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Wednesday, 11 September 2013
Ibori recommended Waziri for EFCC job – Obasanjo
Former President Olusegun Obasanjo
has said the appointment of Mrs. Farida
Waziri as the chairman of the Economic
and Financial Crimes Commission
slowed down the fight against corruption
in the country.
Obasanjo, in an exclusive interview he
granted Zero Tolerance, a magazine
published by the EFCC, said Waziri was
a wrong successor to Mallam Nuhu
Ribadu, the pioneer chairman of the
anti-graft agency.
The former President, whose
administration established the EFCC
and the Independent Corrupt Practices
and Other-Related Offences
Commission, added that he was aware
that convicted former Delta State
Governor, James Ibori, played a major
role in her appointment.
He said, “I know that the woman they
brought in to replace Ribadu was not
the right person for that job because I
understood that one of those who head-
hunted her was Ibori. If Ibori, who is
now in a UK (United Kingdom) prison for
fraud, head-hunts somebody who will
fight corruption in Nigeria, then you can
understand what happened.”
To butress his argument that Waziri
was a wrong person for the job, he
challenged the publication to “go and
look at her track record.”
“Go and look at the condition or the
qualification; go and look at the type of
interaction that anybody holding that job
will have with a similar organisation
elsewhere; did Waziri have that type.
What connection did she have with the
FBI, what relationship did she have with
Metropolitan Police in London. It’s not a
picnic,”Obasanjo added.
Waziri, a retired senior police officer,
was appointed head of the EFCC in 2008
after the controversial exit of Ribadu,
who was also a former police officer.
Obasanjo commended Ribadu, saying
his performance as the EFCC boss
helped reduce corruption in Nigeria and
improved her rating by the
Transparency International.
He said, “When I was there, the EFCC
and ICPC worked tirelessly and we
moved this country from the corruption
perception index being number two
from the lowest to number 45 from the
lowest. We should have graduated from
being number 45 to being number 50 to
being number 60, to being number 100.
But we are not doing that, rather we
have started sliding down.”
The former President flayed the
manner Ribadu was removed from
office, saying he cautioned the late
President Umaru Yar’Adua against his
removal.
Obasanjo said if given the opportunity
again, “I will reappoint Mallam Ribadu
and I will not dismiss him the way he
was dismissed from the EFCC.”
He, however, criticised Ribadu for
hobnobbing “with people he had
declared as corrupt.”
Asked to rate the incumbent EFCC
Chairman, Ibrahim Lamorde, on the fight
against corruption, Obasanjo, said he did
not know how to score him.
But he recalled that Lamorde was
directly involved when he requested
the anti-graft agency to investigate him.
He said, “I was investigated. I told the
EFCC to investigate me. I told the EFCC
to carry out clinical investigation and
they did.
“They also did same with all people on
my farm. One of them was telling me
the other day how Lamorde called him
three times and took statements from
him. The EFCC even made sure they did
not submit that report to me; they
waited until I left and updated their
report after going round the world and
saying look this is the report. Nobody
should be below board in the fight
against corruption.”
The Egba chief also expressed
concerns about the perceived corruption
in the judiciary, saying it required the
efforts of all Nigerians to check the
trend.
In a separate interview with Zero
Tolerance, Waziri denied that Ibori
supported her appointment as the EFCC
chairman.
She said, “I never knew him. I never
knew James Ibori.
“Let me ask you, if I was in league with
Ibori and was not sincerely pursuing
him, would he have run, gone out of this
country to Dubai in the United Arab
Emirates?
“It is all lies of the enemies. By the
time I write my book, the truth will
prevail. I never knew Ibori; look I
believe what is worth doing at all is
worth doing well. I don’t believe in half
measures. By my training and
upbringing, I can never betray my
country for anyone.”
Justifying her appointment, Waziri said
she secured the first conviction in the
history of the EFCC.
“N190bn, one single recovery from one
person that went to jail was during
Farida Waziri. That is why it is good to
have changes in an organisation”, she
added.
Waziri faulted the manner she was
sacked by the Goodluck Jonathan
administration despite committing more
than 30 years to serving the nation.
She said she learnt of her removal in
November 2011 in the news media and
stated that she did not deserve the
humiliation since she had not been
found wanting for any misdemeanour.
“If you are removed like that, it has a
tendency to scare some people. I
wasn’t bothered that I left because my
philosophy of life is simple, ‘what has a
beginning has an end,’’ Waziri said.
Meanwhile, the EFCC has said that it
secured 80 convictions in eight months.
The 80 were part of the 368 cases
charged to court.
In a statement by its Acting Head of
Media and Publicity, Wilson Uwujaren,
the commission said it had also
recovered N6,583,108,350 ;
$19,251,519; 20,520 Euros and
£19,000.
“Beyond the recovery, the EFCC
intensified the prosecution of politically-
exposed persons, failed bank executives,
captains of industry, beneficiaries of
fraudulent oil subsidy payments and
senior civil servants involved in pension
fraud.
“A number of cases for which
investigations have been concluded,
would be charged to courts across the
zones where the Commission maintains
offices as soon as the courts resume
from recess.
“The commission deplored attempts by
mischievous elements to distract it by
imputing political motives to some of its
investigations.”
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