The
Federal Government’s anti-graft war, which many have dismissed as below
average, may collapse as the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission,
one of the agencies saddled with the responsibility of prosecuting
the campaign, is said to be broke.
Investigations by our correspondent in
Abuja on Tuesday revealed that the EFCC had been finding it difficult
to meet its obligations to the lawyers handling cases on its behalf.
The most affected are senior lawyers in
charge of cases against influential politicians/ suspects who are
either involved in high profile money laundering or outright stealing.
Continue after the break.
One of the lawyers, who disclosed this
to our correspondent on condition of anonymity, said he and some of his
colleagues, were not happy with the turn of events.
He said that some of them had not been
paid their professional fees for long, adding that this was capable of
affecting their performance in court.
The lawyer said, “It may interest you to know that we have not been paid for long. I believe that the commission is broke.”
It was also gathered that the cash
crunch had seriously affected the commission to the extent that its
enlightenment programmes on radio and television stations had been
suspended.
The programmes called Zero Tolerance, is used to educate Nigerians on the evils of corruption in the society.
Apart from that, the commission needed
for also uses the programmes to inform Nigerians about its activities
and ongoing cases in court.
The presenters of the programmes,
especially those on television, interview notable people in the society
on the evils of corruption.
But the inability of the commission to pay the affected stations, our correspondent gathered, made it to suspend the programmes.
A top source in the commission said, “It is painful that we could be in this mess. Imagine an agency fighting corruption to be financially incapacitated? It is bad.
“The programmes we suspended were designed to project the commission and also keep Nigerians abreast of the activities of the commission.
“But now, they are dead because we can’t pay the affected stations. We could have suspended the publication of our in-house magazine as well, but the Chairman resisted it and vowed to make sure that it is not suspended.”
In the last edition of the magazine,
former President Olusegun Obasanjo had berated those running the
commission, saying there were areas they were not doing well.
He said because of this, they should be ashamed of themselves.
Obasanjo said in the interview, which
was published in the magazine, “I feel concerned about Nigeria and I
will never stop feeling concerned and that’s why occasionally, I speak
up.
“Even now, I am speaking up to say that all of you in EFCC, there are areas where you should be ashamed of yourselves.
“If you take an organisation which took
Nigeria from level 2 to level 43 and then it starts coming down to level
34, then, something is wrong.”
The Chairman of the EFCC, Ibrahim Lamorde, had while addressing the House of Representatives earlier this year said,“It is important to note that for 2012, we requested N21.8bn from the Budget Office of the Federation out of which only N10.9bn was allocated, representing 51 per cent of our requirement.”
He further revealed that of the N300m
and N700m for Legal Services and Staff/Office Equipment Insurance
Premium respectively for 2012, not a kobo was allocated.
Also, the total budget estimate of N10,
97bn for 2012 represents a decrease of N2.87bn from that of 2011
appropriation figure of N13 85bn or 21 per cent thereof.
Of the N10bn acquired for the
construction of the Head office in the 2012 budget, only N3bn was
appropriated and as of November 21, 2012, only N1.39bn was released.
Attempts to get an official response
from the Spokesman for the EFCC, Mr. Wilson Uwujaren, were unsuccessful
as he did not pick calls to his mobile telephone.
Uwujaren also did not respond to a text message sent to him on the subject as of9pm on Tuesday.
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