The United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime, UNODC,
has sought a more robust working relationship with the Economic and
Financial Crimes Commission, EFCC.
This quest was made in Abuja on Thursday,
January 23, 2025 when its Country Representative, Cheikh Ousmane Toure led a
staff delegation on a courtesy visit to the EFCC’s Executive
Chairman, Mr. Ola Olukoyede at the Commission’s corporate headquarters.
Toure, who said that he was eager for knowledge
sharing among West African States explained that "this is the only way we
can bring a little bit of more safety and security to our
children. The menaces are many and complex and today we have AI.
Imagine AI in the hand of a cybercrime criminal doing movements on
bitcoins? What will be our line of defence in
investigating such cases? It will be more complex than those
cases that you cracked in the past. It will require new sets of legal
understanding to criminalize those cases.
Speaking further, Toure stated that “the second
element is on international cooperation with countries where there is
a lot of investment from Nigerians and where you have difficulties to
seize some of the ill-gotten assets. I don't want my
tenure to be some sort of UN framework tenure. No. I am a
technician. I'm the child of West Africa. I want an effective
partnership. So, basically what I am here to engage on is that if we
work with you, I want that to be a partnership. There is a lot of expertise in
Nigeria. Those expertise can help us achieve our goals. So it is only
fair to go for strategic partnership.”
In his response, Olukoyede noted that achieving the
goals Toure enumerated came down to UNODC working together in partnership with
the EFCC and strengthening the partnership. “All that you have said boils down
to the need for us to strengthen our relationship and to work together. As
a matter of fact, we have a very good working relationship as a country and
also as a Commission with UNODC. We have had decades of relationship
with UNODC and it has been of mutual benefit and interest. Most of the
things in our mandate have almost become global in nature. We
are looking at money laundering, financing of terrorism, proliferation of small
arms and all of that. There is a very strong relationship between our
mandate and yours. Where you see some of these crimes happening,
there is an element of money laundering and in all financial crimes
generally", he said.
The EFCC’s boss further stressed that,
“we need to establish a very strong collaboration with other law
enforcement, security agencies and also our partners
on the international scene. We will continue to build on
the existing relationship. There is a need for us to collaborate more
particularly on the relationship that we have with the
United Nations in the area of asset recovery. We also want
to pledge our support for your tenure. All the areas where
you need to get our cooperation and our synergy, we are going to make
them available to you.”
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