Nigeria has been financially hemorrhaged by some corrupt leaders, as a
report from the United States-based Global Financial Integrity
indicates. The agency recently said a total of $182 billion was stolen
and laundered offshore between 2000 and 2009.
While average Nigerians struggle to feed, our leader stealing activities
have made Nigeria to rank eighth out of 20 countries notorious for
illicit financial outflows...
The plundering of our commonwealth by just a few goes against the grain
of prevailing crippling poverty, unemployment and decrepit
socio-economic infrastructure. Nigeria is placed 135th out of 176 in the
Transparency International’s Global Corruption Perception index.
The GFI described Nigeria as “the leading source of illicit financial
outflow from sub-Saharan Africa.” This is a huge paradox as the theft
happened under a democracy. Since 1999, the country has been under civil
rule. According to the GFI, it relied on analysis of data from the
World Bank and International Monetary Fund to reach its conclusion,
stressing that developing countries lost a total of $903 billion in
2009. Even now, the trend is accelerating as graft is worn as a badge of
honour.
What fostered this heist is not difficult to fathom. Ours is a
government being run by narrow minds, and harder hearts. Mismanagement
of oil wealth and illegal oil bunkering have strewn a cobweb of
corruption, making slush funds easily available for pillaging. However,
the seemingly industrial scale of the looting, despite the operations of
the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission and the Independent
Corrupt and other Related Offences Commission, should arouse some
curiosity. Is it that the anti-graft bodies were deficient, complicit or
looked the other way while the looters had a field day? And what role
did the banks play? These are genuine concerns.
The Nigerian Financial Intelligence Unit and the Special Control Unit
against Money Laundering were established to strengthen the performance
of the EFCC. Under the act, through automation, banks alert the EFCC on
transactions that fall within the “suspicious thresholds.” From
periodic revelations of how public funds are looted by public officials,
with banks as conduits, it is obvious that extant laws on money
laundering are observed only in the breach. Annually, the Central Bank
of Nigeria and the Nigeria Deposit Insurance Corporation audit the books
of these banks; yet the humongous illicit transactions that pass
through their systems in violation of extant financial regulations are
not made public. Nevertheless, the only oasis was the CBN’s hammer of
2009, which fell on some corrupt bank chief executives who were not only
relieved of their jobs but were prosecuted.
Money Laundering Prohibition Act (2011) as amended prescribes limits of
financial transactions in banks by individuals and bodies corporate,
beyond which a bank must alert the EFCC or make transaction reports. The
MLPA increased the threshold for reporting transactions by individuals
from N1 million to N5 million and between N5 million and N10 million for
corporate bodies. Abuse of this regulatory regime was evident in the
pension funds looting spree uncovered by the Senate in a recent
investigation.
The political leadership is not sincerely committed to the eradication
of corruption. As the chairman of the ICPC, Ekpo Nta, once put it,
“there is no political will to fight corruption in Nigeria.” Key public
officials do not demonstrate exemplary conduct such as adopting a modest
lifestyle, and avoiding corruption themselves. People found guilty of
corruption are not punished because of their position or status in the
society. The “big fish” are not only protected from being prosecuted for
corruption, the unlucky few that are prosecuted get light sentences.
Besides, spurious state pardons are remedial measures for the few that
get convicted. It is this vacuous moral compass that led the
administration of the late President Umaru Yar’Adua, in cahoots with
corrupt politicians, to hound the pioneer chairman of the EFCC, Nuhu
Ribadu, out of office.
In the corporate sphere, the scourge is as corrosive and devastating as
it is in the political arena. A disgraced former bank executive
reportedly acquired 12 homes in the United States, 28 shops and seven
residential houses in Dubai, and four houses in South Africa, all bought
with laundered funds. Indeed, the rot in the banks is very deep. Since
successful money laundering is largely a product of either connivance
of, or negligence of, bankers, the Chartered Institute of Bankers of
Nigeria Act 2007 has a redemptive role to play here. Striking out names
of its members aiding and abetting money laundering from its register
has become imperative. By so doing, such elements become professionally
prostrate and are seen as lepers who should never be employed by other
banks.
But, the situation is becoming hopeless. The former US Secretary of
State, Hillary Clinton, described the level of corruption in Nigeria as
“unbelievable.” Fighting corruption requires a strong political
leadership. The basic requirement of civilised democracy is that
everyone plays by the rules and that the rules command public
confidence. Brazen stealing of public funds will continue until laws
aimed at fighting corruption are strictly and consistently applied.

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