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On the details of recovered loot

By Editorial Board
30 June 2016   |   2:32 am
When Minister of Information and Culture, Lai Mohammed, made good the promise of President Muhammadu Buhari to release the details of money and other assets recovered from persons who had looted the country’s treasury...
Lai Mohammed, Minister of Information.

Lai Mohammed, Minister of Information.

When Minister of Information and Culture, Lai Mohammed, made good the promise of President Muhammadu Buhari to release the details of money and other assets recovered from persons who had looted the country’s treasury, Nigerians were justifiably excited at the progress so far made.

The minister informed the world that the Buhari administration, from its debut on May 29, 2015 to May 25, 2016, recovered about N116.2 billion cash (excluding USD 5 billion described as interim forfeitures) and 239 physical property that included undeveloped lands, uncompleted and completed buildings, vehicles, maritime vessels and farm lands. The cash recoveries, according to Mohammed, had been kept in a special account.

Though, contrary to all expectations, the released details were without the names of individuals and organisations from whom the recoveries were made, the government this time, kept its promise, and a signal has been sent that the government has some measure of capacity to keep its promise. However, whether the released information without the names of the looters will serve good purposes towards fighting corruption is debatable. This is particularly of interest because, for legal reasons which the government adduced as reason for not disclosing the names of persons involved in looting the commonwealth.

Yet, Nigerians would rather have the government release the names. While the legal obstacle to naming is understood, Nigerians are, however, keen that the looters be thoroughly investigated, prosecuted and punished, if found culpable.

Beyond the foregoing, Nigerians are interested in the government informing them upfront, what the recovered funds and other assets would be used for; measures being put in place to prevent re-looting the recovered assets and curbing treasury looting in the future. The legality and implications of warehousing the recovered funds in a special account rather than in the federation account or treasury single account is also of concern to the people.

While President Buhari deserves to be commended for his commitment to defeating corruption and his decision to make public what has so far been recovered, he still has many steps to take if the vice must be up-rooted. One of the most important steps is to ensure that government’s attention on corruption does not assume a proportion that makes it impossible for the overall wellbeing of the economy to be considered a priority. As it were, a person may become more disposed to corruption when hunger rules.

The current state of the economy, therefore, has to improve in order to elicit holistic support of the citizenry against corruption. Thus, while the war against corruption rages on, the government must quickly address the downhill sliding of the economy. Second, the government must institute full-proof preventive measures such as effective checks and balances in its financial management system, whistle-blowing, training and re-orientation of the work-force on values, ethics, professionalism and corporate governance, to ensure that the nation does not contend with corruption in public and private services.

Third, speedy conclusion of investigations, diligent prosecutions and timely determination of cases with imposition of severe sanctions on culprits to serve as deterrent to others who may be tempted to become corrupt, must be ensured. The fourth thing the government should put in place is an Infamous Persons Register where names of proven corrupt persons should be registered and periodically published. It is, therefore, imperative that any legal and other impediments to naming looters publicly must immediately be addressed. It is also high time government invoked the law which specifies that persons involved in criminality must not be allowed to hold public office.

Finally, knowing that there is still a huge stock of looted funds/assets yet to be identified and recovered, government should find more effective and pragmatic ways to engage and encourage citizens, within and outside the country, to volunteer credible information and provide evidence that will be of assistance in substantially improving the achievements so far recorded in the anti-corruption war.

Now, with regard to the recovered physical assets, government, in order to prevent them from being corruptly shared by government functionaries among themselves, the list, with relevant details such as type of asset, location and address, should be made public so that Nigerians will watch over them pending their disposal, perhaps, via public tenders or conversion into such public infrastructure as libraries, schools and hospitals. It will amount to efforts in futility if after the recovery of the assets, mindless and fraudulent civil servants, as well as politicians are allowed to convert those asserts to their personal use.

2 Comments

  • Author’s gravatar

    Well said Guardian on our behalf. In the first place if there are no other consequences to stealing than returning the stolen objects, what’s the incentive not to steal. Also, naming and shaming has a role to play in developing our moral conscience, which we seem to have lost generations ago. It is not to be done for gratious reasons, but to set examples and standards for people to see, that some actions are wrong and there will be consequences. It’s not enough to just say sorry and return a portion of what you have stolen. And to continue on the lines or transparency and accountability, what are these returned funds going to be used for, how do we track them, and the projects they were used for. What is the role of the ministry of finance in the administration of these funds?

  • Author’s gravatar

    What are those legal obstacles to naming and shaming looters of our common patrimony? Is the Presidency trying to cover up big wigs in the APC who have returned a slice of their loot? We are not fools, no one should try to persuade us that if it was only PDP thieves on that list Mr Lai Mohammed would have hesitate a second to make it public. The war on corruption should be all embrasive, we cannot wait until after PDP looters have been cleansed before confronting APC robbers.