17 Ways of Stopping Financial
Corruption in
Nigeria
– A Summary
By
Mobolaji Aluko, PhD
alukome@comcast.net
Burtonsville, MD, USA
Sunday, December 05, 2004
As a general move, we
should:
-
Pass the Freedom of
Information Bill;
-
Pass the Whistle-Blower’s
Bill;
-
Strengthen all the laws that
were used to establish the ICPC and the EFCC so that they are not weakened
by the courts.
For elected public
officials, we should:
-
focus on the executives at
the National, State and Local Government levels;
-
enable public access to
their declared assets, sanctioning any officials that don’t declare their
assets and/or truthfully;
-
require independent,
professional and regular audits of
all LG, state and federal accounts, and make available to the public;
-
abrogate or seriously amend
Section 308 immunity clause that benefit the President, the Vice-President,
the 36 governors and 36 deputy-governors. If amended,
Section 308 should allow the
(i)
the Police, the
ICPC and the EFCC to pursue CRIMINAL charges the executive officials;
(ii)
the Senate to
investigate civil charges against the President, after a grand jury of three
Appeals Court judges has determined that there is a prima facie case against
them that is urgent; and
(iii)
State Houses of
Assembly to investigate civil charges against the governors and their deputies;
after a grand jury of three High Court judges has determined that there is a
prima facie case against them that is urgent;
For unelected public
officials, we should:
-
speedily prosecute all
persons not protected by Section 308 who aids and abets those immunized
officials in financial and other types of corruption;
-
focus on ridding the Police
Force and Judicial Bench of corruption; these two arms are the most public
faces of exercising justice in the land;
-
observe zero-tolerance for
bribery by the NPF on our highways, including use of sting operations;
-
observe zero-tolerance for
bribery by judges, mandatorily disbarring any found to have taken bribes.
For private sector
officials, we should:
-
focus on ridding the banks
and other financial houses of corrupt practices;
-
observe zero-tolerance for
money-laundering: sanctions could for example DOUBLE the amounts laundered,
including closing banks down for egregious violations;
-
observe zero-tolerance for
foreign-exchange round-tripping; fines should double the amount
round-tripped.
For the citizenry at
large, we should:
-
focus on eliminating the
4-1-9
advanced fee fraud crime, making it a “special economic crime against the
state”;
-
use a central registry of
phones and faxes supplied on the
4-1-9
letters to SHUT down the phone numbers IMMEDIATELY;
-
use sting operations to
arrest and SUMMARILY jail caught miscreants.
Until we strenuously tackle at
least each of these seventeen steps comprehensively, the fight against financial
corruption in
Nigeria
cannot be deemed to be serious.
BIBLIOGRAPHY
http://nigerianmuse.com/essays/?u=corruption_nigeria_how_why.htm
FRIDAY ESSAY: How and Why
Corruption Persists in
Nigeria
– And Some Simple Things to Do About It
November 26, 2004
http://www.dawodu.com/aluko22.htm
On 419 (Again!) and Nigerian
Perceptions - Confronting the crime.
October 9, 2002
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/AlukoArchives/message/38
SUNDAY MUSINGS: On Corruption in
Nigeria
- "419: The Game is Not Over!"
September 17, 2000
http://www.nigeriavillagesquare1.com/Articles/mobolaji_aluko/2000/02/on-nigerian-criminality-and-public.html
On Nigerian Criminality and
Public Accountability
February 20, 2000