CACOL COMMENDS PRESIDENT MUHAMMADU BUHAR AND EFCC AS THE ANTI-CORRUPTION WAR ACHIEVES ITS FIRST CONVICTION – CACOL

The Executive Chairman of the Coalition Against Corrupt Leaders, CACOL, Mr, Debo Adeniran has congratulated the Federal Government, the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission, EFCC and other security agencies as the anti-corruption war achieves its first conviction.

The EFCC had accused Mr. Omatseye of engaging in contract splitting and bid rigging to the tune of over N1.5bn while in office as the DG of NIMASA. The offence, the anti-graft agency said, contravened Section 58(4) of the Public Procurement Act 2007.

Mr. Adeniran in reacting to the development said that, “the recent judgment delivered by Justice Rita Ofili-Ajumogobia of the Federal High Court, Lagos, which convicted former Director-General of the Nigerian Maritime Administration and Safety Agency, NIMASA, Mr. Raymond Omatseye, to 5 years imprisonment over a contract scam involving N1.5bn is heartwarming and welcomed.”

The CACOL Chairman, sad that “It has always been our position that the conviction of corruption criminals was possible if the cases are handled diligently; from information gathering to arrests and from prosecution to conviction. The truth is that 99% of the so-called corruption crimes suspects are mostly likely to be found guilty if their cases were diligently handled.”

“Some of the corruption criminals have the wherewithal to take advantage of the lacunae in our laws and the shoddy prosecutions to escape justice. There should be thoroughness in investigations and diligence in prosecutions for all the cases of corruption; these will a long way in ensuring that corruption criminals do not cleverly escape the wrath of the law.” Mr. Adeniran added,

We commend the efforts of the Federal Government, the EFCC and the civil society organizations as the anti-corruption war is beginning to bear fruits with recovery of loots and the latest conviction. We hasten to repeat our call for life imprisonment for convicts that stole any amount above 1 billion naira, and they should be made to work diligently for their own upkeep via whatever skills they possess previously or has been able to learn behind the bars.

“They should be used as objects to educate the young, the youth and all when they go on excursion to the prisons, seeing former corrupt leaders in such situation will certainly serve to deter the potentially corrupt. Furthermore, whatever assets traced to such convicts should be deemed to be proceeds of corruption and confiscated by the Nigerian state.’’ The Executive Chairman of the Coalition concluded.

Wale Salami

Media Coordinator, CACOL

080141121208

wale@thehumanitycentre.org

cacolc@yahoo.com,

cacol@thehumanitycentre.org

21 May 2016

 

For more press releases and statements, please visit our website at

www.corruptionwatchng.com, www.cwatch.thehumanitycentre.org

 

BEYOND THE COMMENT OF DAVID CAMERON AND HYPOCRITIC PATRIOTISM; NIGERIA IS INDEED ‘FANTASTICALLY CORRUPT’

The reported comment attributed to the Prime Minister of UK, Mr. David Cameron, that Nigeria is ‘fantastically corrupt’ as the International Conference on Anti-corruption is going on has divided the opinion of Nigerians with some calling for head of the UK PM and vilifying him for speaking the obvious!

 

The Coalition Against Corrupt Leaders, CACOL is towing a different line on this and takes the position that Mr. Cameron’s comment stems from the reality that Nigeria is indeed profoundly corrupt which justifies the fierce fight the President Muhammadu Buhari-led government is prosecuting against corruption.

 

We view the comment not as an attack on Nigeria or the President, but as an honest comment on the corrupt system that have subsisted and characterized even several regimes before the present administration in Nigeria. The fact is that the UK has even been more helpful than harmful in the fight against corruption in the country. For instance, it took the UK to be able to make James Ibori to answer for some of his very outrageous corruption crimes against the background of him having escaped about 171 charges of corruption in Nigeria by maneuvering through the judicial system.

 

The immediate past Minister of Petroleum, Diezani Allison Madueke is currently facing corruption charges in the UK, an individual who also was on the run from justice; a fugitive from justice in Britain, Diepreye Alamesiagha was granted state pardon in Nigeria, another fugitive from justice in the same Britain is spending his third term in the Senate and we think Mr. Cameron is ‘insulting’ us?!

 

CACOL sees Cameron’s assessment as being informed by what had happened in Nigeria in the past; events in the past such as the Halliburton and Siemens scandals, the police pension scam, the power project scam, the Security and Exchange Commission scam and others. legislating for good people of Nigeria? Is not fantastic that an ex-convict in Britain came back to Nigeria to become a powerful governor? Is it not fantastic that the same man is now back in Britain as a guest of her majesty over similar corruption charges he had been discharged and acquitted in Nigeria?

 

Rather than whimpering and engaging in hypocritical patriotism, Nigerians should introspect and confront the reality of how badly corruption has eaten into the fabric of our National life. We cannot afford to be hiding behind a finger, covering our faces when our behinds are in the full glare of the world, which would amount to nothing but plain absurdity!

 

While acknowledging the somewhat sarcastic statement of the UK PM and understanding the context, CACOL’s response is to draw the attention of the UK and its Prime Minister to some cogent issues on the anti-corruption drive in Nigeria as they have to do with the United Kingdom and other countries at the anti-corruption conference beyond trivialities and ‘mocking’.

 

First, we call on the United Kingdom as host of the ongoing international anti-corruption conference and other World Leaders at the ongoing anti-corruption conference to extract a commitment from President Muhammadu Buhari to re-open and resume of action on the Halliburton and Siemens bribery scandals that indicted several former Heads of Nigerian government, some of their spouses and other prominent leaders in Nigeria with a view of bringing the culpable among them to book.

 

The United Kingdom and other participating countries should as a matter of urgency play similar roles that Germany and others countries linked with international scams that have helped exposed those involved and even applied punitive against their nationals that were collaborators in the scam.

The re-opening and resumption of activities on the Halliburton and Siemens bribery scandals with the aim of bringing those culpable in the bribery and money laundering scandals to book is very imperative to proving the anti-corruption war being led by President Buhari to be profound enough.

 

The background to the Halliburton and Siemens scandal to remind all, is about a reported settlement agreement with reached the federal government November 22, 2010, under which Siemens will pay 7 billion Nigerian Naira (approx. $46.5 million) to the Nigerian Government in exchange for the EFCC dropping charges against Siemens AG, Siemens Nig Ltd and four of its officers.  The settlement payment was variously described as “restitution” and “disgorgement”.

In connection with the TSKJ/Bonny Island bribery matter, on November 25, 2010, it was reported that the EFCC arrested ten Halliburton employees in Nigeria during a raid of the offices of Halliburton Energy Services Nigeria Limited in Lagos, as well as one employee each from Saipem Contracting Nigeria and Technip Offshore Nigeria.  On December 7, 2010, the EFCC reportedly filed corruption charges against Halliburton, former U.S. Vice President Dick Cheney (who was the CEO of Halliburton during the period at issue), Albert Stanley (former CEO of KBR), David Lesar (current CEO of Halliburton) and William Utt (current CEO of KBR).  Technip, Snamprogetti and JGC Corporation were reportedly also charged on the same day.  The case reference was Federal Republic of Nigeria v. Halliburton and others, CV/435/10, High Court of Justice, Abuja Judicial Division (Abuja).

 

We call on World leaders at the conference particularly countries where loots stolen from Nigeria are being stashed help facilitate the repatriating the loots. We urge other countries to be proactive by emulating the UK in helping Nigeria fight corruption as demonstrated in the manner the Dipreye, Ibori, Diezani and others’ cases were handled and are being handled.

 

“Name, Nail, Shame and Shun Corrupt Leaders Anywhere, Everywhere”.

 

Signed

 

Debo Adeniran

Executive Chairman, CACOL

08037194969

dadnig@yahoo.com,

www.deboadeniran.com


 

For more press releases and statements, please visit our website at

www.corruptionwatchng.com, www.cwatch.thehumanitycentre.org

THE CLAMPDOWN ON STUDENTS’ UNIONISM WILL AGGRAVATE THE CRISES IN THE IVORY TOWERS

The Coalition Against Corrupt Leaders, CACOL strongly lends it voice in support of the ongoing struggle of Nigerian students against the clampdown on independent unionism in Nigeria’s Ivory Towers. We view the clampdown as illogical and unnecessary; from University of Lagos to University of Port Harcourt, from Yaba Polytechnic to University of Ibadan to Obafemi Awolowo University etc. the stories are indeed confounding, worrisome and must be handled in a manner that is serious and reasonable.
In its apparent failure to learn from the history of its clampdown on legitimate agitations of students organized in their Unions and the attendant negative outcome, the Nigerian state and school managements appear to be returning to the draconian era of banning student unionism in the Ivory Towers.
Mr. Debo Adeniran, Executive Chairman of CACOL went back in history in his reaction to recent developments said that “since the late seventies, the disdain of the State and Management of the institutions have always reflected in their responses to legitimate agitations of students for better learning and teaching environment; from the famous ‘Ali Mungo’ story to the ban imposed on National Union of Nigerian Students which led to the birth of National Association of Nigerian Students.”
“The assaults on student unionism have been consistent on all our campuses; massacres, victimizations, dehumanization, undeserved rustications and expulsions etc. characterize the story of how the state and management of our institutions have responded to legitimate agitation of students.” He added.
“This is why the returning scenario as being witnessed in the University of Lagos presently and other tertiary institutions becomes worrisome. It is this kind of attitude on the part of government and school managements that led to the birth of cultism on our campuses. When the avenue of expressing legitimate dissent to the perpetual insensibility to situation of students by most regimes and school managements was blocked, the students’ agitation of course found expression other means and sadly for us as a Nation, cultism was and is still one of the other means.” CACOL’s Chairman noted.
The rigors, financially and psychologically that parents and wards incur to get access to education; from the unnecessary pains of obtaining admission even when over-qualified to different amorphous examination processes under different names and a host of abuses that Nigerian students that pass through in recent times are better imagined than experienced. There is a clear and present, danger which must be addressed decisively! 
It is against the foregoing that CACOL stands in solidarity with the present raging struggle to call the State and Managements of University of Lagos, University of Ibadan, University of Port Harcourt, Obafemi Awolowo University, Ile-Ife,  and others to reasoning on the assaults on the inalienable rights to independent unionism and fundamental rights to associate and assemble.
We insist that the remote cause/s of students’ agitation/s should consistently be interrogated and handled from such perspective in resolving conflicts or clash of interests whenever they arise. This is what is expected of school managements that are supposed to be academic in approach and government that is supposed to democratic in culture.
We are saying a resounding NO to repression, it is corruption!
Wale Salami
Media Coordinator, CACOL
080141121208
May 4, 2016.
 
 

             For more press releases and statements, please visit our website at

CACOL COMMENDS THE PRESIDENTIAL ADVISORY COMMITTEE ON ANTI-CORRUPTION, PCAC, SAYS THE TIME TO ESTABLISH SPECIAL COURTS FOR CASES OF CORRUPTION IS NOW!

The Coalition Against Corrupt Leaders, CACOL commends the Presidential Advisory Committee on Anti-corruption, PCAC on its initiatives and the proactive steps being taken to achieve the establishment of Special Courts for cases of corruption in Nigeria as the country continues the war against corruption.

“CACOL have consistently advocated for reforms in the judicial system including the creation of Special courts for corruption cases to facilitate the enabling environment for the successful prosecution of the anti-corruption war. Several cogent reasons abound for the inevitable need for Special courts for corruption cases and some reforms in our laws.” said Mr. Debo Adeniran, the Executive Chairman while reiterating the stance the Coalition on the expediency of establishing Special courts for cases of corruption.

“Since the kitchen became hotter for corruption criminals based on the ongoing war against corruption, corrupt elements are fighting back using every means available including lapses in our laws to evade justice. The plethora of corruption cases that the ongoing anti-corruption has thrown up calls for reforms in the existing judicial system to ensure that the anti-corruption drive bears fruits.” Mr. Adeniran continued.

Explaining CACOL’s position further, he said that “this is why we also back the two bills sent to the National Assembly by President Muhammadu Buhari seeking for stiffer penalties for culprits of money laundering and to make provisions that would enable Nigeria to seek international assistance in recovering looted funds in January 2016. We once again call on the National Assembly not to further delay processes that will translate the Bills into Acts of Law if they are really sincere and on the same page with majority of Nigerians on the need to expunge corruption from our system holistically.”

As corruption fights back viciously, the logical response is to; lawfully remove all the encumbrances on the path of the anti-corruption drive which corruption criminals cleverly use to wriggle through the labyrinths of the existing judicial system to escape justice, amend our laws and the creation the Special courts for corruption cases.

“We therefore welcome and commend the PCAC on its initiatives and the proactive steps being taken to achieve the establishment of Special Courts, just as we call on all the Arms of the Federal Government to work in unison to fight corruption, a scourge that have encroached our country for too long and threatening to obliterate it.” Mr. Adeniran concluded.

Wale Salami

Media Coordinator, CACOL

080141121208

wale@thehumanitycentre.org

cacolc@yahoo.com,cacol@thehumanitycentre.org

May 6, 2016.

 

For more press releases and statements, please visit our website at

www.corruptionwatchng.com, www.cwatch.thehumanitycentre.org

Dr. TUNJI BRAITHWAITE: A MAN OF MANY PARTS BUT GENERALLY HUMANE ON ALL PLAINS. A DOGGED REVOLUTIONARY, A HUMANIST AND HERO OF THE PEOPLE!

The Coalition Against Corrupt Leaders, CACOL mourns the passage of Dr. Tunji Braithwaite; a Nationalist, a consistent and persistent fighter against all forms of oppression and repression, a supporter and motivator of our Coalition in the war against corruption. His passage represents a colossal loss to the activist and revolutionary community.

Dr. Tunji’s monumental contributions to the struggle for an egalitarian society are immeasurable and invaluable. He lived and died for the struggle to liberate the poor and oppressed in spite of his ‘privileged’ background.

As far back as 1978, he formed the National Advance Party, NAP, a political party with the mission of prioritizing the welfare of people in governance; he was of the ‘Awoist’ school of thought, an ardent and outspoken defender of the voiceless and the poor.

His passage is particularly painful for us in CACOL, for the roles he played in supporting actively the activities of our coalition including being the Chairman of our past 5 Annual General Meetings; intellectual support and guidance.

A strong advocate for the restructuring of Nigeria Federation, defender of women and human rights; Dr. Tunji dared and confronted the military with every ability he had, until the Khaki boys were kicked out of power and remained intolerable to civilian dictatorship afterwards, especially during the Olusegun Obasanjo regime; this informed his active participation in foiling the illegal and infamous third-term bid of the retired General.

As a humanist, his ideology was inextricably bounded with humane acts in personal, socio-political, economic and cultural relations. And his humanism was revolutionarily unrepentant and consistently against the sub-human experience Nigeria and Nigerians had been forcefully made to pass through for so long. He was persistently calling for a revolution, a system change that would rid Nigeria of ‘cockroaches and rats’ (a popular cliché of his that he regularly used to depict the rot, decay and corruption in the system).

Dr. Tunji was also a bridge builder that related with a broad section of virtually all active organisations, groups and participants in the struggle for liberation of the oppressed class. He was instrumental to the formation of Movement Of the People (MOP), led by Fela even though he was not a member, he participated in the collective struggle on other broad platforms like National Intervention Group (NIG), Nigerians United for Democracy (NUD) etc.

He thoroughly believed that only the oppressed could achieve their emancipation via struggle which informed the motto of the party he formed – ‘Our destiny is in our hands’. As revolutionary humanist he shunned irredentism and sectarianism keeping his focus of what he was convinced to be good for the vast majority.

The pains of his passage lies only in the reality that the Nigeria of his dream and the struggle to radically alter the subsisting and hitherto existing system, have neither been achieved nor consummated; the hope lies in the lessons we learnt from his contribution to the struggle, as they will continue to guide our actions in the struggle against the subsisting corrupt, oppressive and exploitative system.

Looking at the state of the nation as we celebrate the heroic passage of Dr, Braithwaite, we reiterate that Nigeria remains in a state of catastrophic equilibrium stemming from the systemic failure that has always been the bane and the clog in the wheel of progress of the nation and people; a state or situation, which Dr. Braithwaite was stoutly against till death.

It is no gainsaying to state that at the moment, Nigerians are groaning in pains under a situation where every aspect of the country’s body polity seems to be in quagmire and doldrums. The double dose of tragedy represented in the present crises in the energy and power sectors have taken majority of Nigerians to the peak of pains where life is steeply becoming more and more frustrating and hellish.

A critical and objective look at, and appraisal of the state of the Nigerian Nation at this moment reveals fogginess and confusion as the country remain in that situation where the poor ordinary working and toiling people which constitute the majority are writhing in pains almost on all plains; with a rich ruling class and their underbellies that are impervious to this reality and apparently does not ‘give a damn’.

More than 9 months after the inauguration of the All Progressives Congress (APC) led Federal government, it is pertinent to come to terms with what is real and what is fad or farce. The worst thing may not be so much about where we are coming from but much more about in which direction we are going, we dare say. And as things stand, Nigerians are more concerned with the direction the Nation is moving. And the only direction they want to go is that direction which will guarantee that the ordinary Nigerian can feed; have shelter, have access to gainful employment, education, good health care and security and to live in harmony, as simple as that, and it is for those reasons that government was instituted in the first place!

On our part, we believe the onus is on us (the oppressed poor and their organisations) to pick up the gauntlet; rededicated and recommit ourselves to the cause of the struggle as we unrepentantly continue to organise and mobilise for fundamental change in the system.

We call on and encourage all compatriots not to rest on their oars, as the struggle to liberate our country and people is a protracted one involving processes and stages. The struggle is not an event, we make bold to say! We must mobilize, organize and educate the masses to rise up against bad governance for our destiny lies in our hands.

We support the on-going anti-corruption war as we recognize corruption as a bane that has permeated almost every aspect of polity as country, a cankerworm that is deeply embedded and must be excised. The drive must continue and this is regardless of the class, social, ethnic, political or religious status of individuals or groups involved. Impunity must end!

Dr. Tunji Braithwaite, indeed was a rare kind and in a class of his own; comparable to Fela Kuti, Beko Ransome Kuti, Gani Fawehinmi, Alao Aka Bashorun etc. who were his ideological soul-mates and like them, he cannot die, for revolutionaries don’t die!

Viva Tunji Braithwaite!!

 

Debo Adeniran,

Executive Chairman, CACOL

08037194969

dadnig@yahoo.com

www.deboadeniran.com

 

 

 

 

 

Being the Valedictory Tribute to Dr. Tunji Braithwaite as delivered by Mr. Debo Adeniran, the Executive Chairman of Coalition Against Corrupt Leaders, CACOL, at his Funeral Programmer, 24th-28th of April, 2016

CACOL CONDEMNS THE 108 LAND CRUISER JEEPS DISTRIBUTED AMONGST THE MEMBERS OF THE NIGERIAN SENATE

As recently reported, the distribution of the first batch of the 108 brand new Sport Utility Vehicles (Land Cruisers) by the Nigerian Senate to Senators that has naturally attracted deserved criticisms and resentful attention of right thinking citizens is an immoral and insensitive act that could only have emanated from the Nigerian Senate, a Senate that appears apparently to be hell-bent on achieving a record-breaking feat in the human history of corruption.

The Executive Chairman of the Coalition Against Corrupt Leaders, CACOL, while corroborating the foregoing position of CACOL said that “the Nigerian Senate has severally demonstrated their greed and shamelessness via their lust for luxurious frivolities and insensitiveness to what the scale of preference should be at this trying time for Nigerians and Nigeria. Through immoral and bared-faced unethical means, the Senate, have cleverly legitimized their ineptitude in parliamentarianism by infecting the process with their vagaries, avarice and innate corrupt tendencies; this informs why at this point the Senate can contrive the idea of purchasing exotic jeeps when basic needs of the vast majority are not been paid any attention.”

“We have in Nigeria today, some Civil servants both at the State and Federal levels that have not been paid salaries for months now, there are doctors, lecturers and teachers threatening to embark on strike actions if their allowances are not paid and demands not met. The flipside and bad side of the story is that how come so-called representatives of people prioritize frivolities over very basic needs of the people they are supposed to be representing?”, asked Mr. Debo Adeniran, as he continued to lampoon the Senate in his reaction to the unwarranted purchase of 108 exotic jeeps by the body.

Furthermore, the Executive Chairman of CACOL said that “when the head of an institution is rotten, the whole body gets infected, the Head of the Senate have too much corrupt baggage that would inadvertently impact corruptly on every approval and decision to that comes out from that already desecrated Chambers. And this is why CACOL has been and is still insisting on the resignation of Dr. Bukola Saraki as President of the Senate on moral and ethical grounds. Nigerians need to insist on that necessity, and be pro-active about rejecting the toga of shame being foisted on Nigeria as a country within the comity of nations. That is the patriotic duty and a clarion call to all Nigerians to salvage our country. It is our country, let us take it back!”

Wale Salami

Media Coordinator, CACOL

080141121208

wale@thehumanitycentre.org

cacolc@yahoo.com,cacol@thehumanitycentre.org

April 21, 2016.

 

THE PRO-CORRUPTION BILL AGAINST THE ANTI-CORRUPTION WAR AND THE CODE OF CONDUCT BUREAU IS SHAMEFUL, IMMORAL AND RETROGRESSIVE! – CACOL

The process kicked-started by the Nigerian Senate to shield one of ‘their own’, the Senate President, Dr. Bukola Saraki in the bid to frustrate the constitutional role of the CCB in the battle against corruption by amending the law setting up the Code of Conduct Bureau and the Code of Conduct Tribunal, with a view to whittling down the agencies’ powers must obviously be a script written from the dirtiest and most shameless part of the pith of hell. It is a move that resoundingly ranks the present Senate as the most shameless and inept Senate in the annals of Nigeria’s political history.

As recently reported, the Senate, passed for second reading, a bill for the amendment of the CCB and Tribunal Act barely 48 hours after its presentation, the pro-corruption bill and its sponsors claim that the CCB should be only vested with power to receive declarations by public officers made under paragraph 12 of Part 1 of the Fifth Schedule of the Constitution and examine the declarations in accordance with the requirements of the code of conduct or any law.

“The blunt truth is that, the fact that this is coming up at a crucial point when the trial of the Senate President at the CCT is at a crescendo is no coincidence, for it is clear to the discerning that it is a conscious and orchestrated attempt to frustrate the judicial trial of Dr. Bukola Saraki, the Senate President over corruption charges. When you genuinely fight corruption, corruption and corrupt elements fights back viciously and shamelessly with bare-faced impunity and reckless abandon having been cornered and exposed!’’ said Mr Debo Adeniran, Executive Chairman of CACOL said in reaction to the pro-corruption bill.

“We all have been witnesses to all the ploys Saraki and his cohorts have deployed thus far to frustrate the many charges of corruption against the Senate President and his wife. We have seen so-called Distinguished Senators accompany their ‘comrade-in-arms’ whenever he appears at the CCT; hiring arguably the largest delegation of Senior Advocates Of Nigeria, SAN, to represent him in the history of the Nigerian Judicial process. Saraki have been running helter-skelter – from the High Court, to the Appeal and to the Supreme Court – to achieve the maneuvering of the judicial processes of his prosecutions over several corruption charges.’’ Mr. Adeniran added

 

CACOL calls on all right thinking Nigerians to come together to shoot down the diabolic pro-corruption bill. We must not allow the abnormal to become the normal in our society. We must reject the toga of disgrace being imposed on us collectively as a people by the incurably, profoundly and shamelessly corrupt elements in the corridors of power. One only needs to ask, why this bill is coming up at this point, to understand the self-serving intentions and interests at the background of the shameful plot.

“We reiterate that Saraki should resign as Senate President and Chairman of the National Assembly based on moral and ethical grounds for the several hitherto corruption allegations against him and the recent ‘blockbuster’ – the Panama Papers. He is only hanging on a string like someone ‘hiding behind a finger’’, he fails to realize that ‘there is no fist big enough to hide the sky (the truth)’! CACOL’s Executive Chairman concluded.

 

Wale Salami

Media Coordinator, CACOL

080141121208

wale@thehumanitycentre.org

cacolc@yahoo.com,cacol@thehumanitycentre.org

April 16, 2016.