Anti-Corruption Groups Call on Senate to Confirm Magu as EFCC Chairman

Mon, Nov 7, 2016
By publisher
5 MIN READ

BREAKING NEWS, Politics

– 

ANTI-Corruption groups on Sunday, November 7, urged the Senate to expedite action on the confirmation of Ibrahim Magu as chairman of the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission, EFCC. President Muhammadu Buhari’s letter for Magu’s confirmation is before the Senate.

This latest call on the National Assembly reiterated an earlier call made by the Africa Network for Environment and Economic Justice, ANEEJ, in August in the wake of delays in the confirmation of Magu as substantive chairman of the EFCC.

The groups in a communique issued on Sunday in Abuja at the end of its recently-concluded national conference on the Role of the Legislature in the Fight Against Corruption, organised by the National Assembly and the Presidency, noted that prior to the process leading to the confirmation of Magu, the National Assembly went on recess.

Interestingly, the Senate has since reconvened, screened and confirmed justices of Supreme Court and Board of the Niger Delta Development Commission, NDDC, forwarded to it long after the submission of Magu’s name for confirmation as the EFCC’s chairman by President Buhari.

The coalition in a joint statement said Magu’s confirmation would give the anti-corruption fight the impetus to sustain President Muhammadu Buhari’s agenda to curtail impunity in governance. Having a substantive chairman for the EFCC, the group argued, would be in compliance with Article 6(2) of the United Nations Convention Against Corruption, UNCAC, of which Nigeria is a signatory.

Members of the coalition include, the Coalition Against Corrupt Leaders, CACOL; the Civil Society Network Against Corruption, CSNAC; Social-Economic Rights and Accountability Project, SERAP; Africa Network for Environment and Economic Justice, ANEEJ;  Network on Police Reform in Nigeria, NOPRIN; Publish What You Pay, PWYP; Nigeria  and the Centre for Transparency Advocacy, CTA. They all authorised the statement signed by Debo  Adeniran, CACOL; Lanre Suraju, SNAC; Adetokunbo Mumuni, SERAP; David Ugolor, ANEEJ; Okey Nwanguma, NOPRIN; Faith Nwadishi, PWYP and Oluajo Babatunde, CTA.

The groups said: “This delay by the Senate sends a wrong signal of deliberate attempt by the Senate to frustrate the anti-corruption fight or at best, exert political pressure on the EFCC and force it into some compromise with the Senate.

“Having reconvened from recess almost two months ago, the group therefore calls on the Senate to treat Mr. Magu’s confirmation as substantive executive chairman of the EFCC as a matter of top priority and of urgent national interest.

“We also call on President Buhari to use the ongoing second review mechanism of the United Nations Convention Against Corruption (UNCAC), which Nigeria is undergoing to send a strong message to the international community that Nigeria is genuinely committed to the fight against corruption.”

They said Magu is qualified to lead the anti-graft commission.

They said: “Section 2 of the EFCC Act says ‘there shall be a chairman who shall be the Chief Executive Officer of the commission, and who shall not be below the rank of an Assistant Commissioner of police. He is to be saddled with the responsibility of running the anti-crime commission.

“The groups verily believe that Mr. Magu, a Deputy Commissioner of Police, meets and exceeds this requirement, and therefore his confirmation as EFCC Chairman without further delay will give the anti-corruption fight the boost it needs to end the culture of impunity and systemic corruption in Nigeria.”

The groups explained why the confirmation of Magu was necessary at this critical time, saying: “The security of tenure for the leadership of the anti-corruption agencies saddled with the task of tackling the debilitating effects of corruption is a globally recognized principle for guaranteeing the independence of anti-corruption agencies.

“Fighting corruption without the basic guarantee of security of tenure for the head of anti-corruption agencies as has become the trend in the recent past in Nigeria is one of the major limitations of the fight against the scourge of corruption in Nigeria and the Senate of the Federal Republic of Nigeria has a duty to reverse this trend.

“The guarantee of security of tenure of anti-corruption agencies officials is at the root of the independence, effective functioning and freedom from undue influence of anti-corruption agencies as prescribed by Article 6(2) of the UN Convention Against Corruption (UNCAC) of which Nigeria is a signatory.

“Anything short of such a guarantee renders the fight against corruption ineffectual, susceptible to political manipulation and compromises the independence of the anti-corruption agencies.”

They said Magu deserves to be confirmed because he has changed the face of anti-graft war in the country.

The statement went further: “The EFCC has of late stepped up the fight against acts of corruption and abuse of public trust as exemplified in the tracking of those remotely and directly connected with the misapplication of monies meant to fight Boko Haram insurgency.

“The commission has also ensured the confiscation of the properties suspected to have been acquired from proceeds of crime linked to politically-exposed persons as well as the investigation and prosecution of alleged owners.

“Lack of a substantive head with a secured tenure has been a major set back in all these efforts.”

—  Nov 7, 2016 @ 17:30 GMT

|

Tags: