The claim by former President Goodluck
Jonathan that corruption had worsened since he left office was Thursday
vehemently rejected by the presidency, which dismissed the former
president’s proposition as astonishing and absolutely untrue.
Jonathan, had in his book, ‘My
Transition Hours,’ rated President Muhammadu Buhari’s anti-graft war
very low, saying graft had not only worsened under the president’s watch
but that his de-marketing of the country had driven away investors.
He rebuked the president’s strategy of
media trial of suspects, saying it worsened the corruption perception of
Nigeria and led to Nigeria’s slip in the Transparency International
Corruption Perception Index.
He said in his book, “The sundry
accusations by the new administration will appear to have baited the
media. Media trials are entertaining but have little or no effect in
fighting corruption and improving the economy.
“Since I left office, rather than
improve on our TI corruption perception record, the situation has
worsened with the nation going 12 places backward, becoming number 148
according to the latest CPI ranking for 2014, from 136 in 2014 when I
was president.”
The book was launched at an impressive ceremony on Tuesday in Abuja.
But the presidency replied Thursday,
saying the former president’s claim was like playing the ostrich that
buried its head in the sand in order to avoid the truth.
The Senior Special Assistant to
President on Media and Publicity, Mr. Garba Shehu, in a statement in
Abuja, entitled, ‘Dr. Jonathan Should Stop Playing the Ostrich,’ said
the fact on the ground today ran contrary to Jonathan’s “outlandish
claim”.
According to the presidential spokesman,
Buhari, in pursuit of the war against corruption, has set a number of
local and international records, one of which is to call judicial
officers in Nigeria to account.
Shehu said, “He is the first to set such
a record. Not only that, this is the first time that top military
commanders and service chiefs are brought to trial and convictions were
achieved on account of corruption.
“Also, this is the first time a ruling
party is convicting high profile citizens, including former governors,
who are members of the same party. This is the first time the
international community is acknowledging the efforts of a government of
Nigeria in this regard as manifested by the selection of President
Buhari by the African Union as the Anti-Corruption Champion of the
continent.
“For the records, this is the first time
a ruling party is investigating ranking officers of the administration,
including some at the very top.”
He stated further that in addition to
the many firsts recorded by Buhari’s administration, the government had
introduced a lot of changes, considering that the laws relating to the
fight against corruption could not reasonably be static.
According to him, as part of the desire
to be ahead of the growing sophistication of corruption and financial
crimes, the administration initiated new legislations and proposed
amendments to different sections of the laws.
Some of them, he said, are the Money
Laundering Prevention and Prohibition Bill 2017; Anti-Terrorism
Prevention and Prohibition Bill 2017; Nigerian Financial Intelligence
Unit Bill 2017 (NFIU); Proceeds of Crime Bill 2017; Public Interest
Disclosure and Witness Protection Bill, 2017 and the Mutual Legal
Assistance in Criminal Matters Bill, 2017.
According to Shehu, owing to these
efforts and support of all relevant stakeholders, NFIU Act has been
passed and Buhari gave his assent on July 18, 2018. The administration
is currently working with the legislature for an expedited passage of
the Proceeds of Crimes Bill to make the anti-corruption war more
effective.
He urged that “Nigerians should dismiss
Dr. Jonathan’s hollow boast that he, not President Buhari, introduced
schemes such as the Biometric Verification Number (BVN), Treasury Single
Account (TSA) and the Integrated Personnel and Payroll Information
System (IPPS),” asking, “Of what use is the announcement of good
policies without the will to implement them?”
He said, “Nigerians are witnesses to the
huge success recorded through the implementation of the TSA where some
government agencies that had over the years remitted peanut amounts or
nothing at all are now periodically pumping billions into government
coffers.
“Prominent among these remittances
include the ones made by Joint Admissions and Matriculation Board
(JAMB), Nigerian Ports Authority (NPA), Federal Inland Revenue Service
(FIRS), Nigeria Customers Service (NCS) and Nigerian Maritime
Administration and Safety Agency (NIMASA).
He said while it was true that the BVN
was introduced in 2014 to ensure that all bank accounts had biometric
identification of their owners, the lack of will and capacity under
Jonathan stalled its implementation, pointing out that the policy had
been auctioned by Buhari.
Shehu said the Buhari administration had
taken the battle against graft forward by the introduction of the
whistle-blower policy as a veritable tool against corruption as it gives
individuals an opportunity to expose corruption, fraud, bribery, looted
government funds, financial misconducts, government assets and any
other form of corruption or theft.
“Within six months of introducing this
policy, over 5,000 reports were made through various channels, 365
actionable tips were received out of the 5.000 reports. So far more than
N200bn has been recovered,” he said.
He said under Jonathan, the Economic and
Financial Crimes Commission could only recover N19.5 billion as at May
29, 2015, while under Buhari, the figure had gone up to N279 billion.
0 Comments