The Executive Chairman of the Economic and Financial
Crimes Commission, EFCC has stated that Nigeria’s under-development would be a
thing of the past if everyone begins to see corruption as a common enemy and
tackle it.
He stated this on Friday, January 31, 2025 when
officials of the Centre for Crisis Communication, CCC, led by the Director of
its Board of Trustees, BoT, Major General Chris Olukolade (retd) paid him a
courtesy visit at the EFCC corporate headquarters, Abuja.
According to Olukoyode, “One of the major problems in
Nigeria which when tackled, will make under-development a
thing of the past, is corruption and financial
crimes. A society that is ready to move forward is a responsibility
not only of the government, but of the citizens. This is
what has actually led some of
us to be very committed to this cause. We are ready to
go the whole hog to do what we need to do within the
confines and provisions of the law and the power that
the Constitution has conferred on us. If everybody makes up his or
her mind to do the right thing, we'll move forward in this country.”
Olukoyede who expressed delight at the proposal of the
CCC delegation for collaboration and synergy in the areas of strategic
communication and public engagement, re-emphasized that the work and
successes of the EFCC run on the wheels of public engagement and advocacy.
“We thank you for proposing a synergy and
collaboration with us to support the work we do. One of the strong pillars
of our mandate is the issue of public engagement and public advocacy. We
will partner with you in that respect. We have so many projects and
programmes with respect to letting the public know what we're doing and we
are doing everything possible to ensure that we create awareness
on the part of Nigerians with respect to the need for us to be
careful and play by the rules. However, it is so unfortunate that the same
people who approbate also reprobate at the same time. Everybody is
crying that Nigerians are corrupt, that the system is
corrupt; that corruption is killing us and destroying our system, but when
we investigate high profile cases and arraign people in court, the
same people will carry placards and be supporting corrupt
leaders. It doesn't show that we are serious about this fight. The
fight is supposed to be a collaborative effort. No single agency can
do it alone. It is practically impossible for us as EFCC to
fight all the battles. The society has a role to play; policy has a role
to play and the issue of welfare of the citizens has a role to play,”
he said.
Speaking on the trajectory of his leadership, he
disclosed that he has prioritized prevention over enforcement since coming on
board.
“Now we are laying more emphasis on prevention
which is a critical aspect of our mandate. We don't have to always be
waiting for money to be stolen before we start
working in EFCC. To drive prevention, I established a new directorate
called Fraud Risk Assessment and Control ,FRAC and now we
are doing more of blocking of the leakages. We have access
to GIFMIS (government payment platform). We want to track and see where
every money, released is going. We want to ensure that every
capital project is executed. With prevention, we
discovered that there will be less to enforce. We are not dropping
our mandate on enforcement. As a matter of fact, we are
scaling it up. But we believe that it is important for
us to prevent because it costs less to prevent than to react when the deed
must have been done. So that is one of our areas of focus as of now.”
Besides prevention, the EFCC boss identified the
leveraging of intelligence gathering in the work of the Commission as being
instrumental to some of the recent mind-blowing successes of the Commission.
“Some of the modest achievements we have recorded,
particularly towards the last quarter of last year, have never been done
anywhere in the world. Nowhere in the world, and no agency has
anywhere made the recovery of one single real estate as
large as what we did. It may not necessarily prove that corruption is
increasing in Nigeria, but rather shows the proficiency of our
system as an agency to track, trace and recover because that property
has always been there. It shows our proficiency. Most of the work we
do now is intelligence-driven. Part of my key policies is that
investigation must be intelligence driven. There is the racket
we bursted in Lagos that involved 194 foreigners, Chinese, Filipinos, Indians,
Tunisians, and Eastern Europeans, perpetrating fraud in Nigeria,
using the identity of Nigerians to perpetrate fraud. In one single
operation 792 were arrested with 184 foreigners. We
started in the evening and stayed throughout the night. And there was
no single casualty. The Abuja racket of about three or four
weeks ago involved over a hundred foreigners. There was also no
single casualty, but the one we had in Awka,
just one, and everybody went to town as if it was no
longer the same agency. So we are professional in what we do. We will
do the little we can within the capacity and also the resources that are
available to us. Operations cannot always be 100 percent perfect. One
way or the other there could be casualties. We pledge that we will continue
to do what we in the best way to do it.”
Earlier in his remarks, Major General Olukolade
disclosed the desire of the CCC to work in partnership and collaboration with
the EFCC in the areas of public advocacy and strategic communication, stating
that the Centre was a body that works in close collaboration with the
security architecture of the country and supporting government
organizations from the point of view of non governmental organization.
While lauding the EFCC for its giant strides in the
anti-corruption fight, he stated that. “We want as a
body to acknowledge the fact that the EFCC has continued to prove the
relevance of his work to the Nigerian public. And we want to particularly
acknowledge the fact that the renewed commitment of this organization to
tackling economic and financial crimes, including the crackdown recently on
high profile corruption practices, have been of great attention to us and we
want to commend the agency for this renewed effort. We also
particularly want to applaud the Commission's proactive
steps in investigating fraudulent activities, asset recovery and
promoting the essence of transparency in governance through its anti graft
operations.”
Touching on the dangers of the anti-corruption war,
Olukolade said, “We know that all of this commitment should be drawing a lot
of hot air and opposition from people with diverse
interests. Our position for instance, as a body is that there's no reason
why anybody should be opposed to the logical efforts of EFCC if he is
not guilty or sympathetic to the guilty. We want to urge the
EFCC not to be deterred. You have supporters out there and we are at
your disposal to support and promote the patriotic zeal that has been
demonstrated here. You should not be discouraged,
particularly with the renewed propaganda to
discredit you or call some negative attention to this body.
“We are aware and commend your resilience that in
spite of that you are still pushing on. We will urge you not to relent or
be discouraged. Part of our own undertaking is in terms of advocacy,
public advocacy. We will deploy that in support of this organization,” he
said
He admonished the EFCC to be conscious of the antics of mischief makers and reassured the Commission of CCC’s absolute support. “The EFCC should be conscious of the fact that there are people willing to generate crises around its activities just for the fun of it. As stakeholders we are willing to work with you and we assure you that you can count on this Center as a source of support. Your campaign is laudable. It is patriotic and we are in support of you,” he said.
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