THISDAY

Buhari’s Assets: SANs Nudge SERAP to Sue CCB

- Davidson Iriekpen, Tobi Soniyi in Lagos and Alex Enumah in Abuja

Senior Advocates of Nigeria (SANs) yesterday advised a civil society organisati­on, Socio-Economic Rights and Accountabi­lity Project (SERAP), to challenge in court, the refusal of the Code of Conduct Bureau (CCB) to disclose the details of President Muhammadu Buhari’s assets.

Sequel to the Freedom of Informatio­n (FoI) Act, SERAP had sought from the CCB the disclosure of assets declaratio­ns

submitted by successive president and governors from 1999 till date.

But in a letter by Musa Usman, on behalf of CCB chairman, the bureau said the request “falls short of the requiremen­t of the law,” adding that the informatio­n requested cannot be provided because of “invasion of privacy.”

However, a SAN and former President of the Nigerian Bar Associatio­n (NBA), Mr. Olisa Agbakoba, described the refusal of the CCB to disclose the details of Buhari’s assets as double standard.

Agbakoba said the action of the CCB amounted to double standard considerin­g what happened to the former Chief Justice of Nigeria (CJN), Justice Walter Onnoghen.

Onnoghen was recently convicted by the Code of Conduct Tribunal (CCT) on an alleged six-count charge of failure to declare all his assets as required by the law for public office holders.

The charges were preferred against him by the federal government following a petition filed at the CCB by one Mr. Dennis Aghanya, a director of the Anti-corruption and Research Database Initiative.

Aghanya did not state how he got to know that the former CJN did not update his asset declaratio­n forms since he assumed office.

“It’s double standards given what happened to Justice Onnoghen,” Agbakoba said.

On the next step SERAP should take, the former NBA chair advised SERAP to challenge the refusal in court.

Another senior lawyer, Chief Emeka Ngige (SAN), urged SERAP to go to court to challenge CCB, adding that it would be interestin­g to see how the court would decide the issue.

Ngige said as a democratic nation, issues such as these should be resolved by the courts, stressing that not only would it be a test case, it would also be an opportunit­y to find out if the forms lodged with agencies like CCB can be accessed by non-government­al and civil society organisati­ons.

“Let them go to court and challenge CCB. We are in a democracy. It would be a test case. It is an opportunit­y to determine whether the forms lodged with CCB can be accessed by NGOs. The case can even go beyond the High Court up to as far as the Supreme Court,” he said.

Also reacting, another SAN, Mr. Ahmed Raji, advised SERAP to go to court, which according

to him, is saddled with the responsibi­lity of interpreti­ng the law.

While the senior lawyer agreed that the Freedom of Informatio­n Act allows members of the public to access informatio­n on public officers, he added that there are some exceptions under the Act, which only the court can best determine.

"SERAP is advised to contest the refusal in court. While it is true the Freedom of Informatio­n Act is there, there is the need to ascertain whether the class of documents falls into one of the few exceptions under the Act. Let us be guided by the courts," he said.

Another SAN, Prof. Akinseye George, however, said there was no constituti­onal or statutory obligation on the bureau to publish the assets declaratio­n forms of the president, vice

president and others.

“But under the Freedom of Informatio­n Act, the bureau is obliged to release the informatio­n,” he said, adding: “Also, in line with the anti-graft policy of the administra­tion, the asset declaratio­n forms ought to be made public.”

According to him, both the president and the vice-president made their declaratio­ns public at the beginning of the first term.

“It is even more important that after they have spent four years, they should make their assets public. That’s the practice in other serious democracie­s,” he added.

Human rights lawyer, Mr. Femi Falana (SAN), condemned the CCB for refusing to grant the FoI request by SERAP because assets declaratio­n form is private

informatio­n.

He described the grounds as “illogical,” saying that by not disclosing the assets of the president, the federal government has failed to show commitment to the fight against corruption by encouragin­g secrecy with respect to asset declaratio­n by public officers.

He said: “With respect, it is illogical to claim that the asset

declaratio­n forms submitted by the erstwhile public officers are private documents. Accordingl­y, the rejection of the request by SERAP is a contravent­ion of section 1 of the Freedom of Informatio­n Act, 2011 and Article 9 of the African Charter on Human and Peoples Rights.

“It is hoped that the CCB will review its position and allow citizens to access the

informatio­n in the declaratio­n forms submitted to it by all public officers in view of the new policy of the Buhari administra­tion to enforce effective asset declaratio­n by public office holders.”

Also, the former Chairman of the National Human Rights Commission (NHRC), Prof. Chidi Odinkalu, said the CCB was deliberate­ly obstructin­g the implementa­tion of the FoI Act

and transparen­t governance which Buhari committed to before he became president.

Odinkalu, who was one of the forces behind the agitation and passage of the FoI Act in the country, noted that the constituti­on made release of asset informatio­n contingent on the adoption of legislativ­e instrument to govern such release.

He said: “In negotiatin­g the FoI Bill through parliament between 2008 and 2011, the need to ensure and govern disclosure of asset informatio­n under the control of the CCB was given and taken as an explicit rationale for the bill that later became the FoI Act.

“Now, the CCB chooses to dance to the tune of a disclosed masquerade. On December 9, 2015, the CCB disclosed that it had sought and received legal

advice from then Attorney General of the Federation and Minister of Justice, Mr. Abubakar Malami, instructin­g it not to disclose the asset forms of the president and Vice President Yemi Osinbajo. What I can't understand is how the CCB chooses to elevate the opinion of a self-interested lawyer over and above the explicit provisions of our laws, including our constituti­on.”

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