Tag: Anti-corruption commission

  • Adamawa assembly okays establishment of anti-corruption commission

    Adamawa assembly okays establishment of anti-corruption commission

    The Adamawa House of Assembly has passed a bill for a law to establish an anti-corruption commission, in its efforts to fight corrupt activities in the state.

    Alhaji Aminu Iya -Abbas, Speaker of the assembly made this known in an interview with newsmen in Yola on Tuesday.

    The anti-graft commission,mIya-Abbas said, is expected to complement the effort of other agencies in fighting corruption in the state.

    ”The agency when set up, will promote accountability and transparency as well as address financial crimes.

    ”The bill for a law to provide for the establishment of the Adamawa State Anti Corruption Commission, was sponsored during plenary by Malam Abubakar Isah, PDP-Shellang constituency,” he said.

    Iya-Abbas said the assmbly has directed the clerk to the house to prepare and forward a draft copy of the bill to Gov. Ahmadu Fintiri for assent.

  • Lagos mulls establishment of own Anti-Corruption Commission

    Lagos mulls establishment of own Anti-Corruption Commission

    Lagos State Government is set to establish an Anti-Corruption Commission, with Gov. Babajide Sanwo-Olu on Monday signing the Public Complaints and Anti-Corruption Commission Bill 2021 into law.

    Sanwo-olu said during the signing ceremony at Lagos House, Ikeja, that the move was to deepen the culture of accountability and transparency in the expenditure of appropriated public funds.

    He said that with the legislation put in place, the anti-corruption commission, which would be formally set up in the coming days, had been backed by the instrument of law.

    According to him, the commission is to investigate and prosecute officials of the state government and deregistered contractors indicted for economic crimes and financial misappropriation.

    Sanwo-Olu said that the action was a testimony to the state government’s effort towards entrenching accountability in governance and checking malfeasance among officers entrusted with public resources.

    ”The bill establishing Public Complaints and Anti-Corruption Commission is an important legislation critical to the delivery of quality services to the citizens.

    ”When we came in, we had said we would be accountable and responsible in the appropriation of the state’s resources.

    “We want to stand in front of the citizens to give account on how public funds are being spent.

    ”To give credence to this promise, the executive arm initiated the bill and sent to the Assembly for approval.

    “We believe that this law would ensure accountability of public funds, responsibility of public office, it will also promote dialogue among public officers to keep the trust of the people in the discharge of their duties in line with transparency.

    ”The anti-corruption commission will ensure that all approved activities are implemented in accordance with budgetary allocation,” he said.

    Sanwo-Olu said that the anti-corruption commission would be independent in its operations and functions.

    He said that the agency would complement efforts of similar agencies in the police and federal establishment.

    Also, the governor assented to the Lagos State Lotteries and Gaming Authority Bill 2021, initiated by the executive arm to coordinate activities of lottery agencies operating within the state.

    He said that the Lotteries and Gaming Authority Bill 2021 was to simplify and incorporate technological innovations in the gaming sector.

    Sanwo-Olu said that the law sought to harmonise five gaming and lottery formats, such as casino, jackpot, pool, lotto and sports betting, thereby regulating the sector and checking fraudulent activities of unregistered game centres within the state.

    He said that the former lottery law of the state did not meet the contemporary needs in the industry.

    This, according to him, was why the executive initiated the bill to accommodate technology in regulating the business.

    ”As a forward-looking government, we are doing the needful to ensure fair play, regulation and monitoring is brought back into the gaming industry.

    ”The law is not in any form to stifle investment, but to offer better platform for lottery companies to enhance equity, transparency and make their investment more rewarding,” the governor said.

    Sanwo-Olu reiterated that his government’s actions would continue to boost confidence of the public and promote accountability in governance.

    He thanked the Speaker and members of the Assembly for cooperating with the executive arm and consistently prioritisng executive bills aimed at delivering good governance.

    The Commissioner for Justice, Mr Moyosore Onigbanjo, SAN, said that the two bills signed by the governor brought to 10 legislation sponsored by the executive and passed by the House of Assembly to strengthen good governance.

    Onigbanjo said that 26 executive bills had been initiated since inception of the current administration.

    ”The anti-corruption agency to be established is akin to Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) to prosecute misappropriation of public funds in the state.

    ”The chairman of the agency will be appointed by the governor, subject to the ratification of the House of Assembly.

    “If the investigation leads to prima facie case, the offender will be prosecuted in the court,” he said.

  • Nigerian-born Nwabudike resigns as Liberia’s anti-corruption boss over citizenship saga

    Nigerian-born Nwabudike resigns as Liberia’s anti-corruption boss over citizenship saga

    The head of Liberia’s anti-corruption commission, Ndubusi Nwabudike has resigned, the government said in a statement on Tuesday.

    According to reports, Nwabudike resigned amid allegations that he obtained his citizenship of the West African state illegally.

    President George Weah appointed Nigerian-born Nwabudike, a naturalised Liberian citizen, as the chair of the country’s anti-corruption commission, in 2019.

    There are reports that his parents are from Delta State, Nigeria, according to a report by The Punch.

    Political opponents of the footballer-turned-president began to question whether Nwabudike obtained his citizenship legally after Weah nominated him as chairman of the anti-corruption commission last year.

    The Supreme Court later confirmed that he obtained his citizenship properly.

    On Tuesday, the government published a statement declaring that Nwabudike had nonetheless offered his resignation, which will take effect on February 26.

    “It does not serve the overall strategic interest of your government and our people if I were to constitute a distraction from the national agenda that your government is poised to deliver to our people,” Nwabudike was quoted in the statement as saying.

    The anti-corruption chief is a lawyer by training who had served as a graft investigator in the nation of about five million people before Weah appointed him to his role.