite professional expertise to successfully prosecute especially high profile cases. And it is some of these big fishes that we need as scapegoats to show the government’s seriousness in this matter and drive home the point that, truly, no one is above the law. That is not the case for now as these big people often buy justice and only get a slap on the wrist for serious crimes committed against the state.

    The courts too must be strengthened with the needed modern facilities provided to assist them in the administration of justice. Moreover, judges found wanting, especially with regard to corruption should not only be retired, they should also be made to face the law. There is a lot to do if the country is to make any serious dent on corruption.

    All said, however, given the credentials of most members of the committee, there is no doubt that they have the essentials to make a success of their assignment. The chairman is himself a man of proven integrity, and one who should know where the judiciary is being abused to miscarry or delay justice.

    President Buhari must realise that his integrity is at stake in this matter. Indeed, it is this question of integrity that has made three influential international development partners, the Ford foundation, MacArthur Foundation and Open Society Foundation to establish an Anti-Corruption and Criminal Justice Reform Fund with $5m to assist in the implementation of key components of the Action Plan and the work of the Presidential Advisory Committee. The government must realise that this is an unusual partnership and must therefore strive to ensure there are results. It is doubtful if any international organisation could have extended such assistance to the immediate past Federal Government to tackle corruption. On their part, the committee members must realise that all eyes are on them to see what they would make of the assignment.

    My daddy is gone!

    Finally, my dad died on August 11, after battling with death for about one week. It was exactly eight days to his 80th birthday. He took ill on August 5, was rushed to a hospital, appeared to have recovered and was returned home, only to be taken back to the hospital the next day when the sickness relapsed. In our efforts to get him better medical care, we changed his hospital. But death, that necessary end that will certainly come when it will, according to Shakespeare, came and snatched him away at about evening on August 11.

    For the benefit of readers who had been wondering why this column had been off in the last two weeks; this explains it all. I spent the first week trying to assist so that the old man could make it, and the next, when he didn’t, trying to recover from the shock. What could have come as an 80th birthday present by way of celebrating him on this same page would be published shortly before his burial. My only regret is that he is no more alive to read or feel it.

    I say thank you to all those who have been calling to commiserate with me. It was an experience indeed.