It is another season of politics. With the general elections fast approaching, politicians of all hue are traversing the country in desperate bid to woo the electorates for their votes.
Such is the beauty of democracy which is founded on healthy contest with the electorate as the ultimate decider.
Unfortunately,
not all the actors in our nation’s political arena understand the rudiments of
a free electoral contest. For some category of politicians, elections are
nothing short of open warfare where any weapon that can swing the tide in their
favour is fair.
It does not matter whether such weapons deviate from the
acceptable norm.
In
recent weeks the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission, EFCC, has been
alarmed by reports in a section of the media, accusing it of failure to act on
certain petitions supposedly sent to it through the pages of the newspapers.
According to the petitioners, the Commission’s failure to act had reduced their
chances of success in the political arena.
While
it is puzzling how the Commission’s action or inaction could confer political
advantage on any aspirant, it is important to educate petition writers that the
EFCC have standard operating procedures, which clearly state the irreducible
minimum standards which officers must uphold in evaluating petitions for
investigation.
Where petitions fall short of such standards, the EFCC is not
obliged to proceed.
The
Commission wishes to sound a note of warning to politicians not to attempt to
use it as a tool for political warfare, In recent weeks, the EFCC has received
many frivolous petitions alleging high crimes against leading political
figures.
Some of them came from the opponents of such individuals. While it is
important for citizens to be whistle blowers, it amounts to self help to
attempt to instigate the EFCC against a political opponent. Citizens do not
have to wait until election time to report alleged financial malfeasance.
It
is equally important that members of the public realize that it is an offence
under the EFCC Establishment Act to write false petitions or supply misleading
information to the Commission.
Also,
the trend where persons engage in acts of criminality and attempt to blackmail
the EFCC from going after them by imputing political motives to the Commission’s
enforcement activities is most unfortunate.
Nobody is above the law. The fact
that a politician is the standard bearer of any political party for any
political office does not amount to immunity from investigation or prosecution
for any acts of criminality.
The
core mandate of the EFCC is fighting all forms of economic and financial
crimes. Crimes of this nature have no political or religious colorations.
It is
therefore important that Nigerians, indeed all stakeholders, appreciate that
the Commission has a responsibility to take on all perpetrators of economic and
financial crimes irrespective of their political, ethnic and religious
affiliations.
The
point which all stakeholders need to take to heart is that the Commission is a
professional organization which will resist any attempts to, overtly or
surreptitiously, drag it into the political arena ahead of, during or after the
forthcoming general elections.
We
appreciate the sentiments which all the political leaders have expressed about
strengthening the anti corruption institutions.
That is the way to go. If
anything, it shows there is a common ground in the understanding that fighting
corruption in Nigeria is a national emergency. And distracting agencies saddled
with such responsibility is hardly an incentive for addressing the emergency.
Signed:
Management
13th January, 2015
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