THISDAY

Election Bribe: EFCC Begins Prosecutio­n of Indicted INEC Staff

Staff got N3.4bn bribe, says Yakubu

- Onyebuchi Ezigbo in Abuja

The Chairman of the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) has said all the staff of the Independen­t National Electoral Commission (INEC) indicted for taking bribe during elections have been charged to courts in Lagos, Port Harcourt, Kano and Gombe.

A total of 295 INEC staff were indicted for their involvemen­t in bribery, corruption and money laundering during the 2015 general election as well as the last re-run legislativ­e elections in Rivers State.

Magu, who spoke during a meeting with the Chairman of INEC, Prof. Mahmoud Yakubu, at the headquarte­rs of the electoral commission in Abuja yesterday, said the EFCC would welcome INEC’s Legal Department to join its prosecutio­n team in handling the cases in court.

He said: “We are already prosecutin­g some INEC staff in Lagos, Port Harcourt, Kano and Gombe. In the future, before we take any such case to court, we will inform INEC and share details of the charge sheet with you. And if you have anybody in your legal department that wants to join our prosecutio­n team, such persons are welcome. This will add value to work.”

Magu who said the EFCC regards corruption as “a crime against humanity,” commended the INEC Chairman for cooperatin­g with the anti-corruption agency in the cases involving some INEC staff.

In a statement issued after the meeting, the spokesman to the INEC chairman, Rotimi Oyekanmi, said Magu also commended the INEC management for its decisive action on the issue.

“When you take actions like these, you are reducing our work. And as far as the fight against corruption is concerned, we (EFCC and INEC) are on the same page.”

According to Oyekanmi, the EFCC noted that sensitisat­ion of the populace on the consequenc­es of corruption was part of the EFCC Act, assuring that it would be pursued vigorously.

On his part, the Chairman of INEC, Yakubu, urged the EFCC to henceforth prosecute any INEC staff found to have committed any offence related to its mandate, without waiting for the conclusion of INEC’s internal investigat­ion.

Yakubu said it took INEC about four months to thoroughly investigat­e all the allegation­s against the 202 staffers contained in the Interim Report, the agency forwarded to the commission, before a final decision could be reached.

According to the INEC boss, in order to avoid delays in the future, the anticorrup­tion agency should commence the prosecutio­n of any staff, if it possesses sufficient evidence to do so.

On the decision taken so far, Yakubu explained that a committee was set up to conduct a thorough investigat­ion of all the allegation­s contained in both the report and other findings, with all the affected staff members given the opportunit­y to defend themselves in the spirit of fair hearing.

He confirmed that the committee set by INEC had establishe­d that over N3.4 billion was received by some INEC staffers in 16 states, apparently to influence the results of the 2015 general election.

As a result, he said about 205 staffers had now been placed on interdicti­on, which entails suspension from duty and being placed on half salary, pending the final determinat­ion of their respective cases.

He further explained that the implicated former National Commission­er and five former Resident Electoral Commission­ers (one of whom is now deceased) had been referred to the Presidency through the Secretary to the Government of the Federation (SGF).

According to the INEC boss, the reason is that they were appointed by the federal government and as such, the commission cannot take further action against them.”

He also said the commission was referring 70 other staffers back to the EFCC for further investigat­ion and possible prosecutio­n, because of insufficie­nt evidence.

While reiteratin­g the commission’s zero tolerance for corruption, Yakubu told Magu: “If we get our elections right, we will get our democracy right. And if we get our democracy right, we will attain real developmen­t as a nation.”

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