Corruption Perception Index 2021: Change Your Anti-Corruption Strategies, CSOs Urge Buhari

Factors responsible for Nigeria’s latest poor corruption ranking include “public sector corruption, bribery, nepotism, the criminal justice system, state capture, excessive red tapes, effective justice system, and lots of other corruption-related issues.

Worried by Nigeria’s low rating on the corruption perception index, President Muhammadu Buhari has been urged to review his administration’s tactics and style of fighting corruption.
Representatives from Non-Governmental Organizations, the Civil Society Legislative Advocacy Centre (CISLAC), and CLEEN Foundation made the call during the anti-corruption radio program, PUBLIC CONSCIENCE, produced by the Progressive Impact Organization for Community Development, PRIMORG, on Wednesday in Abuja.
Transparency International (TI)  ranks Nigeria 154 out of the 180 countries in its latest Corruption Perceptions Index (CPI) report for 2021, placing Nigeria as the second most corrupt nation in West Africa.
Reacting to the development, the Program Officer Anti-Corruption at CISLAC, Samuel Asimi, said President Buhari’s government could only advance the fight against corruption by urgently strengthening legal frameworks on whistleblowing, proceeds of crime, audit; as well as fortifying anti-graft agencies.
Asimi, however, backed Nigeria’s current CPI rating, saying it was fair given the prevalence of corruption in the public sector while harping on the need for members of the National Assembly to adequately play their constitutional role in tackling corruption in Ministries Departments and Agencies (MDAs) of the government.
CISLAC's Samuel Asimi and CLEEN Foundation’s Anna White-Agbo on Public Conscience on Radio His words: “We need legal frameworks, the government needs to beef up a legal framework that should focus on whistleblower, proceeds of crime.
“Secondly, financial institutions and the anti-graft agencies should work together in terms of the ‘Know Your Customer policy, customer due diligence policies and the rest.
“Looking at the audit reports, NASS should work on the audit report; MDAs that have not been submitting in their audit reports should do well to comply, and those who have disregarded regulations as prescribed by the constitution should also work on that, and we need coordination among anti-graft agencies.
“It’s also important for the government to recognize the freedom and rights of anti-corruption and human rights defenders, attempts to shrink the civic space should be discouraged, and freedom of individuals should be upheld,” Asimi stated.
He called on the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) and other anti-graft agencies to focus on low and high-profile corruption cases.
He urged the government to give the anti-graft agencies free hand to operate.
“The general independence of the anti-graft agencies should be ensured: political interference should be out, we don’t want cases where individuals switch political affiliations and all of a sudden, charges against them are dropped,” Asimi stated.

According to Asimi, factors responsible for Nigeria’s latest poor corruption ranking include “public sector corruption, bribery, nepotism, the criminal justice system, state capture, excessive red tapes, effective justice system, and lots of other corruption-related issues.

On her part, Media and Communications Officer at CLEEN Foundation, Anna White-Agbo, stated that the anti-corruption strategies of the current administration were not working, hence, alluding that the corruption ranking enjoyed by Nigeria was a true reflection of the state of corruption, tasking the government to employ a different approach to fighting corruption or risk worse corruption perception ranking in future.
On the need to strengthen anti-graft agencies to fight corruption, White-Agbo called for the absolute independence of anti-graft agencies from political influence. “The anti-graft agencies are supposed to be independent of the politics or politicking in Nigeria; I feel like there is a lot of influence coming from all of these angles from people in power, from politicians, and the rest of them. They need to be left alone to do the work,” She stressed.
White-Agbo expressed her disbelief in the ability of the government to fight corruption adequately and called on citizens to look inward and play their part in the anti-corruption fight.
“This government came in heavy on corruption, but I do not believe that whatever strategies they have employed are working, the reason being that we have so many issues of accountability and transparency.”
According to the Programme Manager of PRIMORG, Adaobi Obiabunmuo, all efforts to get Senior Special Assistant to President Muhammadu Buhari on Public Affairs, Ajuri Ngelale, to join the radio program proved abortive.
Meanwhile, the Attorney-General of the Federation (AGF), Abubakar Malami, and Minister of Information and Culture, Lai Mohammed, had earlier rejected Nigeria’s low rating on the corruption perception index, arguing that it does not reflect the strides of the administration in the fight against corruption.
Public Conscience is a syndicated weekly anti-corruption radio program used by PRIMORG to draw government and citizens’ attention to corruption and integrity issues in Nigeria.
The program has the support of the MacArthur Foundation.

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