|
Coalition Against Corrupt Leaders (CACOL)
The Humanity Centre: 610, Lagos-Abeokuta
Expressway, Ijaye Bus stop,
Ijaye-Ojokoro.
P.O. Box1592, Agege, Lagos, Nigeria.
Tel: 01-4736534, 08023226276,
08037194969
Website:www.thehumanitycentre.org
E-mail:
cacolc@yahoo.com,
dadnig@yahoo.com
Name, Nail, Shame and Shun Corrupt
Leaders Anywhere, Everywhere
PRESS STATEMENT
Ibori: Aondoakaa, Courts must allow
Diligent Prosecution of Corrupt Leaders
The Coalition Against Corrupt Leaders (CACOL)
has adduced reasons why it believes that
the Minister of Justice and
Attorney-General of the Federation would
not want the case of large-scale
corruption and money laundering that the
EFCC is prosecuting against the former
two-term governor of Delta State Mr.
James Ibori to succeed. Apart from the
open secret that the ex-convict of
London’s Clerkenwell Magistrates
Court that former Governor Ibori is, was
the biggest financial powerhouse for the
President Umaru Yar’Adua’s presidential
campaign for the 2007 election, Chief
Michael Aondoakaa a is a personal friend
to the Iboris and a sworn enemy of the
latter’s prosecuting agency, the EFCC.
We need to remember that he, Chief
Aondoakaa, and a few colleagues of his
had once gone to the Supreme Court on
behalf of the
Benue State Government to seek an order
of the apex court to scrap the EFCC as
an
anti-corruption agency.
The AGF, who is expected to be the chief
prosecutor of caught thieving rascals in
government houses, is only serving as
their chief protector. We need not
forget in a hurry that it was our AGF
who frustrated Ibori’s trial in another
London court because, according to the
court, “the evidence against him did not
emanate from
Nigeria”. This was after AGF Aondoakaa
(SAN) wrote the UK Metropolitan
prosecutors that he had no evidence of
corruption against their accused to make
available to help their prosecution of
Ibori. However, the same senior member
of the Nigerian Bar who could not help
the UK to diligently prosecute his
client publicly promised to continue the
Ibori’s trial in Nigeria. What a
shameless ambivalence.
Just about the time our AGF protested
the prosecution of Ibori by the Met
police in London, the Court of Appeal in
Kaduna struck out the EFCC’s case
against the suspected crook on the
grounds that Kaduna was about 700
kilometres from Delta State where the
offence was allegedly committed! CACOL
suspected that Aondoakaa’s stance on the
case influenced the court’s decision
since he bosses the courts. Our dismay
stems from the fact that there had been
several earlier pronouncements that
Federal Courts, be it High or Appellate
were one and the same no matter which
part of the federation its officials
operate. This gives an impression that
“the suspect on trial was a special one
and should be so treated”. Nonetheless,
the preferential
treatment had not been our worry but
using it as an excuse to frustrate
diligent prosecution of a leader who is
suspected to have caused his people a
lot of socio-economic calamity.
Now that the EFCC has indicated its
preparedness to go ahead with the
prosecution as the Kaduna Court ordered,
no one or institution should provide
EFCC with excuses for tardiness. We are
worried that the 170-court charge
against him is already facing the
regular routine of challenging the
competence of the Federal High court in
Asaba to get along with the case owing
to lack of what Ibori’s lawyer called
absence of “prima-facie case” against
Ibori. If the Justice of the court
acquiesces to this, it will spell doom
to diligent prosecution of other Corrupt
Leaders in Nigeria and that will
embolden up-coming ones to drown
themselves in the pool of brazen corrupt
activities. Nigerians are not satisfied
by the mild punishments the judiciary
gave
the convicted former governor of Bayelsa
State, Dipriye Alayemesigha and former
Inspector-General of police, Tafa
Balogun which were based on corrupted
version of what justice should be termed
“plea
bargain”. We would not want President Yar’Adua to continue to accord state
respect to suspected or convicted
corrupt leaders like Peter Odili, the
former governor of Rivers State who was
granted perpetual injunction against
arrest and prosecution, and Lucky
Igbinedion, the convicted former
governor of Edo State, who was given
just a slap-on-the-wrist punishment for
monumental corrupt practices. Their
indulgence by both the judiciary and
federal government is a dent on the
president’s seven-point agenda and
Akuyili’s re-branding campaign that will
for long remain fresh sore points in our
memory that Nigeria’s judicial system
has to
nurture.
CACOL therefore calls on all judges to
live up to the confidence that ordinary
members of this society repose on them
by summoning up adequate courage to do
the right thing by performing the sacred
duty that will stand the test of history
no matter whose ox is gored. They should
not only outrightly reject frivolous
objections and applications by lawyers
who are paid to frustrate corruption
cases but punish such litigants for
attempt to deceive the public and erode
citizens’ confidence in their courts.
Furthermore, we appeal to all concerned
judicial officers both at the bar and
the bench, including those in political
and administrative offices, to allow all
alleged corrupt leaders truly and
sincerely prove their innocence or
otherwise face the full weight of the
law. It is our country, nay all of us
that will be better for it. Justice must
not only be done at all times, it must
be seen to have been done.
Debo Adeniran
Executive Chairman, CACOL
Tuesday, 4th August, 2009
|