We need strict sanction for corruption – Ribadu - Facts Square

Monday 19 September 2016

We need strict sanction for corruption – Ribadu

We need strict sanction for corruption – Ribadu

The pioneer Chairman of the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC), Nuhu Ribadu, on Monday said the nation needs strict sanction regimes to win the war against corruption.


The pioneer Chairman of the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC), Nuhu Ribadu, on Monday said the nation needs strict sanction regimes to win the war against corruption.
He said the government should phase out security votes, abolish cash transactions, put an end to subsidies and criminalize extra-budgetary expenditure.
He, however, said the police, the judiciary and the entire justice sector require comprehensive reforms to make the anti-graft campaign a reality.
Ribadu made the submissions in a lecture at the 2016 Annual National Management Conference of the Nigerian Institute of Management (NIM) held at the International Conference Centre, Abuja.
Although he said leadership and transparency measures were vital to anti-corruption crusade, strict sanction regimes would make the war winnable.

He said: “The first two steps (leadership and transparency measures) in cutting down cases of corruption cannot address it all. And that is why we need strict sanction regimes. Persons who are found to have infringed on the laws by helping themselves to what is for the overall good of the rest of the citizens must be made to pay direly for their actions.
“In driving this, there should be keen commitment from the political leadership, in addition to competence and integrity of the drivers of the process.
“First step in achieving this is to push for immediate and comprehensive reforms in the justice sector. These reforms should cover the entire justice sector chain: the police, judiciary, ministries of justice, prisons and other reformatory institutions. This is an absolute prerequisite for the success of any anti-corruption campaign.
“As is often said, our laws may not be faulty, but operators of the system are likely to be. To fight corruption, the umpire has to be clean, honest and sincere.
“Dishonesty cannot fight dishonesty; if you are corrupt you cannot lead successful anti-corruption campaign. Having a corrupt person pretending to fight corruption only creates confusion.”



BY YUSUF ALLI

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