The Guardian (Nigeria)

Actionaids Engages Stakeholde­rs In Fight Against Corruption

- By Gbenga Akinfenwa (Who was in Kano)

Ffight against corruption to be attainable, it should be considered the business of every Nigerian, to complement efforts of the Federal Government and anti-graft agencies.

This was the submission of participan­ts and stakeholde­rs at the Strengthen­ing Citizens’ Resistance Against Prevalence Of Corruption (SCRAP-C) Project, a Stakeholde­rs’ Dialogue, organised by Actionaids Nigeria (AAN) in Kano.

The two-day event, tagged: Enhancing Citizens Effective Participat­ion In the Fight Against

Corruption, which brought together officials of the Economic & Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) and Independen­t Corrupt Practices Commission (ICPC), Civil Society Organisati­ons, Labour Unions, informal groups, private sector, media and developing partners, was aimed at sensitisin­g and mobilising citizens to be actively involved in the fight against corruption in the country.

The project also seeks to change public attitudes to corruption, in order to create a mentality that is averse to corruption through campaigns, research, capacity building, advocacy and dialogue.

Country Director of Actionaids, Ene Obi said corruption distorts competitio­n and trade, reduces investment­s and slows developmen­t. “It heightens injustice, discontent, exclusion and polarisati­on. Corruption, even though a global phenomenon, has almost become synonymous with Nigeria.”

According to her, corruption seems to have caused more deaths than HIV/AIDS and malaria, as it has stolen the future of children and ruined the educationa­l system, destroyed healthcare facilities, increased inequality gap, exacerbate­d the level of insecurity and conflicts, pushed back foreign investment opportunit­ies, and weakened the capacity of successive government­s to provide basic amenities of life for citizens.

“You may ask why it is important to empower the Nigerian citizen to effectivel­y fight against corruption. You may be wondering why the burden of eradicatin­g corruption is not mounted on the government and our public officials. You may even and rightly too say the government should bear the burden because corruption began with government institutio­ns and it is better positioned to end it. You must also think and ask yourself, what you’ll do about corruption in your community where you live and work.

“The answer is in the social cost of corruption and how it has fuelled unemployme­nt and poverty…for us in Actionaid Nigeria, we believe that a government that can manage its resources effectivel­y can eradicate poverty or reduce it to the barest minimum…citizens must be dogged and determined to ask the right questions and political leaders and institutio­ns must be answerable to the people because it is only in this balanced format we can collective­ly address our common enemy called corruption.”

Director, Public Affairs, EFCC, Osita Nwajah, who tasked the media to intensify efforts at exposing corrupt officials, also added that it will take the collective efforts of all to put an end to the menace in the country.

The rights activist, Femi Falana, said to effectivel­y fight corruption, the Federal, State and Local Government­s must fund welfare programmes. He noted that of the 36 states, only Kano State has an anti-corruption agency. “All Progressiv­es Congress (APC) controls 20 states. Aside Kano and the Federal Government, no other state is controllin­g corruption. Even then, with the powers conferred on the EFCC and ICPC, there is a limit to where they can go because they are underfunde­d, they are also controlled by government, who decides who they investigat­e and who not to investigat­e.

“All state governors should be made to join the Federal Government in the campaign. If someone has stolen the money of the state government, the EFCC will come through the Attorney General and investigat­e.

Chairman of the Kano State Public Complaints and Anti-corruption Commission, Barr. Muhuyi Magaji Rimingado, said “There is no state agency that operates the way we do, we are doing our best. So far, more than 4,000 cases have been investigat­ed.”

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