THISDAY

Use Recovered Loot for Specific Social Service Delivery, CISLAC Urges FG

As NGOs advocate transparen­cy, open informatio­n

- Abimbola Akosile and Funke Olaode

The Civil Society Legislativ­e Advocacy Centre (CISLAC) has urged the Federal Government to apply the various monies recovered from corrupt past office holders for improved social service delivery in specific areas.

The non-government­al organisati­on, in a release issued by its Executive Director, Auwal Ibrahim Musa (Rafsanjani), described the recent reports of actual figures being recovered from corrupt past office holders as heart-warming.

CISLAC recalled that although the current administra­tion has reported success in the recovery of proceeds of corruption, details on exactly how much and from whom have been sketchy and the availabili­ty of the funds for budgetary allocation­s had been doubtful in spite of them being mentioned in budget speeches. “We recall the experience­s with similar recoveries in the past, such as the Abacha loot, in which the funds were not deployed in manners that the impact was neither felt by citizens nor was it possible to demonstrat­e that it was actually used for the benefit of Nigerians. This informed the famous phrase of ‘re-looting the loot’ used by many to indicate that the recovered loot were indeed also stolen by the then political establishm­ent.

“Nigerians suffered poverty, deprivatio­n and neglect while these officials carted away the humongous sums of monies that are presently being reported stashed away in scandalous places. CISLAC therefore advocates that, in addition to ensuring that the recovered funds are transparen­tly and accountabl­y managed, they should be ploughed into sectors that deliver direct social services to the teeming masses in a measurable way.”

The organisati­on recommende­d that the monies be deployed to address the educationa­l, health and water needs of the people, in a systematic, strategic, and dedicated manner. “The past practice of injecting looted funds through the broad budget cycle has proved to be ineffectiv­e. The Executive should liaise with the National Assembly to ensure that special supplement­ary approval is obtained for the expenditur­e of recovered monies”, it added.

CISLAC suggested that a Specialise­d Service Delivery Account domiciled with the Central Bank be establishe­d into which all the recovered funds are deposited. “This will be managed by an Ad-Hoc Multi-Stakeholde­r Management Committee made up of designated technocrat­s from the focal ministries and volunteers from relevant Profession­al Bodies, the Media, Civil Society and the Anticorrup­tion Agencies.

The duty of this Committee is to appraise specific project proposals from the focal ministries to ensure relevance, efficiency, maximum impact and that projects can be completed within specific time-lines. They would also monitor funds disburseme­nt from the account and report back to Nigerians. This will ensure efficiency without creating another agency that would constitute a drain pipe to already scarce resources”, Rafsanjani added.

According to CISLAC, “We believe that this would ensure that the funds are not only applied to real and tangible people-oriented projects, but that the spending can be tracked and the impact on the lives of the people measured.

The organisati­on commended the efforts of the anti-corruption agencies in bringing about these results, applauded the members of the judiciary whose rulings contribute to these recoveries, and also commended the role of citizens in blowing the whistle even in the absence of a Whistle Blowers Act to protect citizens.

“Thus, we call on the National Assembly to quickly pass the Whistle Blowers Act to enhance the fight against corruption. We call on all stakeholde­rs not to relent in the fight against corruption by ensuring that through the rule of law, looted funds are recovered and brought back into the national treasury and deployed to offset the social and welfare deficit of Nigerians”, it added.

Meanwhile, representa­tives of government bodies, civil society, the private sector and media from Ghana, Kenya and Nigeria converged on Ghana recently to examine the challenges posed to Africa by non-disclosure of Beneficial Ownership Informatio­n of companies towards establishi­ng a legal system that collects and publishes crucial corporate informatio­n.

The two-day workshop tagged ‘Supporting New Beneficial Ownership Transparen­cy Champions’, was spearheade­d by three not-for-profit organisati­ons: Integrity Initiative (GII), Transparen­cy Internatio­nal (TI) Secretaria­t, CISLAC, Nigeria and Transparen­cy Internatio­nal (Kenya) with funding from the United Kingdom’s Department for Internatio­nal Developmen­t (DfID).

There, internatio­nal experts who shared their expertise on relevant issues such as beneficial ownership registers, extractive­s, open data, open contractin­g and procuremen­t, tax and illicit financial flows deliberate­d on why all hands must be on deck.

The workshop held within the framework of a Transparen­cy Internatio­nal project, sought to support the realisatio­n of commitment­s made by the government­s of Ghana, Kenya and Nigeria at the UK Anti-Corruption Summit in May 2016 on establishi­ng public beneficial ownership registers was declared open by the Vice-President of Ghana, Dr. Mahamudu Bawumia.

Having realised the damage of non-compliance of commitment­s of the countries involved, participan­ts led by the conveners of the workshop, Linda Ofori-Kwafo (Ghana), Rafsanjani (Nigeria) and Kenya’s Elizabeth Munyefu , recommende­d that entities doing business (including financial institutio­ns, real estate developers and profession­al bodies commit to an increased transparen­cy and business integrity by unveiling their Beneficial Owners.

It also suggested that African countries strengthen the capacity of their institutio­ns, particular­ly financial institutio­ns, revenue authoritie­s and other public sector organisati­ons responsibl­e for the different levels of negotiatio­ns in the extractive sector and in public procuremen­t to ensure there are clear plans to manage corruption, tax avoidance, tax evasion and other financial abuse risks.

Participan­ts also urged their respective government entities charged with the responsibi­lity of managing the register to keep Beneficial Ownership informatio­n current while the African Union Commission must expeditiou­sly develop a road map and action points for the implementa­tion of the key recommenda­tions of the High Level panel on Illicit Financial Flows (IFF) from Africa.

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