Connect with us

News

NBA counsels Buhari on how to fight corruption

Published

on

N1.4BN ALLEGED FRAUD: NBA president Usoro, pleads not guilty, gets bail

President Muhammadu Buhari has been counselled not to concentrate on the number of conviction and assets seized, to measure the success of his administration’s fight against corruption.

The NBA instead wants government to embrace authomation, adopt strategies that are proactive and also avoid discriminatory selective prosecution of corruption.

Urging Nigerians to stand up against corruption and blow the whistle when necessary, the NBA further counselled the Buhari administration to embrace the rule of law and transparency in order to rid the country of the scourge of corruption.

The association, gave the counsel in a statement by its President, Mr Paul Usoro (SAN), to mark the 2019 International Anti-corruption Day, cautioning that the anti-corruption war may be tainted by corruption.

According to Usoro, measuring the success of the anti-graft war using the number of convictions or volume of assets recovered from looters as an index would corrupt the criminal justice system, inducing corruption and abusing prosecutorial rights.

“By using these as our primary index for determining our success in fighting corruption, we set targets that induce corruption and abuse of prosecutorial rights.

“We thereby make a statement that the end justifies the means and, in the process, encourage and advocate convictions and purported recovery of assets no matter how crooked, corrupt and undermining of justice the processes may be for attaining those goals.

“The end result is that we pay more attention to and celebrate these corrosive and corruptive processes while giving scant attention and regard to proactive measures that could actually stem and block the avenues for corruption”, he said.

Calling on the government to abolish media trial for suspects, Usoro said: “It is gratifying that President Muhammadu Buhari, GCFR, has consistently made it the credo of his government to fight corruption, right from his first term in office. That is commendable.

Read also: Akwa Ibom govt frustrating anti-graft war —ICPC

“The fight must however not be selective or discriminatory in nature; it must not even be perceived to be selective or discriminatory.

“The trial of persons for corrupt practices must itself not be tainted with corruption. Media trial of persons charged with corrupt practices, for example, amounts to corruption itself.

“Abuse of prosecutorial powers is perhaps one of the worst forms of corruption and so are the intimidation, blackmail, harassment and coercion of judicial officers in order to secure pre-determined judgments that quite often subvert justice and indeed amount to injustice. Indeed, the subversion of justice by any means whatsoever amounts to extreme corruption.”

The NBA president further called on government to put in place a mechanism that would engender transparency as a way of effectively fighting graft.

“In other words, financial and economic corruption thrives where there is lack of transparency, impunity in public service, political non-accountability and pervasiveness of administrative malfeasance.

“Proactive measures that promote transparency and eliminate administrative malfeasance generally curbs corruption and abuses.

“Automation also helps greatly in stemming these tendencies and the attendant corruption and the more we can automate our processes in all the branches of government – executive, judiciary and legislature – the greater our success would be in tackling corruption through the elimination of some of those human elements and abuses that encourage and foster corruption.

“The NBA advises government at all levels and in all branches to embrace such proactive measures in the fight against corruption.

“Impunity and abuse in public service must be abhorred and so must political non-accountability and a lack of transparency in public administration and the management of our affairs”, he said.

Join the conversation

Opinions

Support Ripples Nigeria, hold up solutions journalism

Balanced, fearless journalism driven by data comes at huge financial costs.

As a media platform, we hold leadership accountable and will not trade the right to press freedom and free speech for a piece of cake.

If you like what we do, and are ready to uphold solutions journalism, kindly donate to the Ripples Nigeria cause.

Your support would help to ensure that citizens and institutions continue to have free access to credible and reliable information for societal development.

Donate Now