Thursday, 22 July 2010

Electricity, Myth or Reality - Letter to the President.

Mr. President, I would like to thank you for the updates you provide on you Facebook wall. I have major concerns with the power issue in Nigeria. I am sure every other well meaning Nigerian has this same problem. It is a shame that at 50 years, in the year 2010, as the 6th largest producer of crude, that we still talk about issues of power.

We are aware that this has been a result of decay and lack of concern from all previous administrations of this country. As the Head of Government and the Minister of Power, it will be fair for us to transfer our frustrations to you.

While power is just one of the many issues we have facing us today, (Education, Healthcare and Agriculture are also of serious concern) the importance of this cannot be overemphasized. Power is the backbone of any modern society.

One question we all ask is, can PHCN be any different from Nigeria Airways, NITEL, NNPC and the rest of the other state own institutions? Trying so hard and putting so much into PHCN, might just be as bad as trying to generate electricity from a broken dam. I doubt very much if anything will come out of PHCN. It is time that we stop deceiving ourselves and wasting the time of the people. Every sector of the economy is riddled with such lack of care or concern. There is never any improvement or advancement in most if not all sectors.

Does the government have any genuine plan for the private sector to come into all aspects of power? Generation, Transmission and Distribution. Should government be involved in this business, or should it just regulate the playing field? It tried this with NITEL and MTEL, all of which eventually went under. Too many people make too much money from state owned institutions that the thought of this stream of cash drying up will not be tolerated at all costs. Not to talk of the fact that finical crimes go largely unpunished.

COAL
Coal is the most abundant fossil fuel in the world today. Nigeria's coal reserves are large, over 2 billion metric tonnes, of which 650 million tonnes are proven. Our low-sulphur coal has been of interest to the international communities. I strongly believe that we need to explore the option of utilizing this large coal deposit for power generation. If we do not, I wonder what we intend to do with all this coal.

I am aware that carbon dioxide emissions from coal usage are slightly more than those from petroleum and about double the amount from natural gas, but this does not in any way mean we should look away from coal. The USA still produces 50% of its electricity from coal and I am sure advancement in technology will give us a way of making the emissions less toxic.

Nigeria is not ready for gas. There have have too much talk and no positive outcome in the use of gas for power generation. While we continue to sort out the issues surrounding gas, who says we cannot exploit coal.

Our dependence on oil and gas has been a major issue to our nation. It has crippled a lot of other sectors, Agriculture and other natural resources especially. We continuously have refused to learn and we have not moved forward in anyway visible. Too many committees have been set up with no results. The next 5 years may not even see any visible change at the rate we are going.

Everyone comes in advising government to do this and that. What the citizens want to see is light at the flick of a switch and he/she wants this 24 hours of the day and all year round.

Is this something we will ever see? Do we need to employ magicians before we can have electricity, or do we have to just get some other country to come do it for us since it is clear we are not ready to work.

Mr. President, I want to believe that you will keep to you words and promise that you will deal with the issue of electricity, but I can assure you that it is a difficult battle and would require everything you have got. We have sunk so far into this abyss that the talk of steady power is just a mirage. There is no way we can advance as a country without electricity. No one will want to invest in a society as this, small businesses cannot grow, people cannot live comfortably at home, local manufactures cannot compete against foreign cheaper products.

It is either all or nothing.


Thursday, 6 May 2010

In death we look for sympathy!

Well, nature has finally decided for us. It seems we are never able to make or take any decisions. Nigeria is a country and must not be held to ransom by a group of people who hide behind the illness of another while trying to blackmail Nigerians by playing on their sentiments.

All these would have ended well if it was handled properly in the beginning. All the lies about the man climbing stairs, playing with children, running the treadmill have all come to the open.

Sentiments, is the game they have been playing. Now in death they look for sympathy.

RIP Umaru, for in time all must come to an end.

It is where we go after here that really matters and not what we enjoy here.
All those who have lied, deceived, threatened us during the period of uncertainty must be brought to book.

As for the clerics that went visiting and praying, what was the outcome of all their prayers? Some of them even threatened us on national TV, saying there would be repercussions if we dared to touch that sit. Have our clerics all forgotten so soon that nothing in this life will go with us when we leave this world?

So help us God.

Monday, 19 April 2010

Why IBB will not run in 2011 and why I will not vote for him.

There is so much drama in the political realm here in our dear Nigeria. IBB has again declared that he wants to run for president come 2011. I strongly believe that what he is doing presently is testing the waters. All IBB seeks is relevance; anytime there is a presidential race (2003, 2007 and now 2011), he always makes sure he is the topic of discussion.


IBB will never run in opposition, and it most unlikely that he will ever get the PDP presidential ticket. Why would anyone endorse IBB? To whose advantage would it be? IBB will not and cannot afford to gamble with this; he will only run if he is the candidate of the ruling party.


IBB has never been able to defend the annulment of the June 12 election; he has always come out to say the election was the fairest in the country, yet he refused to hand over to Abiola. While I am no fan of MKO (rest his soul), this was an abuse of a process that he will forever have to live with. The reason is simple, he was cajoled by a certain cabal not to hand over to a MKO.


This was also the beginning of the ethnic and religious divide in Nigeria. Remember Kingibe ran alongside MKO. Both candidates were muslims and no one in Nigeria cared about this. What we wanted was to have a democratic government in place and send the khaki boys out. Now you can't have a presidential election without having president and vice president coming from different religions.


We must accept the truth that this ethnic and religious divide is getting wider and the Yar'adua situation has only made it worse.


This is the simple truth and the only reason why IBB did not hand over to MKO. We are always afraid to speak about issues especially when they cut across the ethnic and religious divide. If we continue to do this, we will never find a solution.


IBB is making so much noise because so far we do not have a credible opposition. Yes we all don't want IBB, but then who do we want?


It is important that there is someone Nigerians can vote for and who will be accepted by us all. This is important to stop people like IBB from dancing in the sun.



IBB has still not been forgiven by Nigerians, he stole our money, destroyed the civil service, crippled the police, and stripped the military of all professionalism.

He did all these to protect his ass, but he still had to run away (step aside as he called it) in 1993.


No one can fight the power of the people.


We should find a way to send all thieves and looters to jail instead of allowing them to walk freely polluting our society with their evil and corrupt practices.


IBB ruled for such a long time and failed. Failure is inexcusable in leadership. He has no business coming back.


One major drawback we have is that we do not believe in the electoral process and as such we never register or vote at elections. We spend out time making so much noise on blog sites and leave voting to the area boys and bus drivers. Voting is is duty we must all perform.


Come 2011, all Nigerians of voting age must be involved in choosing our next president. Even if we fail, let us fail trying.

Tuesday, 9 February 2010

Is our President AWOL?

I am no expert at law but I find the current political situation in Nigeria very funny and interesting. It is obvious that a lot of different camps with various interests are at play here. One thing is certain in all this, and that is the interest of the ordinary Nigerian citizen is not of interest.

Between the President's kitchen cabinet and the pro-Yar'adua Ministers there has been a large display of sycophancy and insincerity. Over the period the President has been away, all sorts of lies have been told. So much that they have run of lies just as we have run out of interest in their fairy tales.

It is no surprise that almost every Nigerian now can recite parts of the constitution. We must commend them for helping to improve our understanding of the constitution.

Section 144 of the constitution reads as follows;

144. (1) The President or Vice-President shall cease to hold office, if -

(a) by a resolution passed by two-thirds majority of all the members of the executive council of the Federation it is declared that the President or Vice-President is incapable of discharging the functions of his office; and

(b) the declaration is verified, after such medical examination as may be necessary, by a medical panel established under subsection (4) of this section in its report to the President of the Senate and the Speaker of the House of Representatives.

(2) Where the medical panel certifies in the report that in its opinion the President or Vice-President is suffering from such infirmity of body or mind as renders him permanently incapable of discharging the functions of his office, a notice thereof signed by the President of the Senate and the Speaker of the House of Representatives shall be published in the Official Gazette of the Government of the Federation.

(3) The President or Vice-President shall cease to hold office as from the date of publication of the notice of the medical report pursuant to subsection (2) of this section.

(4) the medical panel to which this section relates shall be appointed by the President of the Senate, and shall comprise five medical practitioners in Nigeria:-

(a) one of whom shall be the personal physician of the holder of the office concerned; and

(b) four other medical practitioners who have, in the opinion of the President of the Senate, attained a high degree of eminence in the field of medicine relative to the nature of the examination to be conducted in accordance with the foregoing provisions.

(5) In this section, the reference to "executive council of the Federation" is a reference to the body of Ministers of the Government of the Federation, howsoever called, established by the President and charged with such responsibilities for the functions of government as the President may direct.

The Federal Executive Council came out to pass a declaration that the President is capable of discharging the functions of his office. This is clearly not what the constitution is asking of the Ministers.
It is a different issue if they had come out to say the did not get a two-thirds majority to pass a declaration declaring him as incapable to to discharge his functions. There is no where in the constitution where it says the Ministers should declare the President fit.

Section 145 and 146 read

145. Whenever the President transmits to the President of the Senate and the Speaker of the House of Representatives a written declaration that he is proceeding on vacation or that he is otherwise unable to discharge the functions of his office, until he transmits to them a written declaration to the contrary such functions shall be discharged by the Vice-President as Acting President.

146. (1) The Vice-President shall hold the office of President if the office of President becomes vacant by reason of death or resignation, impeachment, permanent incapacity or the removal of the President from office for any other reason in accordance with section 143 of this Constitution.

Now this is the part I find most interesting. Since the President did not inform the Senate of his whereabouts and he has been out of office for quite some time, it will be okay for us assume the President is AWOL.

Yes we all know he is in hospital, but remember that the Senate does not know this officially. I would deem this fit to be labeled as violation or breach of the provisions of the Constitution under which the President can be impeached.

As the Council of Ministers meet tomorrow, we await to hear what the outcome of the meeting will be following the drama that happened in last weeks meeting.

PDP being the ruling party has the majority in the National Assembly and we do not know for certain how they plan to go with the whole saga. This can only go on for so long. Something will eventually have to give way. They are only delaying what cannot be stopped.

Sunday, 10 January 2010

Our Nation, Our Constitution, Our President


Let me start by listing a section from our constitution.

Section 1(2) states; The Federal Republic of Nigeria shall not be governed, nor shall any persons or group of persons take control of the Government of Nigeria or any part thereof, except in accordance with the provisions of this Constitution.


It is not news that Nigerians have been asking questions about the true health condition of our president. Since November 23, 2009 when the Federal Government announced that the President will be traveling to Saudi Arabia for medical treatment, there have been conflicting stories about the state of his health.

There have been conflicting stories as well as as speculations on the state of the presidents health. The cloak of secrecy thrown around the president's condition has clearly thrown our government into chaos.

The Federal Executive Council (FEC) is also paralysed with the Ministers of Information, Foreign Affairs and Justice all singing different songs. Nobody has been able to give Nigerians an authentic and true position on the state of affairs.

With the turn of events it is most unlikely the Mr. president will be returning to the 'throne' in Abuja. Obviously the ruling PDP is scrambling to look for a suitable Vice President, since the current VP, Goodluck Jonathan would definitely become president if Yar'adua fails to return to office. It is also not news that PDP is looking for someone who will also run for Office of President come the next presidential elections in 2011.

One major question still remains unanswered; why didn't the president hand over to the vice president when he was going for treatment? We have heard all sorts of responses to this question, but nothing suffices for me but to think that it is greed and selfishness that made the president and his team do otherwise.

What does the constitution say about transferring Presidential Powers?

Section 145. Whenever the President transmits to the President of the Senate and the Speaker of the House of Representatives a written declaration that he is proceeding on vacation or that he is otherwise unable to discharge the functions of his office, until he transmits to them a written declaration to the contrary such functions shall be discharged by the Vice-President as Acting President.

This doesn't seem to be a mandatory function but more of an obligatory one. This section can be argued in so many ways. However, if our president was to be concerned with the welfare of the nation and its peoples he would understand that the honorable thing to have done was to write the Senate asking that powers be transferred temporarily to the Vice President pending his return.

Also lets take a look at what the Oath of Office of President says:

Oath of Office of President

I, .............. do solemnly swear/affirm that I will be faithful and bear true allegiance to the Federal Republic of Nigeria; that as President of the Federal Republic of Nigeria, I will discharge my duties to the best of my ability, faithfully and in accordance with the Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria and the law, and always in the interest of the sovereignty, integrity, solidarity, well-being and prosperity of the Federal Republic of Nigeria; that I will strive to preserve the Fundamental Objectives and Directive Principles of State Policy contained in the Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria; that I will not allow my personal interest to influence my official conduct or my official decisions; that I will to the best of my ability preserve, protect and defend the Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria; that I will abide by the Code of Conduct contained in the Fifth Schedule to the Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria; that in all circumstances, I will do right to all manner of people, according to law, without fear or favour, affection or ill-will; that I will not directly or indirectly communication or reveal to any person any matter which shall be brought under my consideration or shall become known to me as President of the Federal Republic of Nigeria, except as may be required for the due discharge of my duties as President; and that I will devote myself to the service and well-being of the people of Nigeria. So help me God.


Has our President in anyway kept to this by his actions? My answer is no. He has clearly allowed his personal interest to influence his official conduct. He as also not devoted himself to the service and well-being of the people of Nigeria.
Rather they have run this country like it is a monarchy. While we do not wish the president ill, he, his family and cohorts need to understand that the office of President is bigger than any one person. He needs to respect and preserve the integrity of that office and not allow his selfishness cloud his judgement.

It is sad and very unfortunate that we have continuously had leaders who have no passion for the well-being of our people. The sycophants around us have not made this any better. Nigerians clearly live in an illusion and are nowhere close to reality. We never speak the truth and we believe whatever lies (no matter how silly) we are told by those in authority. We do not question authority.

We do not realise that in a democracy the leadership is there to serve the people. Yar'adu is our servant and not a King. He is answerable to us and we demand and have a right to know everything about him, his heath and well-being until the day he ceases to be president.

The position of President is also a voluntary one and comes with a lot of work. It is not a holiday or a jamboree, so no one going into office should complain about how difficult it is to rule. You can very well resign at any point in time.

We have also wondered why the president has not been removed from office. The Section of the Constitution that addresses this states that:

144. (1) The President or Vice-President shall cease to hold office, if -

(a) by a resolution passed by two-thirds majority of all the members of the executive council of the Federation it is declared that the President or Vice-President is incapable of discharging the functions of his office; and

(b) the declaration is verified, after such medical examination as may be necessary, by a medical panel established under subsection (4) of this section in its report to the President of the Senate and the Speaker of the House of Representatives.

(2) Where the medical panel certifies in the report that in its opinion the President or Vice-President is suffering from such infirmity of body or mind as renders him permanently incapable of discharging the functions of his office, a notice thereof signed by the President of the Senate and the Speaker of the House of Representatives shall be published in the Official Gazette of the Government of the Federation.

(3) The President or Vice-President shall cease to hold office as from the date of publication of the notice of the medical report pursuant to subsection (2) of this section.

(4) the medical panel to which this section relates shall be appointed by the President of the Senate, and shall comprise five medical practitioners in Nigeria:-

(a) one of whom shall be the personal physician of the holder of the office concerned; and

(b) four other medical practitioners who have, in the opinion of the President of the Senate, attained a high degree of eminence in the field of medicine relative to the nature of the examination to be conducted in accordance with the foregoing provisions.

(5) In this section, the reference to "executive council of the Federation" is a reference to the body of Ministers of the Government of the Federation, howsoever called, established by the President and charged with such responsibilities for the functions of government as the President may direct.

We have also wondered why the president has not been removed from office. The questions is can the Ministers appointed by the president vote him out of office? We lack the discipline and integrity to carry out such. The Ministers cannot even speak on the issue. They seem to be waiting for a miracle to happen. Well I am sure in a nation as 'prayerful' as Nigeria some miracle will surely happen.

As events unfold, we all await to see where they take us.

Like our pledge says, So help us God.

Wednesday, 20 May 2009

Capital Loss and Corruption: The Example of Nigeria -Ribadu testifies before US House

Taken from Sahara Reporters (www.saharareporters.com) Nuhu Ribadu's Testimony before the US House Financial Services Committee May 19, 2009. Visiting Fellow at St. Anthony’s College, University of Oxford; Visiting Fellow at the Center for Global Development; and former Executive Chairman, Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) of Nigeria

Good morning, Chairman Frank, distinguished US Representatives of the Committee, and thank you for this very kind invitation to offer testimony as part of this panel. The global financial crisis has made nothing so clear as the fact that the global economy is now highly integrated and interconnected. What affects one corner of the globe will reach to all other corners, and the lack of proper regulation and oversight in one place can undermine stability far away.

Corruption has the same effect on global markets, although it is not often thought of in those terms. So just as it is the purpose of this hearing to explore lines of responsibility in the global financial crisis, so too should it be to better understand the global responsibility to end corrupt practices. Understanding corruption as a transnational problem is the only way to fight it. Corruption in one place is connected to others, enabled by systems of weak regulation and poor oversight. When you think of “corruption,” there will always be specific personalities and places that jump to mind, and inevitably Nigeria is near the top of that list. But I think you will all agree with me that corruption is not a native of any land; it just finds easier homes in some. Societies that have been able to move ahead are those that put the statutes in place to criminalize corruption and ensure that the enforcement mechanisms are proper and ready for action. Let it be clear from the onset that my intention is not to speak ill of my country or continent, but rather to state the facts as they are. Next year, Nigeria will be half a century old. In 1960, the year I was born, my country attained Independence from Britain. The promise of independence was boundless and the famous Nigerian energy was all too evident. We were sure we would make it. Home to about 140 million of the West African region’s 220 million inhabitants, Nigeria’s demography alone elects it as a regional power. Today, after one civil war, seven military regimes, and three botched attempts at building real democracy, there is one connecting factor in the failure of all attempts to govern Nigeria: corruption. * * * * *
Mr. Chairman, your chosen theme for today’s hearing is right on target. Corruption and capital drain have been the major factors in the lack growth and development in the region. The corruption endemic to our region is not just about bribery, but about mismanagement, incompetence, abuse of office, and the inability to establish justice and the rule of law. As resources are stolen, confidence not just in democratic governance but also in the idea of just leadership ebbs away. As the lines of authority with the government erode, so too do traditional authority structures. In the worst cases, eventually all that is left to hold society together is the idea that someday it may be your day to get yours. This does little to build credible, accountable institutions of governance or put the right policies in place. The African Union has reported that corruption drains the region of some $140 billion a year, which is about 25% of the continent's official GDP. In Nigeria alone, we had a leader, General Sani Abacha, it was believed that he took for himself between $5–6 billion and invested most of it in the western world.
With this history, the EFCC undertook the investigation and auditing of the assets of serving state governors and public officials suspected of stealing public funds. The London Metropolitan Police, including in two cases involving governors, assisted us. Mr. Joshua Dariye, Governor of Plateau state, was found by the London Metropolitan Police to operate 25 bank accounts in London alone to juggle money and evade the law. Like many of the governors, he used front agents to penetrate western real estate markets where he purchased choice and expensive properties. The London Metropolitan Police determined Dariye had acquired £10 million in benefits through criminal conduct in London, while domestically we were able to restrain proceeds of his crimes worth $34 million. The other was the case of Mr. D.S.P. Alamieyeseigha, governor of oil rich Bayelsa State. He had four properties in London valued at about £10 million, plus another property in Cape Town valued at $1.2 million. £1 million cash was found in his bedroom at his apartment in London. £2 million was restrained at the Royal Bank of Scotland in London and over $240 million in Nigeria. This is in addition to bank accounts traced to Cyprus, Denmark, USA and the Bahamas.
These are just two examples. In 80% of the grand corruption that takes place in Africa, the money is kept somewhere else, enabled by systems of poor regulation that allow abuse by those looking for ways to profit. Between 1960 and 1999, Nigerian officials had stolen or wasted more than $440 billion. That is six times the Marshall Plan, the total sum needed to rebuild a devastated Europe in the aftermath of the Second World War. When you look across a nation and a continent riddled with poverty and weak institutions, and you think of what this money could have done – only then can you truly understand the crime of corruption, and the almost inhuman indifference that is required by those who wield it for personal gain. For the West to finally understand why those like myself and my colleagues here today, John Githongo and Monica Macovei, are willing to risk so much, risk our lives, to fight corruption in our home nations, the West must then be willing to see corruption as not just a system of bribes and patronage, but the systematic undermining of responsible governance, of visionary leadership, of a society’s ability to meet and overcome challenges. The West must understand that corruption is part of the reason that African nations cannot fight diseases properly, cannot feed their populations, cannot educate their children and use their creativity and energy to open the doorway to the future they deserve. The crime is not just theft. It is negligence. Wanton negligence, the full impact of which is likely impossible to know.
I have said this before, and while I know it is a controversial statement, I stand by the idea that corruption is responsible for as many deaths as the combined results of conflicts and HIV/AIDS on the African continent. I always see myself as a policeman first, and as a law enforcement officer at the frontlines, I have seen corruption provide fertile ground for injustice, for violence, for the failure of government and the failure to use revenues and donor support for the benefit of the people. I see how those who are confronted with these systems – diplomats, foreign businesses, NGOs and others with the best of intentions for the continent – make the choice to work within those corrupt practices to get the job done faster, or try to work ethically and morally while knowing this choice will cost them time, profit, and impact. I see people suffer, and while they may not know why or how exactly, they understand that it is unjust, they know right from wrong, and they know that as long as these systems are allowed to thrive, their lives will never be better. But so long as bowing to corruption is the primary way of succeeding in certain societies, it trains generation after generation to accept its yolk, get their due, and ignore those around them.
On a regional dimension, it is estimated that some $20 billion leaves Africa annually through the illicit export of money extorted from development loan contracts. This money is deposited in overseas banks by a network of politicians, civil servants and businessmen. This figure is now roughly equal to the entire amount of aid from the US to Sub-Saharan Africa every year. This outflow is not just abstract numbers: it translates to the concrete reality of kids who cannot be put in schools, who will never learn to read, because there are no classrooms; mothers who die in childbirth because the money for maternity care never made it to the hospitals; tens of thousands who die because there are no drugs or vaccines in hospitals; no roads to move produce from farms to markets or enable a thriving economy; no jobs for young school graduates or even ordinary workers; and no security for anyone because the money has been stolen and shipped out. * * * * *
The picture I paint here is that of my country. The picture of a potentially great land, slowly poisoned by the idea that the importunity of lawlessness is success. The picture of a land held hostage for decades by a kleptocratic bunch of fraudsters who built a career in politics to protect their lines of revenue. I am saddened when I hear America’s new president, his First Lady, and his cabinet officials all speaking at graduation ceremonies and calling for service to your country and your community, because I know that in Nigeria that this is not happening at the moment. While there is much blame to be directed at Nigeria for this state, we should not stand accused for these crimes alone. The unholy alliance between local political elites and western financial institutions has been the foundation of this narrative of shame. The best illustration yet is the now famous Halliburton/KBR scandal where, as a Nigerian Newspaper recently reported, our leaders received “stacks of US dollar bills in briefcases and sometimes in bullion vans” until some $185 million had been exchanged for a contract to build a liquefied natural gas plant.
The other famous case is the Siemens scandal. According to the US Securities and Exchange Commission [SEC], Siemens made approximately $12.7 million in “suspicious payments” for Nigerian projects, including to government customers for four telecommunications projects. The total value of the four contracts was approximately $130 million. There are many other instances. The total amount in bribes is staggering. In both of these cases, the United States and Germany, the parent nations of these two companies, have initiated stern investigations and issued out hefty fines on the companies – but those who received the bribes in Nigeria continue to enjoy the fruits of their labors, which only means the cycle will continue. It is clear that KBR did their own calculus: $185 million in bribes, plus eventually almost $600 million in fines for violation of the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act, but they won $6 billion in business for their efforts. These projects continue on. And this kind of math will continue on for as long as companies realize there are those on the ground willing and eager for this type of facilitation. In Nigeria, the alleged culprits are going about their daily lives and even running the government by default. And yet they are still engaged from outside as equal partners in governance and development. * * * * *
I have always held the belief that the laws needed to check these problems often already exist; what is lacking is the culture of enforcement. Enforcement blossoms only where there is the necessary political will, and this political will must be strong at the very top. There is no place in the world where anticorruption efforts will succeed without this political will, without leadership to promote the effort openly as a moral and political force. Without this will, the pressure on enforcement agents smothers their efforts and is destined to destroy the very agencies defined to lead the war against graft. I learnt this myself by firsthand example. Having spent five years building Nigeria’s EFCC into a world-class crime fighting agency with trusted partnerships with US and UK agencies, all of it has now changed, like many of the other reform efforts in the country.
When the EFCC was formed in 2003, our country had never secured a single criminal conviction for corruption charges. We were fortunate to have the political support of President Obasanjo; of other several powerful ministers in the government including Nasir El•Rufai, from whose budget the original money to support the EFCC came; from key Senators; and from the judiciary whose responsibility it was to decide the cases presented to them. By 2007 we had secured convictions in over 275 of the near 1000 cases in the courts. It was modest but revolutionary, especially since the convictions were from cases against high-ranking officials such as the leadership of the Nigeria Police, a number of state governors, ministers, legislators and top bureaucrats. The symbol of these convictions to ordinary Nigerians had more impact than I could have believed. But for the first time, they saw those living unlawfully and with impunity being called to task, and they allowed themselves to hope that a new Nigeria, where the fruits of their labors would finally be enough to prosper, may be coming.
And things changed, at least for a while. This was homage to the extraordinary will and belief of young Nigerians who saw corruption as the barrier to the progress of our country and wanted to contribute. The effort we made at the EFCC was a marriage of two forces: pressure from outside and the force from within. The international community deployed the instruments of the Financial Action Task Force [FATF] to trigger necessary reforms, which provided us the platform to build a strong local program to clean up our financial institutions and prosecute those who sought to undermine them. This ultimately paved the way for a far-reaching banking reform in the country, famously described as the consolidation of about a hundred mushroom banks into 25 strong institutions. Some of these banks are now seen as credible financial institutions with continental reach; indeed, some of them are stepping in to fill the gaps left by decreased activity of Western banks during the financial crisis. The EFCC also helped to address the problems in the Niger Delta, which, in my opinion, is driven entirely by corruption. Indeed, one of the governors of the Delta that we investigated offered me $15 million in cash to stop the investigation against him. We charged him both for the theft of state revenues and for the bribery attempt. Sadly today he is still one of the most powerful political figures in both the ruling party and the country. This clearly highlights the problem of the Delta – money meant to have gone for development has gone to very few hands and is used for negative ends.
In 2003•4, almost 100,000 barrels of oil was stolen daily; by 2005•6, we had managed to reduce this to 10,000 barrels per day. We also secured convictions for kidnappers in the Delta, who were driving the cycle of violence and bribery with the private oil companies. The entire team responsible for these successes, which was trained by a variety of agencies in the US, has been moved out of the EFCC. I personally have been dismissed from the service, though I continue to challenge this dismissal in court. After surviving an assassination attempt, I decided to relocate temporarily out of Nigeria. But much work remains to be done. But the policy today in Nigeria is to use all the right rhetoric – speaking of the need for rule of law and the fight against corruption – to cover-up their real campaign to completely undo the reform efforts of the previous government and so thoroughly confuse corruption and anticorruption that no one can sort out which is which any longer. This is why today, many of the law enforcement agencies that used to work hand-in-hand with the EFCC are no longer willing to partner with the EFCC or the Nigerian Justice Department. The issue of integrity is paramount in such relationships. * * * * *
I offer these examples to illustrate the challenge in fighting corruption. When you fight corruption, it fights back. It will likely have greater resources than you, and it is lead by those who operate outside the law and view the fight as life anddeath for their survival. In a globalized and networked world, we all need to believe that the fight against corruption must assume a trans-border dimension. Our own modest success at the EFCC was supported by efforts of institutions of the United Nations, regional bodies, and many bilateral bodies like the US Secret Service, the FBI, the US Postal Service, and the Department of Justice. I would particularly mention the support we got from the United States in setting up and nurturing the Nigeria Financial Intelligence Unit. We were also aided by the emergence of statutes that offered universal applicability. But without a doubt, the fight against corruption in countries like Nigeria will require strengthening international regulations and standards to enable enforcement on the ground. For example, the work of the EFCC would not have been possible without the Financial Action Task Force, which de facto forced Nigeria to develop new anti-money laundering laws and spurred the creation of the EFCC.
However, the FATF lost its original might and importance and there is a need to strengthen it, empower it, and provide the necessary framework for international financial regulations. Stronger global standards against money laundering can force Nigeria and other countries to accept that the old way of business will come with too high a cost. Similarly, the US could help promote a Proceeds of Crime law that has treaty status, and push the boundaries of the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act (FCPA) to be expanded power to bite both givers and takers of bribes. Until those receiving the bribes are punished for their actions, the marketplace for high stakes elite bribery will continue to thrive. I would also propose that Congress support civil society monitoring programmes and direct support for programmes building investigative journalism, which can support transparency and anticorruption efforts. Other challenges will include expanding cooperation in intelligence gathering and sharing and reigning in the vicarious liability of tax havens and offshore banks. This comes back to the theme of today’s hearing, about the role of financial institutions. Safe havens are undermining the effort of poor nations to make progress and we must all work in concert to ensure that secrecy does not undermine greater transparency and accountability.
The UK’s Commission for Africa estimates that the assets stolen from the continent and held in foreign bank accounts amount to $93 billion. If Africa can succeed in tracing and repatriating such stolen wealth, the next chapter in the story may truly turn a new page, and the days of aid dependency can start to wane. * * * * * From a distance, systemic corruption seems like too big a hurdle to overcome. Nigeria’s problems may seem insurmountable, but the rest of the world can make a difference by doing what they can to promote transparency. In five short years, the EFCC was able to make a difference in one of the most challenging environments on the planet; the lesson is that small measures with limited support can bring about meaningful change. But to do this, Western partners and others must truly understand how corruption works and that in some instances they have been unwilling partners to it, even when the intentions have been nothing but good. Corruption is often viewed as a political challenge, and many donor nations would rather support more humanitarian based causes, like health and education. But it is time for everyone to understand that by pumping money into development efforts without a clear accountability mechanism as a part of such programs, these efforts are often as good as putting money down the drain.
The US has many new health and development initiatives in Africa – in Nigeria alone the total is over a half billion dollars a year. You owe it to yourselves and to your taxpayers to ask how this money is spent, ask for results, and insist that any such funds are spent to the good of the people. I believe if you looked more closely at some of the organizations in Africa tasked with utilizing these funds, you would not like what you see. The same is true of any nation offering development aid on the continent; all partners need the need for greater oversight standards. The examples I give today are not to point fingers, but to illustrate that corruption is killing Nigeria, and it is killing across the African continent. I urge you to view the fight against corruption as the ultimate humanitarian effort, for surely there is no stronger chain to shackle the poor to their lot. Corruption may have taken some shots at us, but what it is doing to ordinary Nigerians every day is far worse and far more fatal. When corruption is king, there is no accountability of leadership and no trust in authority. Society devolves to the basic units of family and self, to the baser instincts of getting what you can when you can, because you don’t believe anything better will ever come along. And when the only horizon is tomorrow, how can you care about the kind of nation you are building for your children and your grandchildren? How can you call on your government to address what ails society and build stronger institutions?
Corruption makes democracy impossible because it subverts the will of the people. A select few, with so much money and authority, continue to steal elections and make a mockery of the notion of government by the people or for the people. Nigeria today is the worst example of electoral theft in the world. So it is also important that the United States and other partners in Nigeria stand by the Nigerian people first and foremost, and say that enough is enough. Corruption is one of the greatest crimes the world has ever known. But those who are suffering the most from its poison are the least able to fight it; their resources, their health and wellbeing, and their futures have been stolen away. There is no surer salt in the earth of democratic and representative governance. It is for this reason that I call on you to help fight this global injustice, both for the sake of Nigeria, and for every other country that will never know its potential without your support. But at the end of the day it will be we, the Nigerians and the Africans, that will have to solve our own problems and catch up to the rest of the world in freedom and development.
I assure you that can be done.
Thank you once again for this kind invitation and I now welcome your questions.

Monday, 16 March 2009

Na Wa for Naija!!!

No need to say much. This was taken fom the website of Thisday newspapers. (http://www.thisdayonline.com/nview.php?id=138244)

Members of the Senate Adhoc Committee on Food Crisis probing increase in prices of food stuff, on Saturday searched in vain for Ezillo Silo site in Port Harcourt, River State. Ezillo Silo contract was awarded in 1990 to Messrs Persianas Nig. Ltd for 1.9 million pounds offshore and N12 million onshore with 25,000 metric tonnes storage capacity.
The offshore and onshore components of the project had been paid in full to the contractor. News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports that members of the committee on a fact- finding tour of agriculture projects in the South-south zone, wandered the whole day in search of the silo. The committee could not locate the silo site or the contractor.
NAN learnt that when the contractor earlier appeared before the committee during its public hearing in Abuja, he alleged that the silo had been stolen. The committee also uncovered a N1.8 billion dam abandoned in Nkari, Akwa-Ibom. The dam, meant to supply irrigation water to the community was initially awarded for N667 million and later reviewed to N1.8 billion. Nkari dam was awarded in 2004 to Messes Hydroworks Ltd and Federal Government had so far paid N900 million mobilisation to the contractor. The Consultant to the Federal Ministry of Agriculture and Water Resources, Mr Udeme Akpan of Omodem Ltd, said he had written to the ministry for determination of the job.
''The major problem is the contractor because he has failed to perform and we have communicated our observation to the ministry for further action,'' he said. Briefing newsmen, Chairman of the committee, Sen. Idris Umar, said the committee would make appropriate recommendations to the Senate to ensure that the money for Ezillo Silo was recovered.Idris said
''Today, we arrived and we were taken round Port Harcourt but the Ezillo Silo is nowhere to be found. ''Monies have been taken and the silo site have been taken over by private buildings and the contractor is nowhere to be found. ''I can assure that necessary steps will be taken to recover the monies involved.
''We will not only recover the monies but steps will also be taking to ensure that the contractor is prosecuted for criminal offence.''On the abandoned dam, Idris said ''this is a clear manifestation that the contractor is unable to continue with the project and we will recommend for the determination of the dam.''
''We are not satisfied with this performance and there is no indication that the contractor will ever improve.''