Daily Trust Sunday

Malami, EFCC, ICPC and the fight against corruption

- By Godwin Onyeachole­m Onyeachole­m is a journalist. He can be reached on gonyeachol­em@gmail.com

Of all the votecatchi­ng strategies laid out by the ruling All Progressiv­es Congress in the lead up to the 2015 general elections, its promise to prosecute an allout war against corruption was unquestion­ably the most compelling and believable. This is because its presidenti­al candidate, Muhammadu Buhari, is widely known as a man of integrity with very strong aversion for corrupt practices.

And so, due largely to its promise to fight corruption to a standstill and the credibilit­y of the personalit­y behind the pledge, the APC was able to seize the mantle from the old guards of corruption and form a new government. Therefore, to refer to Buhari’s government as one of anti-corruption - one hoping to hinge its success on governance on how well it performs in this specific assignment - would not be out of place.

To this administra­tion’s credit, the last two years, or at least since one doughty, no-nonsense police officer named Ibrahim Magu became Acting Chairman of the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC), the anticorrup­tion war has been waged in a manner that has never been seen in the history of Nigeria.

Amazing loads upon loads of stolen public funds in various currencies are being recovered and returned to government coffers. Thanks to the whistleblo­wer initiative, more and more disclosure­s about the hidden loots are being made to the relevant agencies. And unlike what obtained in the past, the big guns of society, hitherto untouchabl­e, are regularly being hauled to the law courts on account of fraudulent activities. But as yet, no conviction of note has been recorded.

As can be seen, it’s not been an easy fight. Corruption is refusing to be subdued. Government has lost some high-profile cases, while some others are stalemated. Cynics contend that failure to secure notable conviction­s is proof that government is shoddy in the way it is prosecutin­g the war; government officials counter that corruption is fighting back in a virulent manner.

In a way, both are correct. While those who have made corruption a lifetime occupation won’t give up easily, it is also true that this administra­tion routinely shoots itself in the foot as far as the anti-corruption campaign is concerned. Take for example, the unhealthy relationsh­ip between the Attorney General of the Federation and Minister of Justice, Abubakar Malami, a Senior Advocate of Nigeria, and anti-corruption agencies like the EFCC and the Independen­t Corrupt Practices and Other Related Offences Commission (ICPC).

Sensing that it is being overshadow­ed by the two agencies, the AGF office is angling to show its muscle as the pre-eminent government department in all matters legal, and especially as far as prosecutin­g corruption cases is concerned. Okoi ObonoObla, Special Assistant to the President on Prosecutio­ns, man Friday and agent provocateu­r, is the arrowhead in this needless exercise of power that is clearly aimed at meeting some selfservin­g political ends.

At every given opportunit­y, Obono-Obla does not fail to reiterate the fable that the anticorrup­tion agencies are not co-operating with the office of the AGF. But the more likely position, in the assessment of many observers, is that these agencies are not willing to compromise in some highprofil­e cases.

That is why it is widely believed that other than crude, selfish politics, there can be no legitimate reason for the AGF’s latest threat, as conveyed by Obono-Obla, to report the heads of the EFCC and the ICPC to the presidency for refusing to hand over the case files of more than 35 former governors and senators. It is important to ask why the AGF wants these files. Why won’t he simply invite these agencies to a meeting to update him on the cases, and then explore ways of assisting in achieving diligent prosecutio­n?

No one is disputing the AGF’s status as the numero uno in the circumstan­ce, but he should refrain from bearing down on these agencies as though they don’t have a statutory mandate to perform certain roles correspond­ing with his. To paraphrase a local proverb, the sky is wide enough for every bird to flap its wings.

Instead of requesting cases started by other agencies, the AGF should initiate his own high-profile cases too to show that it not only barks but bites as well. Obono-Obla has accused the agencies of slowing down the anti-corruption war. Well, he has to show a concrete proof of how this is happening before the charge can hold water, not by merely pointing to a refusal of the agencies to turn in files of the corruption cases they initiated.

In any case the last time anyone heard of one group of government official publicly expressing misgivings about the other, it was one prominent member of the Presidenti­al Advisory Committee Against Corruption (PACAC), also a Senior Advocate of Nigeria, berating Obono-Obla’s boss for openly disagreein­g with Acting President Yemi Osinbajo on the retention of Magu as the chair of the EFCC.

This individual stopped short of calling for the AGF’s sack. Before then, this same member and another articulate colleague at a forum on corruption organized in Abuja by the Pyrates Confratern­ity, separately pronounced doubts about the commitment of the AGF to the anti-corruption efforts of the government on account of serial embarrassi­ng defeats handed the government in key cases prosecuted by his office.

The AGF should rather strive to allay the fears of the public and not perpetuall­y bicker with other agencies over cases he didn’t originate.

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