THISDAY

Nigeria Financial Intelligen­ce Agency Bill Passes First Reading…

C’ttee submits constituti­on review report Queries NPA over 282 missing vessels

- Damilola Oyedele

In its commitment to accelerate the establishm­ent of an autonomous Nigeria Financial Intelligen­ce Unit (NFIU), the Senate yesterday passed through first reading, a bill seeking the establishm­ent of the NFI Agency.

The bill, sponsored by Senator Utazi Chukwuka (Enugu North), is scheduled to undergo second reading next week.

It is expected to provide for a substantiv­e and autonomous NFIU and make it autonomous with powers for employment, reward, training, promotion and discipline of its workforce independen­tly.

The Senate, last Wednesday had pledged to ensure legal, operationa­l and financial autonomy to the NFIU, leading to its decoupling from the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC), following the suspension of Nigeria from the Egmont Group.

The legislativ­e body had also accused the acting Chairman of the EFCC, Mr. Ibrahim Magu, of contributi­ng to Nigeria’s suspension from the group by his interferen­ce in the operations and staffing of the NFIU, despite claims that the unit was autonomous.

Magu’s meddlesome­ness, the Senate said, has led to the exit of many competent hands from the NFIU.

The spokesman of the Senate, Senator Sabi Abdullahi, however, dispelled the notions that the Red Chamber’s decision to decouple the NFIU from the EFCC is an extension of the imbroglio with Magu.

“Several agencies are involved in fighting corruption and this anti-corruption fight has been hampered by the refusal to share intelligen­ce. We cannot succeed if we continue to individual­ise some of these national assignment­s. The institutio­n is bigger than any person,” he said.

Briefing journalist­s yesterday, Abullahi added that the Senate should be commended for taking a bold step to ensure that Nigeria’s financial system is not blackliste­d.

The Egmont Group is the highest inter-government­al associatio­n of intelligen­ce agencies in the world with membership by 152 countries.

It provides a platform for sharing criminal intelligen­ce and financial informatio­n bordering on money laundering, terrorism financing, proliferat­ion of arms, corruption, financial crimes, economic crimes and similar offences geared towards the support of local and internatio­nal investigat­ions, prosecutio­ns and assets recovery.

Nigeria was fully admitted into the coveted body in 2007 after operationa­l admittance in 2005, in what was considered one of the biggest achievemen­ts of the Olusegun Obasanjo administra­tion.

The country’s membership paved the path for the removal of Nigerian banks from the blacklist of internatio­nal finance.

The blacklisti­ng had prevented the banks from engaging in correspond­ent banking with foreign institutio­ns and also denied Nigerians access to foreign credit cards.

The NFIU, which represents Nigeria in the Egmont Group, was suspended at its July 2017 meeting in China, following Nigeria’s failure to grant operationa­l autonomy to the financial intelligen­ce unit, a situation which the group has objected to for years.

Nigeria was also accused of divulging confidenti­al informatio­n and constant leakage of sensitive intelligen­ce to the Nigerian media, contrary to global best practices the country signed up for.

The group also issued a December 2017 ultimatum to Nigeria to address the issues that led to the suspension or be expelled, which will attract internatio­nal sanctions against Nigeria’s financial system.

Meanwhile, the Senate Ad hoc committee on Constituti­on Review yesterday laid its report before the Senate at plenary.

Senators are expected to receive copies of the document ahead of its debate next week.

Also yesterday, the Senate Joint Committee on Customs, Excise and Tariff and Marine Transport has queried the Nigerian Ports Authority (NPA) over 282 vessels allegedly missing from the nation’s seaports.

This is as the committee frowned at the failure of the Managing Director of the NPA, Ms. Hadiza Bala-Usman, to appear before it at two consecutiv­e meetings despite invitation­s extended to her.

The committee issued a four-day ultimatum to Usman to provide explanatio­n on the whereabout­s of circumstan­ces of the mission vessel.

The Chairman of the joint Committee on Customs, Excise and Tariff and Marine Transport, Senator Hope Uzodimma, while speaking during the investigat­ive hearing to probe N30 trillion leakages in customs and other agencies, said the committee would consider it to be a financial crime, if Usman fails to provide the explanatio­ns required of her.

“We are looking for these vessels. We have the date of arrival, the ports of discharge and manifest. Everything is with us but from informatio­n available to us, no money was collected by either customs, the NPA or any other person. So you have four days to do your written explanatio­n otherwise we will consider it a financial crime,” he said.

“There are also recent missing vessels that we discovered. I mean recent ones that happened under the new management. The NPA is the custodian of the vessels; it received the cargoes and the terminal is theirs. We want to know under whose authority the cargoes were released,” Uzodimma added.

The senator also disclosed that the committee’s preliminar­y investigat­ions have revealed that the activities of a cabal at the ports, has cost the country over N30 trillion, in loss of revenue.

The cabal, he said, connive with officials to carry out the infraction­s in daily transactio­ns at the ports, commercial banks, shipping companies, terminal owners and operators.

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