Chairman
of the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission, EFCC, Ibrahim Lamorde, has
thrown a strong challenge to Civil Society Organizations, CSOs, in the country
to look inwards and fully support the anti-graft agency in its concerted
efforts aimed at ridding the country of economic and financial crimes.
The
comments of the agency’s boss, which were made at a Share Fair workshop, tagged
“Fulfilling its mandate: Government Leading Anti-Corruption Efforts”, organized
by the CLEEN Foundation, held on August 11, 2015 at the auditorium of the
Bolton White Hotel, in Abuja, comes on the heels of an orchestrated “protest”
staged at the premises of the EFCC Abuja office, recently, which was carried
out by a rented crowd claiming to be representatives of CSOs in the country,
under the aegis of Coalition of Civil Liberties and Equity.
Represented
by the agency’s Director of Operations, Olaolu Adegbite, he noted that it was
essential for the society at large, including the CSOs, to see themselves as
partners with the EFCC, in the war on corruption.
“We
believe in engaging with the civil society groups, as well as non-governmental
organizations, but the events in question, where a group of protesters caused a
melodrama at the premises of the agency, accusing the agency of prosecuting
corrupt individuals in the country, was most shocking,” he said.
He
added that: “It has therefore got to a point, where we now have to sieve those
who are partners in progress, from those who though parade themselves as civil
society organizations, are actually tools in the hands of some corrupt
individuals in the country that we are investigating and prosecuting.”
Lamorde
noted that the commission receives tones of petitions every year, “but we go
through every one of them, and those that are based on frivolous accusations,
we throw away, but those which after investigation, we come up with facts, we
pursue them.”
The
Share Fair workshop, which was organized in partnership with the Campaign for
Good Governance, Partners for Democratic Change, Institute for War and Peace
Reporting, and Budgit, provided yet another platform to further highlight the
ills of corruption on the ordinary citizen, as well as fashion out ways of ensuring
victory over the scourge.
Abdul
Rahman Mansaray, a senior prosecutor with Sierra Leone’s Anti-Corruption
Commission, shed light on efforts the commission had made in curbing corruption
in the country. Describing corruption as a monster that deprives people of
better life, he said, “It is essential to have the political will to fight
corruption, as this is the starting point, and luckily for us in Sierra Leone,
there is that will to prosecute the corruption war.” He further noted that
President Ernest Bai Koroma gave the commission the much needed independence,
because, "we prosecute cases without having to wait to receive a go-ahead
from the Attorney General of the Federation."
Adedayo
Kayode, head of the Investigative unit of the Independent Corrupt Practices and
Other Related Offences Commission, ICPC, who represented the commission’s boss,
Ekpo Nta, noted that prevention was very essential in the corruption war.
“Prevention is essential, but it must be balanced with prosecution,” he said.
Joe
Abah, director general, Bureau of Public Service Reforms, stressed the
importance of the Freedom of Information Act, urging Nigerians to utilize it as
part of their contributions in checking corruption in the society.
“The
most important tool in the corruption war is perhaps the Freedom of Information
Act, and in my view, it is the most powerful with the exception of the Nigerian
Constitution, which all Nigerians must take advantage of,” he said.
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