The attention of the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission, EFCC, has been drawn to a report captioned, Alleged N1tn diversion: Senate to probe Lamorde’s alleged diversion of N1tn, which appeared in The Punch Newspaper of Monday August 24, 2015 containing salacious claims of corruption against the person of the chairman of the Commission, Ibrahim Lamorde.
The EFCC should ordinarily not dignify the publication with a response as the motives of the promoters and their media allies are to impugn the integrity of the EFCC boss with fabricated stories of corruption.
However
the Commission is constrained to respond, to expose the motive behind the sinister
plot. In the first instance, claims of a N1trillion corruption in the EFCC is
infantile and assaults the sensibilities of all reasonable stakeholders in the
anti- corruption fight.
Even
if the EFCC had not returned a kobo of recovered assets in its 12 years existence
in addition to the yearly appropriated funds from the federation account, it will
be nowhere near a trillion naira. This clearly exposes
the mission of the so called petitioner as nothing more than mischief, designed
to smear Lamorde.
More sinister is the discovery that the so
called petition did not follow the procedure for consideration by the senate.
It was sent, not to the senate but to a member, Senate Peter Nwaoboshi, a first
term senator from Delta North.
Under
the senate rules, petitions meant for consideration by the red chamber are sent
to the senate, not to a member of the senate.
Also,
petitions meant for the senate are tabled at the plenary, before they are referred
to the relevant committees for further consideration. In this instance, the
senate has been on recess and there is no evidence that the so called petition was
considered at plenary and referred to any committee.
The
EFCC as an agency that is founded on transparency is not afraid of any “probe”
or request for information regarding its activities by individuals, groups or
organs of government; so far as such requests followed due process of law.
The
EFCC under Lamorde did not need the prompting of anyone, when it commissioned a
reputable international audit firm, KPMG to carry out comprehensive audit of exhibits
and forfeited assets of the Commission from 2003 to date. The report of the audit
will be made public once it is ready.
Were
the Commission to be jittery about its records, it would not have embarked on such
audit.
The
EFCC however warns that those who peddle false information with the intent to mislead
should be reminded that there is a subsisting law on false information and the consequence
for violation is grave.
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