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EFCC seeks law to criminalise unexplained wealth

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The Chairman of the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC), Ola Olukoyede, yesterday sought the backing of the National Assembly to legislate against unexplained wealth.

He said Nigeria cannot win the anti-corruption war without the legal backing to hold public officers accountable for assets far beyond their legitimate earnings.

Olikoyede spoke at the National Conference on Public Accounts and Fiscal Governance organised by the Public Accounts Committees of the Senate and House of Representatives in Abuja.

The EFCC chairman described the magnitude of public sector corruption as disturbing.

“In the last three weeks, we started a commission-wide investigation into the extractive industry, particularly the oil and gas sector. What we have discovered is mind-boggling.

“And we have only just opened the books. So much more corruption is to be unraveled. If this is what we’re seeing at the surface, imagine what lies beneath,” he said.

Olukoyede described fiscal rascality and mismanagement of public resources as a core driver of Nigeria’s economic woes and security challenges.

“There is a strong connection between the mismanagement of our resources and insecurity. When you look at banditry, kidnapping, and terrorism, trace them back, and you will find a pattern of corrupt practices and diversion of funds that were meant to improve people’s lives,” he said.

“Help me pass the Unexplained Wealth Bill. I’ve been begging for the past year. This same Bill was thrown out by the last Assembly. If we don’t make individuals accountable for what they have, we’ll never get it right.

“Someone has worked in a ministry for 20 years. We calculate their entire salary and allowances. Then we find five properties — two in Maitama, three in Asokoro. Yet, we’re told to go and prove a predicate offence before we can act. That is absurd,” he said.

Olukoyede also said the EFCC secured the conviction of 146 out of 194 foreigners arrested for cybersecurity-related financial crimes in 2024.

“Last year, we arrested about 194 foreigners who were involved in various forms of financial crimes and activities that are inimical to the economic growth and development of our country.
“Today, I can tell you that we have succeeded in the prosecution and conviction of 146 of them. They will serve their jail terms and will be repatriated to their respective countries,” he said.

Also, the National Security Adviser (NSA), Malam Nuhu Ribadu, has said President Bola Ahmed Tinubu is determined to put Nigeria on the right track of all-encompassing development, despite the antics of some politicians.

He dismissed the ongoing coalitions of some politicians, saying Nigerians should not pay attention to their desperation.

Ribadu spoke yesterday at the Abuja Continental Hotel during the opening ceremony of the International Cybersecurity Conference organised by the National Information Technology Development Agency (NITDA).

The conference, with the theme: Cybersecurity, building a resilient digital future, was attended by the Chairman of the Senate Committee on Cybersecurity, Shuaibu Salihu; the Chairman of the House Committee on Cybersecurity, Stanley Adedeji; the United States Ambassador to Nigeria, Mr. Richards Mills; the Permanent Secretary in the Federal Ministry of Communications, Innovations and Digital Economy, Mr. Adeladan Rafiu; the National Commissioner of the Nigeria Data Protection Commission (NDPC), Dr. Vincent Olatunji, and the Managing Director of Galaxy Backbone limited, Prof. Ibrahim Adeyanju, among others.

Ribadu said the Tinubu administration has committed huge investments into cybersecurity and other infrastructures.

The NSA also told the private sector to continue to support government efforts to improve the economy.

“We are a family: you in the private sector, we in the public sector. We are one. I want to urge you to continue to be there for us. Let’s work towards improvement for all of us.

“Together, we are building a safer and more resilient digital Nigeria, one that can inspire confidence, drive innovation, and secure our future. The real people are doing the work, not the noise makers.

“But we are not here to rest on our achievements. We are here because we understand that resilience is a journey, not a destination. That requires a whole of common and a whole of society approach,” he said.

“Mobilising not just tools but people, processes, and relationships, every citizen has a role to play; every agency, every company, and every professional community.

“We must move beyond awareness to action; beyond policy to implementation. Therefore, I challenge each one of you gathered here today: let this conference be more than another event in the calendar. Let it be a turning point. Let it be a moment we reaffirm our shared responsibility.”

Source; The Nation News.

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