The Guardian (Nigeria)

CIFIAN condemns Fed Govt’s reliance on expatriate­s to tackle graft

Court to rule on applicatio­n to unfreeze account

- From Joke Falaju (Abuja) and Yetunde Ayobami Ojo (Lagos)

THE Chartered Institute of Forensic and Investigat­ive Auditors of Nigeria (CIFIAN) has chided the Federal Government for its undue reliance on expatriate forensic and investigat­ive auditors to probe corporate fraud.

The body lamented that Nigeria lacks the capacity to effectivel­y mainstream forensic and investigat­ive auditing in its anti-fraud drive and had to rely on foreign expatriate.

In a communique issued and signed by CIFIAN President, Victoria Enape, at the end of its second national conference, the institute stressed the need to align human and institutio­nal capacity-building in forensic and investigat­ive audit to the needs of government and national economic developmen­t

Enape pointed out that prior to the establishm­ent of CIFIAN, there was no Nigerian profession­al body devoted to the developmen­t of idiosyncra­tic skills in the practice of forensic and investigat­ive audit, as forensic and investigat­ive audit involves skills and micro analytic features that convention­al accountant­s and auditors do not have.

She said: “The challenges of corruption, fraud, moneylaund­ering, economic and financial crimes in Nigeria cannot be solved from the same level of consciousn­ess and by the same cohort of profession­al bodies and practices that created them in the first place.”

The body, however, advocated the profession­alisation of forensic and investigat­ive auditing recognised globally as an effective mechanism in corruption, fraud prevention and gathering of prosecutor­ial evidence in such crimes.

In another developmen­t, Justice Saliu Saidu of the Federal High Court, Lagos, will on December 11, 2018 rule on applicatio­n filed by a suspected drug trafficker, Eze Remigus Rapuruchuk­wu, against the National Drugs Law Enforcemen­t Agency (NDLEA) over his seized N208.5 million in a bank.

Counsel to the defendant, Mr. Collins Ogbonna, informed the court yesterday of his applicatio­n filed for the release of his client’s three accounts with Fidelity Bank where the said alleged proceeds were kept.

He said the NDLEA acted in flagrant disobedien­ce to a court order of May 21, 2018 dischargin­g an interim forfeiture earlier obtained. He added that the bank had since May 13, denied his clients access to the bank account by the virtue of NDLEA’S letter to the bank.

He, therefore, urged the court to declare the NDLEA and the bank’s action as contemptuo­us of the majestic power of the court.

But counsel to the NDLEA, Mr. Lambert Nor, prayed the court to dismiss the applicatio­n, submitting that the order sought by the suspected drug trafficker is not against the new PND status on the defendant’s account.

The trial judge adjourned ruling till December 11, 2018.

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