Tag: prosecution

  • Minister’s driver may face prosecution

    Minister’s driver may face prosecution

    The driver of the Lexus SUV in which Minister of State (Labour and Employment) James Ocholi died may face prosecution, Secretary to the Government of the Federation (SGF) Babachir David Lawal, said yesterday.

    Ocholi, his wife and son died in an accident on Sunday on the Kaduna-Abuja road.

    An interim report of the Federal Road Safety Commission (FRSC) claims that the driver, James Elegbede, was over speeding and had no license.

    Speaking with State House correspondents at the end of the Federal Executive Council (FEC) meeting, the SGF said the final report on the accident will determine if Elegbede will be prosecuted.

    He said: “As to the issue of whether we would prosecute the driver, yes, Nigeria is not short of laws; the problem is that Nigerians find it very difficult to obey the laws.

    “There is a speed limit in place and so if anybody chooses not to obey the traffic laws, of course, it is subject to prosecution by the agencies concerned. But as to this

    particular incident, I think we will leave it until the final report of the investigation comes out.

    “But, of course, as we say, accident is accident and nobody goes out deliberately to summersault and die, but as to allegations you claimed from the family, we are not aware and anybody who has anything to the contrary –  that they didn’t die in an accident – is free to report to the law enforcement agencies who will appropriately take it up.”

    Lawal said the Federal Government did not extend automatic employment and scholarship benefits to the driver’s relatives and other surviving victims because they are alive and still on the government’s payroll.

    He said: “The government decided to give employment to the children of the late minister because he was the breadwinner and the children are now orphans. On the other hand, the driver survived and the government is taking care of their medical bills at the National Hospital and they are also government workers as some of them are policemen, SSS operatives and

    others.

    “So they are on salary and are treated free, but God forbids that had any of them suffered the same fate as those who died, the President would have willingly included them on the list of beneficiaries.”

  • Alleged N3.4b theft: Prosecution opens case in ex-NIMASA D-G’s trial

    Alleged N3.4b theft: Prosecution opens case in ex-NIMASA D-G’s trial

    The Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) yesterday called its first witness in the trial of a former Director-General of the Nigeria Maritime Administration and Safety Agency (NIMASA), Patrick Akpobolokemi.

    He was arraigned with nine others, including two companies, before Justice Saliu Saidu of the Federal High Court in Lagos.

    The charge is different from the one before Justice Ibrahim Buba, in which five witnesses have testified for the EFCC.

    In the case before Justice Saidu, Akpobolokemi and others were accused of conspiring to convert N3.4 billion belonging to NIMASA, which the commission said “was derived from stealing”.

    The others are Captain Ezekiel Agaba, Ekene Nwakuche, Felix Bob-Nabena, Captain Warredi Enisuoh, Governor Juan, Ugo Fredrick, Timi Alari and two companies – Al-Kenzo Limited and Peniel Engineering Services Limited.

    The first prosecution witness, a Compliance Officer at Zenith Bank Plc, Mr. Teslim Adekunle, said he was responsible for enquiries from regulatory agencies, such as EFCC.

    Led in evidence by EFCC’s lawyer Festus Keyamo, the witness said Zenith, between last August and December, received several enquiries from EFCC.

    He said the bank was asked to produce statements of account as well as account opening packages of three companies, namely: Interwind Limited, Margai Integrated Limited and Grandpact Limited. The documents were tendered in evidence.

    An argument between the prosecution and defence counsel ensued when Keyamo sought to tender a document on Thlumba Enterprise Limited.

    Akpobolokemi’s lawyer Dr Joseph Nwobike (SAN) objected on the basis that the document was a photocopy.

    Keyamo applied to withdraw the document, but the defence counsel urged the judge to admit the document and mark it as “rejected”.

    If marked as rejected, tendering of the original document may be foreclosed.

    The EFCC witness earlier informed the court that the original copy was in the bank’s archive.

    Justice Saidu adjourned for ruling and continuation of trial today.

  • ‘Why prosecution is key to anti-graft crusade’

    ‘Why prosecution is key to anti-graft crusade’

    How can the anti-graft war be won? It is by effective prosecution and conviction of looters, says Mr. Timothy Melaye, the Nigerian Head of Information Centre of the Inter-Governmental Action Group against Money Laundering in West Africa (GIABA). He speaks with COLLINS NWEZE on GIABA’s efforts to curb financial crimes by empowering agencies, such as, Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) and Nigeria Financial Intelligence Unit (NFIU).

    To what extent do you think bureau de change operators aid money laundering?

    What I would say is this, GIABA has put a lot of resources and efforts in training financial institutions and non-financial businesses and professionals and therefore I expect that the financial institutions across the region are fully aware of their responsibilities. There is what is called the committee of chief compliance officers of banks in Nigeria. GIABA has provided series of trainings to these officers to be able to make sure financial institutions comply with their responsibilities. Financial institutions do not have responsibility to investigate or prosecute anyone. Their responsibility is to stand as the gatekeeper, the money comes through the financial institutions or goes out through the financial institutions and where there are suspicious transactions, they have obligations as a sole responsibility to report such as suspicious transactions. It must be reported to Nigeria Financial Intelligence Unit (NFIU) and if a bank notices any suspicious transaction or what can be termed as a suspicious transaction, they have a responsibility to report too. After reporting, then they have carried out their due diligence responsibility. Now they need to carry out customer due diligence, identify your customers, now we have people who are not the actual owner of money or people who come in a disguise or people who come to open account fictitiously, or people who come as third party to open account in support of someone else. The suspicious transactions report says if my name is linked to the name of a prominent person who is considered as politically exposed persons, then the banks need to do enhanced due diligence reports on that. The report will make them file suspicious transactions so that all those who are linked can be identified, their transactions gotten and be properly documented.

    The Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) is accusing some bureaux de change (BDC) of money laundering. Some of the operators were linked to the arm-for-cash scam; how did things get to this point?

    You see, there is a threshold on transactions for the BDCs. They were identified before. Now there are so many BDCs that are not registered, that are not known and if anything happens, you cannot trace them, you just see them on the roadside and you attend to them but now, BDCs are forced to register. If you have any transactions with registered BDCs, it is easy to track the transaction because you are supposed to take receipts. By such receipts, you will be able to know if they are registered or not. This is not a fight for only the CBN, for only the banks, for only the BDCs. It is a fight for everyone. Those of us that transact business with the BDCs, do you ever ask for receipt? Do you ever find if the BDC you are transacting with is registered? If he gives you fake currency, can you go back to him? Can you go back to his office? If you met him on the road, do you just go and stand on the road looking for him? So it’s a responsibility for us all to ensure that the society will remove quacks from the business. One of the things society needs to do is to make sure it puts in systems to ensure that crimes are reduced to the barest minimum if not absolutely eradicated. So one of the things that is put in place is to ensure the BDCs are operating within the ambit of the law. Apart from being delisted, there are lots of sanctions that can be meted out to erring BDCs. When you don’t have the laws, you have set yourself up for failure. So it is simple. When there is a lawless society, it is even illegal to be abiding by any law.

    There have been many policies around foreign exchange (forex) by the CBN; how realistic are some of these policies? What are the consequences if BDCs stop reporting their transactions to the regulator?

    The CBN has the responsibility of safeguarding and managing the financial systems and those decisions will be taken based on certain information that is available to them. Now BDCs can get forex on allocation from the CBN. Whether they get the forex from CBN or not, they have obligation to report. If for instance in my domiciliary account, I have never seen $1 million before and today I put $20 million, the bank has responsibility to file suspicious transactions report. That they didn’t get it from the CBN is not a justification for them not to file such report, you understand. BDCs have a responsibility to file transactions returns. So in a case where the BDCs do not file a return or file what it should file, then such operator is breaking a law. And when he is breaking a law at the slightest provocation, if he is caught up with, he is out of business. So the fact that CBN is not providing forex for them is not the reason why they shouldn’t file what they should file because CBN regulates their operations and when you are a regulator, you take your decision based on what is happening in the market and the fact that you didn’t buy from them is not the reason why you should stop filing returns. If I come to a BDC now and I am a business man and I say I have $500,000 to sell to you, the person should be able to file transactions reports to Special Control Unit against Money Laundering (SCUML). The BDC is supposed to report to their reporting line, be it SCUML or CBN or even financial intelligence unit so that they identify who this person is, and if need be, investigation can commence .If it is a legal business without crime, nobody disturbs him, if crime has been committed then he will face the penalties.

    What form is the investigation supposed to take?

    It’s the responsibility of the law enforcement agency to carry out the investigation. One if I file a suspicious transactions report, if for instance a bank files suspicious transaction report to NFIU, the body will do an analysis. Based on the analysis, it will either send information to the appropriate law enforcement agency or agencies or not. The agencies now have a responsibility to carry out investigations and investigations can take any form. If someone works in a bank and his salary is N10 but today he pays in $500 million into his account, the responsibility of the financial institution is to file a report. We saw this transaction and think it is unusual, they have finished their responsibility. The NFIU will look at it and analyse it what is this money for, this money came into his account as a transfer for a workshop that is about to happen, why wasn’t it transferred to the official account of the organisation? After they do their analysis, they send the report to EFCC or special fraud unit of the Police or straight to Independent Corrupt Practices and other Related Offences Commission (ICPC), those people will carry out their investigation. If need be, they might invite you, if no need, they would do their investigation without inviting you. If you are cleared, they let you go, if you are not cleared, they call you to come and explain. If the explanation is not justifiable and crime has been committed, you pay for it and this is what the process is and it saves virtually the society.

    Does it apply in both public and private companies?

    It applies to everybody. It doesn’t matter today if you paid unusual account or paid into Abuja, they should report it. They are not saying the person has committed a crime, that is why its called suspicious transactions. Sometimes, it could be currency transactions, it could just be volume of currency, it might not be suspicious. It might be regular, maybe you just saw everyday from my account, N1 million is paid into a particular person everyday. It might just be this is unusual, the frequency is worrisome, somebody needs to file a report and this is the simple process. That is why we encourage that the financial system keeps their safeguards. All the non designated financial businesses and professions keep their safeguards. Even if you are an estate agent and somebody is coming to buy 600 houses or buy an estate and you know that this guy works as a civil servant, you have a responsibility to report.

    How would you assess the Nigerian situation, where there are visible allegations of money laundering activities and proliferation of small arms?

    Well, let me not say I want to assess Nigeria’s situation because I would require some parameters to do a thorough assessment. However, Nigeria as a strong country is a strong member of GIABA, and of course strong member of ECOWAS. And like other strong countries and as members of ECOWAS, of course it is our responsibility to protect the economy of Nigeria from the proceeds of crime, ensuring that terrorists financing do not take place by ensuring that Nigeria as a country does comply with the 40 recommendations of the FATF and put up systems to ensure the implementation of those recommendations to the letter. Those recommendations are to guide and ensure that crimes that we are working against do not get perpetuated in Nigeria. However, Nigeria is one of the countries in recent times that have shown commitments to complying with those recommendations in terms of enacting the laws. Let me say clearly that in a lawless society, it is criminal to be law abiding. When there is no law, you have set the stage for failure, so by Nigeria’s position to enact the laws against money laundering, terrorists financing, proliferation of arms, against all the required issues that have been laid out is the first step to ensuring you have put in place measures to stop that. Secondly, the measurement of effectiveness of those laws can’t be done in isolation. So, I would say Nigeria is working hard to comply with those recommendations. They have taken appropriate measures in enacting the laws and the stage we are now is measuring the effectiveness of those laws and GIABA will be embarking on second round of mutual evaluation of member states. Nigeria is in category of those that would be done.

    Basically, what is GIABA about?

    It is Inter-Governmental Action Group against Money Laundering in West Africa (GIABA). It is an ECOWAS institution, established in 2000 by the authority of Heads-of-States and governments of Economic Community of West Africa States (ECOWAS). It’s a specialised institution, and the Financial Action Task Force (FATF) regional body. The FATF is the global body responsible for building standards and recommendations to fight money laundering, terrorists financing and proliferation of small, light and weapons of mass destruction. Within the confines of this work, GIABA has a mandate to protect the economy and financial institutions of West African states from the laundering of the proceeds of crime and so work with the FATF recommendations to ensure that terrorists financing is not happening within the region and by extension across the world. That is the core mandate and responsibility of GIABA.

    How does it feel knowing that money laundering, proliferation of small arms, terrorists financing and all those things you are supposed to be fighting against still thrive in our societies?

    There is no society without crime yet. We do hope and look up to one day probably there would be but obviously there is none. With all the sophistication in the US, with all the sophistication in Europe, with all the sophistication across the world, you will see the activities of criminals. The efforts that we put in place are to build the system whereby we mitigate, reduce to the barest minimum these crimes. Today, we make a lot of discoveries, which have made it easier for us to know when a crime is committed. So, sometimes the things we see as increase in crime are actually discoveries of crimes. If for instance they say in one country in Africa or West Africa, somebody is being prosecuted for $20 billion or $1 billion, it is because this information is known, that is why the awareness is taking place. If it is not known, it will be as if there is no crime being committed. What we see now is more discoveries of those crimes, more pursuits to stop them or more prosecution of those who commit these crimes and that are what people usually term to be increase in crime. We see them as more detection of crimes and the more you detect, the more you punish, the more you prosecute, the more deterrent there are and the less crime that people are carrying out. You are dissuading them from committing a crime; when you discover, you detect, you investigate, you prosecute, and sanctions are appropriately carried out to those guilty and those sanctions, I must say, must be dissuasive, proportionate and adequate. When this is done, then, you will have dissuasion. People will not have the incentives to carry out the criminal activities anymore.

    Are there specific challenges you are tackling in Nigeria now?

    Of course everywhere you see issues of criminality, there are challenges. Not only in Nigeria but eventually in most African countries, corruption is high, trafficking is high, drug related offences are also high. We are trying to work with all relevant agencies, for instance, GIABA provided technical assistance to Economic and Financial Crimes Commission in Nigeria, and this is part of things to strengthen their capabilities to be able to carry out their duties and also encourage the leadership to provide the political will.

    What is your view on looters returning stolen money and being left to go; is it the right way to fight corruption?

    Well I am not aware of any official document saying some people pleaded and returned funds and if it does exist, I am not aware. What I have seen so far is that there have been arrests ,there are other issues, allegations and as I have said earlier, allegations are just allegations until proven by a competent court of jurisdiction and one is convicted of a crime. If you asked me to return one naira and I returned one naira, there is no court of law that have said I committed a crime; so it is probable discussions and negotiations between private people or public people. What I would say would be of interest is effective prosecution and securing conviction based on the court judgments, then we can now say fine this is a case established by a competent court of law of corruption on money laundering issues and what we see today around is still the process, there are allegations, there are investigations going on, until we see prosecution and conviction, we cannot say crime has been committed. So if people are having any form of discussion by the side, all of those things cannot go as conviction until we secure conviction in the courts. I think many of those cases are being filed in the courts and we are looking forward to see those cases probably prosecuted and if convictions are secured, we will know crime has been committed and appropriate sanction meted out.

    What is responsible for the ongoing increased activities by the EFCC in fighting corruption?

    Well, I won’t say EFCC is either being active or not active. What I use as a yardstick is the amount of conviction secured. GIABA, as I have said earlier, has provided technical assistance to many anti-corruption agencies in the region and part of that is to ensure that there is more conviction. From the report I have received from the EFCC even in the past, there is large amount of conviction. It might not be purely politically exposed persons but conviction has been going on. What we want to see is more conviction, what we want to see is if people have committed crimes, they should pay for their crimes. Now there are a lot of issues and noise because a lot of politically exposed persons are involved. Whether the EFCC has worked more or less should not be for us to pay attention to. What we want to see is that crimes have been committed and those crimes have been paid for which would be a deterrent to those who want to commit crime in the future. I would not say EFCC has been doing more or doing less than they used to. What I want to say is that convictions were being secured in the past, more convictions should be secured if there are more crimes committed. So we must measure first if in the past, where there are crimes committed, were these crimes investigated, was prosecution process instituted and conviction secured? When we have all of those yardsticks, then we should be able to measure.

    If everything goes on and you did not report, the law will catch up with you. So, these are the processes that have been put in place and that are part of the things that GIABA is ensuring that each member state has all of these processes in place. Until those processes are in place and well known and understood, then we will be able to mitigate and fight this crime originally because people now launder money via properties, via luxury cars, they buy all sorts of things. You see somebody has 20 houses, even if nobody is living there; they just lock them because they just want to launder the money. If you go to many cities within the region, you will see that many people have big houses within the high brow areas that are not occupied. If the estate agents are doing their work, when people are procuring, if lawyers are doing their work when people are signing agreements, all of those things supposed to come as suspicious transactions. If they file their reports properly and the agencies do their analysis properly, you will find out that some of these things would be discovered.

    Recently, I heard in the news that there is a civil servant whose account has almost N200 million, whose salary is less than 0.01 per cent of that amount. So the financial institutions have responsibility, they are well taught on what these responsibilities are. They understood it and I expect that they are doing their corporate reporting. If they are not, they would pay dearly for it. Sanctions are going on across the world. It is even increasing. PNB Paribas in the U.S paid in billions of dollars in sanctions; HSBC was sanctioned to the tune of $1.9 billion. Any bank that fails to comply, the sanction can kill such a bank.

  • INEC committee wants prosecution, enforcement department

    INEC committee wants prosecution, enforcement department

    Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC)  Committee on Management of Election Petitions (COMEPET), has recommended for the establishment of  a prosecution and enforcement department in the commission.

    This according to the committee will ensure the prosecution of electoral offenders pending the establishment of the electoral offences commission.

    The committee was inaugurated on the 16th of September 2015, and headed by Barrister Kassim Gaidam.

    Gaidam said that “the prosecutorial powers of the Commission be strengthened and a department of Prosecution and Enforcement be created pending the establishment of Electoral offences Commission”.

    The INEC Chairman, while commending the hard work and meaningful recommendations contained in the report, pointed out that the job of arresting, investigating and prosecuting electoral offenders might be far too stretching for the Commission.

    He said: “Whatever the Commission needs to do in the interim, we will. I am also happy that you recognized that the long term solution is to relieve the Commission of the responsibility of prosecuting electoral offenders, which in some cases may include INEC staff. It is very odd to prosecute ourselves. The other constraint that we can’t arrest, we can’t investigate but we are asked to prosecute. If we don’t properly investigate, at prosecution the case may be thrown out.”
    The INEC Chairman observed that:  “Part of the reason why we have so much litigation is the conduct of the election itself.  Politicians hardly accept defeat and because they don’t accept defeat they end up in court.”

    He expressed delight that the report was coming at a very important time for the Commission, with the spate of nullification of elections and the upturning of elections.

    According to him, “There were issues arising from some of the judgments and I like some of the recommendations from the Committee. A number of things you have raised touch on what we are looking out for the future of the Commission: we need amendments to Guidelines, the Constitution, to the Electoral Act (2010 as amended).”

    He assured the Committee that the Commission under his leadership would expeditiously implement the recommendations contained in the report.

    Also, the meeting between Civil Society Organsiations (CSOs)/ media
    and the Commission called for the setting up of electoral offences tribunal.

    The meeting agreed that in order to stem the spate of violence, the CSO and the media called for the setting up of electoral offences tribunal and the speed enforcement of its legal provisions.

    It is on record that no politician has been prosecuted since the return of democracy in 1999. However, over 200 persons were said to be facing trails over various electoral offences before the conduct of the 2015 general elections. Though no notable politician is on the list.

  • EFCC, DSS to join prosecution of pipeline vandals

    EFCC, DSS to join prosecution of pipeline vandals

    The Managing Director Petroleum Products and Marketing Company (PPMC), Mrs Esther Nnamdi-Ogbue, said yesterday that the Federal Government will involve some security agencies in the prosecution of pipeline vandals.

    Nnamadi-Ogbue stated this during a visit to Mosinmi Depot and Ajebo pipeline in Obafemi Owode local government area of Ogun.

    She listed the security agencies to be involved as the Police, the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) and the Department of State Services (DSS).

    Ogbue said that the involvement of these agencies would facilitate the prosecution of the vandals at the courts of competent jurisdiction.

    “We are looking at all ramifications on how to bring these criminals to book; they have to be treated as criminals and pipeline products thieves.

    “The pipelines are the most efficient way of moving products and then for the first time in a very long time we are pushing products all the way to Ibadan.

    “We intend to move to Ilorin, reduce bridging from Lagos area so that people can go and pick up their products in Ibadan and Ilorin,” Ogbue said.

    She expressed optimism that partnership with EFCC, DSS, Police and host communities would yield positive results and the culprits would soon face the full wrath of the law.

    Ogbue said that federal government would start deploying trackers on trucks carrying fuel from its depots to filling stations across the country to check diversion of the product.

    The PPMC boss explained that with the trackers government would be able to monitor the movement of trucks vis- a-vis their destinations.

    Ogbue lamented that fuel diversion was a serious problem with undesirable consequences on the economy.

    The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports the federal government operates 22 depots nationwide, including Atlas Cove, which is located in Lagos

  • Synagogue: Court stops engineers’ prosecution

    Synagogue: Court stops engineers’ prosecution

    The Federal High Court in Lagos yesterday restrained Lagos State from prosecuting two engineers, who built the collapsed guest house of the Synagogue Church of All Nations (SCOAN).

    Justice Ibrahim Buba granted an order of injunction barring the commissioner of police from arresting and detaining the applicants.

    The orders, the judge said, will subsist, until the engineers’ appeal against his earlier ruling is determined by the Court of Appeal.

    Ruling on the engineers’ application for injunction pending appeal, Justice Buba urged the prosecution to ensure that the appeal is heard expeditiously.

    He said he could vacate the restraining order, if the engineers fail to prosecute their appeal promptly.

    “In the circumstances of this case, the counter affidavit has not been able to show that I should not exercise my discretion judicially and judiciously.

    “Even though the applicants had suffered defeat in this court, I am inclined to granting this application on the caveat or rider that the applicants must pursue their appeal diligently and vigorously so that justice can be done to all parties.

    “The application for injunction pending appeal has merit and is granted.

    “If the applicants fail to prosecute the appeal diligently, the order can be vacated by this court or the Court of Appeal depending on the situation, the time and place,” Justice Buba held.

    Lagos State had preferred a 111-count charge against the Registered Trustees of SCOAN and the engineers over the collapsed building.

    Their arraignment was stalled on Monday. Justice Lateef Lawal-Akapo of the Ikeja High Court adjourned till December 11 because of the state’s inability to serve three of the defendants with the charge.

    The state, however, alleged that the “address given by the applicant in his testimony before the Coroner has been found to be false”.

    The charge borders on the defendants’ alleged failure to obtain approval for the collapsed building contrary to Section 41 of the Urban and Regional Planning Laws of Lagos State.

    They were also charged with involuntary manslaughter contrary to Section 222 of the Criminal Law of Lagos State.

    The engineers – Oladele Ogundeji and Akinbela Fatiregun – had appealed against Justice Buba’s November 9 ruling on their fundamental rights suit.

    They sought to prevent their trial over the collapse which occurred in September 12 last year, killing 116 persons, including South Africans.

    The engineers had urged the court to restrain Lagos State government and the police from inviting, arresting or prosecuting them after they were indicted by a District Coroner, Oyetade Komolafe, a magistrate.

    The Coroner held in his verdict that the building collapsed due to structural defects. He recommended the engineers for investigation and prosecution for alleged criminal negligence.

    But Justice Buba dismissed the application on the basis that the engineers did not make a successful case that their rights were about to be infringed. Dissatisfied, the engineers appealed.

    Arguing the application yesterday, the applicant’s counsel, Olalekan Ojo, said: “The whole essence of the application is to protect the constitutional right of the applicants by preserving the intangible res of arrest and prosecution of the applicants. The interest of justice leans in favour of the preservation of the res.”

    But the state, through its lawyer Akinjide Bakare, prayed the court to refuse the application. He said it was another attempt to stop the implementation of the Coroner’s recommendations.

  • Buhari seeks electoral offenders’ prosecution

    Buhari seeks electoral offenders’ prosecution

    •INEC boss promises to be guided by constitution, electoral law

    President Muhammadu Buhari yesterday advocated the prosecution of electoral offenders.

    The President, who spoke at the swearing-in of the Chairman of the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC), Prof. Mahmood Yakubu and five national commissioners in the Presidential Villa, Abuja, said it was not enough for election tribunals to cancel or order fresh elections.

    Said he: “Another area of concern is the justice administration of the electoral tribunals. Our justice system should address these shortcomings. It is not just enough for an election to be cancelled and a new one ordered.

    “It will be better if those whose actions or inactions led to the cancellation of such elections are investigated and if culpable, prosecuted, whether they are individuals as candidates or party agents, institutions, such as parties, electoral body, or public officers as electoral officials or security agents.

    “Perpetrators of electoral violence and thuggery should not be spared. Unless our system stops covering up electoral malpractices, we can hardly get it right. No system endures with impunity.”

    Promising to respect the independence of the commission, Buhari said his administration would not interfere with its operations.

    His words: “In the conduct of elections, we promised to respect the independence of our electoral body, INEC. We promised non-interference in its activities and we promised to encourage it to conduct free and fair elections. I pledge to keep the promises.”

    The President urged INEC not to allow itself to be influenced or subjected to outside forces’ control.

    He said: “You must respect the law. We will hold you bound by the oath you have taken. The country has reposed trust and confidence in you. You cannot afford to fail.”

    Buhari decried state’s electoral bodies, which hide under the cover of the technicality of law to deny citizens’ rights.

    He said: “I’m aware of Federal Government’s constitutional constraints in its engagement with the state’s electoral bodies. But the government has a social responsibility to protect the democratic rights of all.

    “I am of the view that it is unacceptable to hide under the cover of the technicality of law to deny citizens’ rights.”

    President Buhari said the Federal Government considered a different strategy of engagement with state governments on how to make state electoral commissions freer than many are today.

    Stressing that the All Progressives Congress (APC) government promised Nigerians change, he said the change would be all- embracing.

    “It starts from change of attitude, change of work ethics, change in attitude to corruption and corrupt practices.”

    Buhari said the goalpost would not shift in the Kogi and Bayelsa governorship elections, as the 1999 Constitution and the Electoral Act would be followed.

    Senate President Bukola Saraki, addressing State House correspondents, said the new team would not let the country down, noting that they gave a good account of themselves during their screening and confirmation.

    The commissioners, who took oath of office, were Mrs. Amina Zakari, Mr. Solomon Adedeji Soyebi, Prof. Antonia Taiye Okoosi-Simbine, Dr. Muhammed Mustafa Lecky and Alhaji Baba Shettima Arfo.

    Those in attendance included Vice President Yemi Osinbajo, Senate President Saraki and the Speaker of the House of Representatives, Yakubu Dogara.

    Prof. Yakubu, has promised to be guided by the electoral act and the constitution in the discharge of his functions.

    Yakubu, who spoke on resumption yesterday after his inauguration by President Muhammadu Buhari, said: “I’m not sure this is difficult because the constitution is clear.

    “The roles and responsibilities of INEC are spelt out and the provisions of the electoral act are also clear.

    “Our responsibility is to ensure that in whatever we do, we are guided by the letter and spirit of the constitution. These, we are going to do with courage.

    “Whatever we need to do, we will ensure that this is done courageously and according to the law.”

    He promised to be just to all and never to fail the expectations of Nigerians in his new roles, saying he loved challenges.

    Yakubu added: “One of my bosses used to say that the public office has a tenure, a minimum of one day and a maximum of the tenure.

    “In the case of INEC, it is a minimum of one day and a maximum of five years. In between is the privilege to serve. We will never fail this nation.

    “We will be courageous in what we do, and we will be courageous and just to all we are supposed to serve.”  He pledged to build on the successes recorded by previous administrations, especially in the conduct of the last general election.

    “We have come a long way. We have had commendations locally and internationally, in the conduct of the 2015 general election.

    “As I said at the Senate screening, our responsibility as a new commission is to consolidate and add value.

    “Nations don’t make progress by starting afresh; nations make progress because there is a building block, which we now build more.”

    The INEC boss promised to go through the books handed over to him, which included local and international observers’ reports for implementation.

    He praised the outgoing Acting INEC Chairman Hajia Amina Zakari for holding the fort.

    Yakubu urged the cooperation and understanding of the commission’s officials as given to previous leaderships.

    Zakari said: “With the incoming commission’s officials, we are ready to conduct Kogi and Bayelsa elections.

    “We have not rested on our oars in the last four months. We have tried to maintain the services of INEC to the best of our ability.

    “We hope by the time the commission settles down, it will not be difficult to continue where we have stopped.”

  • Corruption: Before the prosecution starts

    SIR:  A few weeks ago, President Muhammadu Buhari promised Nigerians that the prosecution of those who have short-changed the country and have stolen our collective wealth will soon commence.

    In the past, there have been attempts at prosecuting persons perceived to be corrupt. Sadly, most of those trials achieved little results. Very few of them were diligently prosecuted to a logical conclusion, while the convicted criminals were usually given a pat on the back through the judgment of the courts. Otherwise, how does one explain the short prison sentences handed down by the courts, or the amounts the courts ask corrupt convicts to pay in lieu of a prison term, which is usually a far cry from what was  embezzled or stolen?

    The general feeling among Nigerians is that the current administration will be different in its fight against corruption.  In fact, the anti-corruption posture of the president was what endeared him to Nigerians during the elections. Their expectations are therefore are very high. What then can the administration do to sustain and maintain the goodwill it currently enjoys?

    In order to maintain and sustain the confidence of Nigerians, the fight against corruption should be total. In prosecuting corrupt individuals, the searchlight must go beyond the immediate past administration. From May 29th 1999 to May 29th 2015, there has been monumental embezzlement and the circulation of our collective patrimony by and among a selfish and greedy few. From 1960 to 1999, Nigeria reportedly lost $400 billion to corruption. Although there is no accurate figure, the country must have lost about $300 billion or more within the last 16 years.

    The prosecution of corrupt individuals should also not be limited to political office holders alone. The system is in dire need of a complete overhaul.  Anybody who has illegally eaten our yams must return them. Every institution of government should be cleansed.

    However, we will be merely scratching the surface if we are focused on fighting corruption by prosecuting corrupt individuals alone without tackling the root causes. There are multiple reasons why corruption thrives in Nigeria. These are (but not limited to): poverty, poor remuneration, nepotism, lack of openness and transparency in government, the mentality of Nigerians that an opportunity to serve is an opportunity to grab their share of the national cake, weak institutions to fight corruption, slow determination of corrupt cases. To curb corruption, we must cut it from its roots.

     

    • Frank Ijege

     frankijege@yahoo.com

  • Boat operators to face prosecution if…

    Boat operators in Lagos State who fail to provide life jacket to their passengers will be prosecuted, the Lagos State Waterways Authority (LASWA), has warned.

    LASWA Managing Director Yinka Marinho, gave the warning in Lagos in an interview with the News Agency of Nigeria.

    He said the authority would no longer tolerate passengers travelling on waterways without wearing standard life jackets.

    “It is mandatory that all users of waterways wear life jacket. We are going to prosecute all operators who carry passengers without life jacket. We implore passengers to insist on the use of life jacket,’’ he said.

    He said that the penalty to be melted out on boat operators who failed to comply with the directive would be determined by the courts.

    Marinho said the regulations guiding boat operation would be reviewed and necessary penalties spelt out for erring operators.

    “Some operators have been prosecuted; our regulations will be reviewed and there will be penalties for non-compliance to the use of life jackets. If a passenger refuses to wear life jacket, operators should not allow such passenger on board for whatever reasons.

    “Passengers should also insist on wearing life jackets, because 80 per cent of the fatalities on the waterways are caused by non compliance with the use of life jackets,” he said.

    The Managing Director said that no fewer than 3,500 life jackets had been distributed in the state and many were still being expected.

    He said that the authority recently took delivery of 2,400 life jackets donated by the government for distribution to boat operators across the state.

  • Prosecution or persecution?

    Prosecution or persecution?

    •The president was playing victim, and it took away from the high dignity of his office

    No doubt, Nigerians may have, in the last five years, grown used to President Goodluck Jonathan’s serial gaffes. However, his statement at the thanksgiving and farewell service held at the Cathedral Church of the Advent, Life Camp, Gwarinpa, Abuja, on May 10 would appear to have set a new low in presidential discourse.

    With a hint at the fate which he claims await him post-May 29, the President told his audience of fellow-worshippers: “Some hard decisions have their own cost, no doubt about that. That I have run the government this way that stabilised certain things – the electoral process and other things that brought stability into this country, they were very costly decisions which I myself must be ready to pay for”.

    He was even more point-blank about the future which awaits his ministers when he stated: “If you take certain decisions, it might be good for the generality of the people but it might affect some people differently. So for ministers and aides who served with me, I sympathise with them; they will be persecuted, and they must be ready for that persecution … You will have hard times; we will all have hard times; our ways will be rough”.

    Those statements, we daresay, are as tendentious and opportunistic; aside derogating from the President’s affectation of statesmanship, playing the victim card is a cheap attempt to whip up needless sentiments, an ignoble attempt to divert attention from the criminal mismanagment of the economy under the watch of the departing administration. We must say that the presidential charge also fits into the Peoples Democracy Party’s (PDP) now familiar narrative of presenting the President-elect, General Muhamadu Buhari, and by extension his incoming government, as vindictive. The intention of course is to put both the President-elect and his proposed administration into the defensive mode.

    What is the basis for the fear of possible persecution after leaving office? Only the President is in the best position to answer. However, given the abysmal record posted by the administration in its nearly six years in office, the mind-boggling incompetence coupled with criminal profligacy that attended it, there may well be grounds for the President’s fear for his team. As for fears of possible prosecution, would the outgoing President rather have a blanket amnesty – an immunity of sorts – for the officials even in cases where the incoming administrations have grounds to believe that they have questions  to answer? Would that not assail the core of public policy? And who says that remedies – within the ambits of the law – would also not avail those who have reasons to believe that their rights are likely to be trampled upon?

    The point remains that neither the President-elect nor the hierarchs of the All Progressives Congress has hinted at any extraordinary measures outside of the contemplation of law and constitutionalism in its plan to deal with alleged malfesances. In fact, the President-elect has continued to allay the fears of the outgoing administration’s officials on the possibility of witch-hunt. More fundamentally however is that the administration has said nothing outside of what Nigerians in their millions have said about the need to open up the books of the administration for public scrutiny. Our shock is that the President who continues to maintain that his administration has nothing to hide would seek to reduce the demands to a mission in vendetta. We consider it uncharitable, and if we dare say, futile.

    In the circumstance, we can only advise the incoming administration to ignore the statement. We think that there are simply too many questions begging for answers – issues which it can only ignore to the utter discomfiture of Nigerians. In all, the main considerations should be the law, public morality and due process – not sentiments.

    ‘What is the basis for the fear of possible persecution after leaving office? Only the President is in the best position to answer. However, given the abysmal record posted by the administration in its nearly six years in office, the mind-boggling incompetence coupled with criminal profligacy that attended it, there may well be grounds for the President’s fear for his team’