Ever since the whistle blowing
policy of the federal government was announced in December of 2016,
there has been a frenzy of activities in the anti-corruption sector of
the economy. While many have been excited by these activities, others
have approached the issue with deserving skepticism.
This is because a majority of
Nigerian officials would always find ways of “legally” enriching
themselves by circumventing government policies meant to improve the
society.
With the sudden gale of humongous
sums claimed to have been uncovered by the Economic and Financial Crimes
Commission, EFCC, one begins to suspect that there is more to it than
meets the eye especially when the Head of the organization has been
described by the Directorate of State Security Services, DSS, as one who
“has failed the integrity test and will eventually constitute a
liability to the anti-corruption drive of the present administration”.
This damning verdict on Magu by the
DSS was passed after what the security agency described as a painstaking
investigation into the activities of the Borno born police officer
while serving as EFCC’s Acting Chairman.
That report by the DSS nailed the
coffin on Magu’s expected confirmation by the senate, and since then, Mr
Magu and his backers in Aso Rock have gone so desperate to push for
Magu’s retention by the president despite the negative security report
on him and his non-confirmation by the senate as required by law.
Part of the script to get a gullible
section of the Nigerian public on his side is to get the easily
excitable ones who seem to form a majority of the populace entertained
with what looks like phantom discoveries and uncovering of humongous
sums of money without any trace of the owners.
Such movies are, of course, very
easy to act. All that would always be needed is the cooperation of those
who have formed themselves into a cabal that has come to needlessly
hate the senate and would do anything to spite that institution even if
it means helping Magu get some monies from amenable government financial
institutions to plant somewhere and later turn around to claim that
Magu’s EFCC has discovered the same money where it was planted, hence,
most of the discovered funds have no owners attached to them.
For example, how could anyone with
brains believe that the EFCC actually discovered the large sum of N49m
at the baggage screening section of the airport without either
identifying the owner or apprehending the conveyor? How did anyone ferry
that huge sum in five sacks through the screening machines of the
airport and was not detected? Not that the money was hidden among other
items, but were just all in five different sacks on their own, yet,
passed through the screening machines without being detected?
Why has the EFCC not shown Nigerians
the CCTV footage of the person purported to have ferried the money into
the airport and ask Nigerians to help identify and apprehend him? Who
were those who screened the sacks and passed them through before they
got to the baggage section?
And as if that was not bad enough,
few days later, the EFCC claimed to have discovered another N448m in a
Lagos Shop on Ahmadu Bello Way, Victoria Island, still without an owner.
One would have thought that the EFCC would be more circumspect in its
operations so as not to cast doubts on them, but its desperation to be
seen to be working has made it fall into the temptation of exciting
Nigerians with ear-tingling news of discoveries. Somebody rented that
shop; the shop has an owner. Where are they and who are they? Unless
such vital information is provided, Nigerians would continue to deride
the senseless Nollywood-like discoveries of the anti-graft agency as an
action inspired by selfishness and desperation.
It is the same story with the N250m
purportedly uncovered in the popular Balogun market few days after. That
one, like its twin brothers, has no owner!
The latest of these discovery series
are the $38m, N23m and £27,000 purportedly uncovered at Osborne Towers
in the high brow Victoria Island area of Lagos. Since that discovery,
several parties have been linked to its ownership without any clear
indication as to who the actual owner is. That is exactly what happens
when your discovery prowess seems to beat that of even Discovery
Channel!
A good number of Nigerians are
suspecting that these purported discoveries are nothing but stunts
instigated by the federal government and scripted by the anti-graft
agency just to either divert attention of the Nigerian public from the
failures of the current administration and or for the laundering of Mr
Magu’s already badly battered image.
A more disturbing angle to it all is
the notion in some quarters that those who are pulling these stunts
might just be pulling them to deceive the FG, the media and the general
public while they smile away to the bank with their 5% reward from the
federal government whistleblowing reward policy.
It is believed that those behind
these dramas, which can be a powerful ring of highly placed persons,
only plant the monies somewhere and raise a whistleblower who “tips off”
the anti-graft agency who in turn swoops on them. And in order not to
cause confusion about it and or blow open their lid, they sell the
stories of the monies being abandoned by unknown persons only for them
to claim the 5% whistleblowing reward on the monies through their fake
whistleblower. This possibility is very real in the strange
circumstances of the spate of sudden discoveries of cash in places where
the owners of either the cash or the buildings they are discovered are
not identified or even known.
So while Nigerians get easily
excited by such news, the whistleblowing ring smiles to the banks with
“legally” earned money (I am sure no one wants to know how much 5% of
$38m is in today’s exchange rate value. That’s a whopping N580m at a
conservative rate of N305/$, not to talk of other “recoveries” running
into hundreds of millions of naira. So that’s good business for our new
whistleblowing cabal. Let no one be deceived).
This is similar to the abuse the
Emir of Kano, Sanusi Lamido Sanusi, once said was going on in the
Central Bank where some powerful individuals are said to just sit in
their gardens and call for hard currencies from the apex bank at very
ridiculous or even no rates, sell to the Bureau De Change operators at
prevailing market rate, make huge sums of profits and return the
“borrowed” hard currencies back to the CBN while these highly placed
individuals keep the profits.
One should not be surprised if that
same ring has found its way into the anti-corruption war and are taking
advantage of the loopholes in government’s good intentions about the
whistleblowing policy, and making money for themselves through phantom
discovery of monies without owners.
To stop this trend, the
whistleblowing policy should be strengthened, and reward should go to
only those whose whistleblowing not only lead to the discovery of cash
but also the proper identification of the owners for arrest and
prosecution. If not, powerful individuals will continue to source huge
sums of money from government owned financial institutions, plant same
somewhere, raise a fake whistleblower who discovers the money, get the
percentage reward on it, and go to court to obtain a forfeiture order,
and the money returns to government, and the cycle continues.
I do not trust the EFCC under Magu.
An institution that is reputed for feeding the public with deliberate
falsehood about suspects and facts of court proceedings as in the case
of Col Nicholas Ashinze which has led to the stalling of that case
cannot be trusted especially as the DSS has also confirmed that Magu has
failed the integrity test. A man who has been confirmed by the DSS to
have failed the integrity test can always fall for anything including
the 5% that follows the whistleblowing report leading to the recovery of
monies that have no one identified as their owners.
While Magu seems incurably
fascinated by the attention he gets from the media, he lost about four
high profile cases in just one week, an outcome that confirms the fact
that his strategy of media trials and razzmatazz has seized his
attention from diligent investigation and prosecution.
Making the counting of the monies
uncovered a public show was needless just as it vitiates the seriousness
otherwise attached to the anti-corruption fight and reduces same to
nothing but a comedy designed to amuse rather than cleanse the society.
All these have led to the bastardisation of the anti-corruption war. One
of the most potent solutions to these charade going on is for
government to look for a more competent and honest man/woman with clean
records (and there are plenty of them out there) to take charge of the
agency if we must achieve meaningful result in this fight!
Lastly, I implore the DSS not to shy
away from commencing an investigation into this sudden gale of
discoveries by the EFCC with a view to ascertaining their authenticity
and help bring this madness to a halt. Anyone found complicit in the
suspected “planting and harvesting” of monies anywhere should be brought
to book immediately. This way, the confidence of Nigerians would be
restored in the anti-corruption war.
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