Falana, Rewane, others react as Buhari fails to name looters
Some legal practitioners and economists have expressed
support for the refusal of President Muhammadu Buhari to unveil the names of
looters and the amount of looted assets so far recovered.
The President, had, in an interview
in London, while attending the anti-corruption summit organised by British
Prime Minister, David Cameron, recently, promised to disclose the figure in his
Democracy Day address to the nation.
Buhari, however, on Sunday, dashed the hopes of millions
of Nigerians who were waiting to be told how much his administration had so far
recovered from individuals and firms accused of looting the nation’s treasury.
In his nationwide address to mark his
one year in office on Sunday, Buhari failed to disclose the figure as promised.
Rather, the President promised
Nigerians that the Ministry of Information and Culture would be publishing the
details which he said would be updated periodically.
He simply said “significant amount of
assets” had been recovered.
Buhari promised that when forfeiture
formalities were completed, the money would be put in the nation’s treasury and
be spent transparently to fund developmental projects.
The President said, “The processes of
recovery can be tedious and time-consuming, but today, I can confirm that thus
far, significant amount of assets have been recovered. A considerable portion
of these are at different stages of recovery.
“Full details of the status and
categories of the assets will now be published by the Ministry of Information
and updated periodically.”
A Senior Advocate of Nigeria, Mr.
Femi Falana, and Lagos-based lawyer, Jiti Ogunye, said on Sunday that Buhari’s
directive to the Minister of Information to release details of the looted funds
periodically, was in order.
In separate telephone interviews with
one of our correspondents, the human rights lawyers believed the President’s
directive the ministry was the best approach.
“That is the correct approach because
it is an ongoing process,” Falana said.
But the Executive Secretary of
Anti-corruption Network, Ebenezer Oyetakin, said Buhari’s speech did not meet
the expectations of most Nigerians, who expected him to name the corrupt
elements as he promised.
Oyetakin stated that the people also
expected some shake-up in the structure of government, adding that
disappointment occurred because people thought that Buhari would never say what
he would not do.
He added, “He must embrace
immediately a single policy that is capable of disarming the moneybags, who
uses their stolen wealth to sponsor destabilisation projects. He must as a
matter of urgency and courage deflates such people immediately before they
rocked his government.”
Ogunye said he would not have
expected the President “to be reeling out names of looters in his Democracy Day
speech”.
He said, “The President cannot be
reeling out the names of looters in his speech because there is no way he will
give details of the recovered loot without giving the names of the looters or
from whom what amount was recovered.
“It is the duty of the Minister of
Information to speak for the government. The strategy adopted by the President
is the best.”
Falana however said the Buhari
administration had yet to address “some inbuilt leakages” in government’s
funds.
He argued that the government needed
to mobilise other anti-corruption agencies in the country in the fight against
graft, contending that the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission was already
overwhelmed by the huge number of cases it was contending with.
He said, “The other anti-graft
agencies ought to be reorganised. More importantly, the government should
mobilise the Nigerian people to own and take over the fight against
corruption.”
Falana stated that the Buhari
administration’s fire brigade approach would not solve the current economic
crisis in the country.
He said, “The economy cannot be fixed
through the fire brigade approach of the government. Why should the Central
Bank of Nigeria be wasting the country’s scarce foreign reserves on the importation
of consumer goods for our pampered elite?
“The goods produced by companies
funded by the bank are not patronised because imported ones are cheaper.
“Why has the CBN not increased duties
on imported goods, which can be produced locally? In some of our neighbouring
countries, public officers wear locally produced dresses. Can’t the government
lead by example?”
Also, the Managing Director and Chief
Executive Officer, Financial Derivatives Company Limited, Mr. Bismarck Rewane,
said, “He is not going to mention it (list of looters) in a broadcast. The
President said ‘the government’; he didn’t say he would mention it himself.
Punch
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