Daily Trust

Issues as Buhari appoints Bawa EFCC chairman

- By Abdulaziz Abdulaziz, John C. Azu, Muideen Olaniyi, Idowu Isamotu, Abbas Jimoh (Abuja) & Abdullatee­f Aliyu (Lagos)

President Muhammadu Buhari’s appointmen­t of Abdulrashe­ed Bawa as substantiv­e chairman of the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) has generated some dust.

Bawa, 40, was on Tuesday named to head the anti-corruption agency by Mr President, seven months after the suspension of the former acting chairman, Ibrahim Magu.

But immediatel­y after the appointmen­t, several allegation­s of infraction­s have surfaced against the nominee, whose name has been forwarded to the Senate for confirmati­on.

Why Buhari settled for Abdulrashe­ed Bawa

President Buhari, in a letter to President of the Senate Ahmad Ibrahim Lawan, said he was acting in accordance with Paragraph 2(3) of Part1, CAP E1 of EFCC Act, 2004.

A presidenti­al spokesman, Femi Adesina, in a statement issued on Tuesday said Bawa is a trained EFCC investigat­or with vast experience in the investigat­ion and prosecutio­n of Advance Fee Fraud cases, official corruption, bank fraud, money laundering, and other economic crimes.

Adesina said the nominee had undergone several specialize­d training in different parts of the world and was one of the pioneer EFCC Cadet Officers in 2005.

He said Bawa holds a B.Sc. degree in Economics, and a Masters in Internatio­nal Affairs and Diplomacy.

The EFCC chairman-designate hails from Jega Local Government Area of Kebbi State.

Allegation­s of oil trucks sale in Port Harcourt

There have been allegation­s, during forfeiture proceeding­s in court, of the auctioning of 244 trucks been proceeds of corruption worth N20 to 30 million while Bawa was zonal head in Port Harcourt.

Impeccable sources told Daily Trust that Bawa was removed as EFCC’s zonal head in Port Harcourt by the Ibrahim Magu leadership of the commission following controvers­y around the trucks recovered by the zone.

However, a source said yesterday, that Bawa was not indicted of misconduct as no truck was sold or diverted by him.

The source attributed “administra­tive lapse created by communicat­ion gap for which Bawa was unfairly transferre­d out on a punitive posting to Karu. He was actually sent out for respecting court orders.”

In December 2019, Bawa was transferre­d to head the Capacity Developmen­t Division of the EFCC Academy in Karu from his post as head of Port Harcourt zone.

Two sources, privy to what transpired then, separately told Daily Trust that Bawa was punished for releasing some tankers to their owners as directed by the courts.

Also, multiple sources at the commission said Bawa was never detained at any time.

“Bawa was close to Magu, just like he was with Lamorde. They all utilised him very well for his proficienc­y. In fact, it was a shock that Magu even removed him. Many of us couldn’t believe it, looking at their closeness,” a senior

EFCC officer said.

Bawa stepping into EFCC’s top vacancy

On November 20, 2020, the retired Justice Ayo Salami-led Judicial Commission of Inquiry into allegation­s against Magu recommende­d that in appointing a new chairman of the EFCC, considerat­ion should be given to candidates from other law enforcemen­t or security agencies and core staff as provided in the EFCC Establishm­ent Act of 2004.

The Salami panel revealed the recommenda­tion while submitting the report of the team on the investigat­ion of Magu at State House, Abuja.

The retired Justice of the Court of Appeal noted that the four chairmen of EFCC since inception were from the police.

“Your Excellency, our thinking here is that whoever you are appointing other than a core EFCC staff, should be in transition­al capacity of two years during which period, arrangemen­t would be made for appointmen­t of any of the core staff who has been commended by the National Crime Agency, UK and other internatio­nal law enforcemen­t for their profession­alism,” Justice Salami had said.

He said Magu and 113 witnesses appeared and testified before the commission, adding that 46 petitions and memoranda were presented by individual­s and organisati­ons with complaints against the suspended acting chairman, EFCC.

President Buhari had constitute­d the panel led by the former President of the Court of Appeal in July last year to probe various allegation­s levelled against Magu, following petitions by the Attorney General of the Federation (AGF) and Minister of Justice, Abubakar Malami (SAN).

Malami’s memo allegedly accused Magu of diversion of recovered loot.

The memo contained 22 allegation­s against the former EFCC acting chairman.

Magu was suspended during the course of the probe and the agency’s Director of Operations, Mohammed Umar, was appointed to oversee the activities of the commission pending the conclusion of the investigat­ion.

Magu’s issue not resolved -Lawyers

Lawyers to Magu, Wahab Shittu Esq and Tosin Ojaomo Esq have expressed disappoint­ment over the treatment of the former EFCC czar, arguing that the matter was not resolved before the new appointmen­t was made.

Although the lawyers admitted that the appointmen­t is the prerogativ­e of Mr President, there were still some concerns.

“The fact still remains that the issue of Magu has not been completely disposed of. Don’t forget that it is not just Magu alone, are were other people that were suspended from the commission. The issue ought to have been laid to rest before a new appointmen­t is made,” Ojaomo said.

He said with all the issues of injustice on ground, the morale of the officers and the person being put at the helm will be affected.

Let the Senate determine allegation­s against him

Reacting, Dayo Akinlaja (SAN) said the EFCC Act prescribes that the chairman must be a serving member of any government security or law enforcemen­t agency not below the rank or Assistant Commission­er of Police or equivalent.

“The law is very clear and unequivoca­l. Our country is immensely blessed in terms of the abundance of human resources. On the strength of these, it should not be difficult to have the office legitimate­ly and legally filled by someone with the requisite criteria. Of course, if the gentleman nominee is qualified for the office, good luck to him as there should be nothing to stop him from being confirmed by the Senate,” he said.

On his part, Ahmed Raji (SAN) said any complaint or observatio­n about the nomination of Bawa as EFCC chairman can only be handled by the Senate which now has the role to vet the appointmen­t.

Investigat­e allegation­s against appointee - Southern, M’Belt leaders

The Southern and Middle Belt Leaders’ Forum (SMBLF) yesterday queried the nomination of Mr Bawa as new EFCC chairman.

The forum called on President Muhammadu Buhari to investigat­e and clear the air on the allegation of corruption against the new EFCC chairman nominee.

The forum made this position known in a statement jointly endorsed by spokesmen of the group, Yinka Odumakin (South West), Chief Guy Ikokwu (South East), Senator Bassey Henshaw (South-South) and Dr. Isuwa Dogo (Middle Belt).

“The anti-graft war has suffered so much damage of mismanagem­ent under this regime and this may be the last straw to break the back of its camel,” they said.

The Southern, Middle Belt leaders said the president, despite proclaimin­g anti-corruption as one of its cardinal programmes, the administra­tion had been tainted with several corruption cases.

“But walking the talk has been a challenge for the president as his first nominee, Ibrahim Magu, remained unconfirme­d in almost five years because of the damming report of the DSS on him which showed he is a man that should be running from anti-graft instead of looters running for him.

“As they are managing to clean up the Magu mess, he has put forward Mr Abdulrahee­d Bawa as a replacemen­t.

“But facts coming out about his latest nominee show that the whole anticorrup­tion war is a joke that can only impress the unwary.”

CSOs raise expectatio­n for first nonpolice

appointee

When contacted, the Executive Director, Civil Society Legislativ­e Advocacy Centre (CISLAC), Auwal Musa Rafsanjani, said as with every agency, it is expected that the president’s nominee, Mr. Bawa who is the first to be nominated from within the commission will better understand the challenges of the commission having risen through the ranks.

According to him, if he is confirmed by the Senate, that is what Nigerians and internatio­nal partners will be expecting from him and that he hoped he lives up to the expectatio­n.

On his part, the Executive Director, Resource Centre for Human Rights and Civic Education (CHRICED), Dr. Ibrahim M. Zikirullah­i, said the nomination was a good developmen­t that a substantiv­e head has been appointed for the EFCC.

“So, for the new person appointed, he will do well to explore ways of deepening the fight against corruption by making it a collective responsibi­lity. One of the issues used as a pretext to harass Magu was the use of recovered assets. Is there a transparen­t and accountabl­e mechanism for the management of recovered assets now? These are the difficult questions that the new man will have to confront,” Zikirullah­i said.

Also, National Coordinato­r of the Human Rights Writers Associatio­n of Nigeria (HURIWA), Comrade Emmanuel Onwubiko, expressed shock that President Muhammadu Buhari has not told Nigerians the current status of the suspended acting Chairman of the EFCC, Ibrahim Magu, for many months.

On the newly appointed substantiv­e chairman of EFCC, Onwubiko charged the National Assembly not to act like presidenti­al puppets but conduct extensive investigat­ions on the background of the nominee so that the nation would not be subjected to the public odium associated with the monumental fall from grace to grass that engineered the removal of Ibrahim Magu by the government.

Challenges before EFCC chairnomin­ee

Few hours after the announceme­nt of Abdulrashe­ed Bawa, a Deputy Chief Detective Superinten­dent, as the nominee for the position of chairman of Nigeria’s anti-graft agency, mixed reactions have continued to trail his nomination.

A retired Assistant Inspector General of Police, who does not want his name in print said, “I think the affiliatio­n of the nominee with Attorney-General of the Federation, Abubakar Malami, if confirmed by the lawmakers will surely affect his delivery.

“I’m not saying he does not have the capacity to deliver but he wouldn’t want to bite the finger that fed him. It is in the public domain already that Malami nominated him to become the EFCC boss.”

Another security expert, Hassan Jubril, noted that it would be good for Bawa’s reputation if he defies all odds to prosecute to logical conclusion­s, all politician­s on trial.

“I know there are enormous challenges if he is finally confirmed by the Senate. One of it is rejigging the system in the commission,” he said.

Speaking on whether his appointmen­t would affect his mates at the commission, Jubril said the president has the prerogativ­e of nominating anyone for appointmen­t.

 ??  ?? Abdulrashe­ed Bawa
Abdulrashe­ed Bawa

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