Attorney general seeks foreign support for anti-corruption war
Mohammed Adoke, Nigeria’s attorney
general, says that Nigeria currently has challenges in the area of
mutual legal assistance because a number of countries have not adopted
international anti-corruption instruments, making the process of assets
recovery tedious. Speaking at a meeting in Abuja on Thursday where key
players in the anti-graft fight gathered to mark the International
Anti-Corruption day, most speakers took turns to speak about Nigeria’s
anti-corruption stance.
“Experience has shown that the
procedure for obtaining mutual legal assistance to seize, confiscate
and repatriate proceeds of corruption is often complex, expensive and
time consuming,” Mr. Adoke said.
While speaking at the event, Mr. Adoke
reiterated that asset recovery is the pivot of the anti-corruption war
and called for other countries to implement the asset recovery
provisions of the United Nations Convention against Corruption.
“We believe that these provisions, if
diligently implemented by the state parties, will go a long way in
redressing the injustice associated with a system that allows a few
corrupt persons to enjoy the proceeds of their crime to the detriment
of the majority especially in developing countries,” Mr. Adoke said.
Speaking at the event also, Farida
Waziri, the head of the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission,
complained that the staff strength of her commission is not sufficient
to fight corruption.
“Corruption has eaten deep into this
society and can no longer be the job of only one agency,” she said.
“The EFCC is 1,700 in strength and the country is 150 million. How can
we cover that? We can only work with the support of the people.”
Blame it on Nigerians
The president-general of the Trade
Union Congress, Peter Esele, said that Nigerians are to blame for the
growth of corruption in the country.
“Nigerians are docile and the members
of the National Assembly are no longer public servants but our masters
because of this,” he said. “Nigeria is the only country where corrupt
politicians can go to court to prevent the EFCC from investigating
them. Nigerians must say enough is enough.”
Dagmar Thomas, country representative
for the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime, who also spoke at the
event, said that Nigeria is far from winning the fight against
corruption.
“Corruption impedes Nigeria’s
development,” she said. “Since Independence, successive administrations
of Nigeria have acknowledged the need to combat corruption. While these
efforts have recorded some successes, numerous legal and institutional
challenges persist,”
Ms. Thomas added that Nigeria is yet to create an enabling
environment to fight corruption, thus making the work of agencies like
the EFCC more difficult.
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