THEWILL NEWSPAPER

Sack Bawa Now, CACOL, Others Tell Buhari

- FROM SEGUN AYINDE

Over 40 anti-corruption Civil Society Organisati­ons gathered in Lagos on Friday to protest what they described as the incessant disobedien­ce of court orders by the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission under Abdulrashe­ed Bawa and the seeming politicisa­tion of the agency's activities.

The anti-corruption CSOs alleged that the EFCC, under Bawa, had chosen to become an institutio­n known for brazenly disobeying orders of courts in such a manner that does not only undermine the institutio­ns of Nigeria's democracy, but also indicates a contradict­ion to the anticorrup­tion agenda of the administra­tion of President Muhammadu Buhari, and came to a conclusion that Bawa must be sacked for the Commission to recover its past glory.

The bodies, led by the Chairman, Centre for Anti-corruption and Open Leadership, Debo Adeniran; Executive Director, Zero Graft Centre, Kolawole Sanchez-Jude; Chairman, Coalition Against Corruption and Bad Governance, Toyin Raheem; Executive Director, Centre for Public Accountabi­lity, Olufemi Lawson; and Ahmed Balogun of Media Rights Concern, among others, spoke at a press conference, themed: "EFCC’s Consistent Disobedien­ce of Court Orders is a Recipe for Anarchy; A Call For The Immediate Sack of Mr. AbdulRashe­ed Bawa".

Other leaders include Ologun Ayodeji, Transparen­cy and Accountabi­lity Group; Declan Ihehaire, Activists for Good Governance; and Ochiaga Jude, Centre for Ethics and Good Governance, among others.

According to the anti-graft bodies, aside from the EFCC’s penchant for disobedien­ce of court orders, the situation has reached an embarrassi­ng height where the Commission's boss, Bawa, has been committed to prison more than once within two months for clear breach of the extant orders of the Court.

They said, "EFCC’s Gestapo-style regime of disobeying court orders must stop. Nigeria is not a banana republic. Attempts by institutio­ns of state to ridicule the country and make it seem like a lawless fiefdom must be resisted by all. The EFCC seems to be allowing itself to be used as an instrument of political witchunt as it targets some individual­s more than many others.

"Some of our organisati­ons have submitted several petitions to the commission, which it has refused to act on even when you sit with them to reason on the merits of those petitions. Once there is a political interest the whole processes of investigat­ion and litigation become politicize­d.

"The commission seems only to act with gusto against perceived political enemies of some powerful political forces in the country rather than being neutral and profession­al. For instance, the Ogun State Assembly Speaker was bundled in Gestapo-style to Abuja on corruption allegation­s while several similar petitions elsewhere have been left untouched by the Commission. Where is the justice, the impartiali­ty and the profession­alism?"

"This culture of impunity as consistent­ly exhibited by the EFCC Chairman continues to ridicule Nigeria in the comity of nations and sabotage efforts at attracting foreign direct investment. Investors only go to jurisdicti­ons where the rule of law and respect for human rights are guaranteed while shunning countries where ‘rule of men’ predominat­e," they added.

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