|
Top executives of Bank PHB, Spring Bank
and Equitorial Trust Bank who were last
week sacked by the Central Bank of
Nigeria will soon appear before the
Economic and Financial Crimes
Commission, EFCC to answer questions in
regard of some of their activities while
they held sway in the three banks.
The hint was dropped on Wednesday
October 7, 2009 at the venue of the
on-going World Bank/ IMF conference in
Istanbul , Turkey by the Executive
Chairman of the anti-graft agency, Mrs
Farida Waziri while fielding questions
from journalists during a joint press
briefing with the Finance Minister, Dr
Mansur Muktar and the CBN governor, Mr
Lamido Sanusi.
Mrs Waziri assured that nobody will be
treated as a sacred cow in the latest
exercise even as debtors of the three
banks should prepare to interact with
the EFCC as soon as the CBN makes their
list available to the Commission.
According to her, `` As soon as we
return home we take on the case of the
latest three banks. I can assure you
that nobody will be spared, no sacred
cow. We will handle it the way we did
the last set. So there cant be any
discrimination or preferential treatment
for anybody. We will also act on the
debtors list as soon as the CBN releases
that to us. It is in the interest of our
economy and the nation.
Speaking later at a policy forum on good
governance, investment climate and the
challenge of increasing capital flows to
Africa, Mrs Waziri justified the EFCC
intervention in the bank reform process
in Nigeria .
At face value, there should be no basis
for the EFCC's involvement in the recent
banking sector cleansing and the
recovery of debts. However we must
understand that section 7 (2) of the
legislation establishing it states that
the EFCC “shall be the coordinating
agency for the enforcement of the
provisions of the following key
legislations:
1. The Failed Banks (Recovery of Debts)
and Financial Malpractices in Banks Act
1994.
2. The Banks and other Financial
Institutions Act (BOFIA) 1991
These 2 laws alone should suffice to
justify the involvement of an
organisation like the EFCC in the bank
cleansing exercise and the recovery of
loans by the Central Bank of Nigeria .
However it may be necessary to go beyond
that. The general issues arising from
the exercise in Nigeria have shown that
margin loans, other forms of loan
facilities and Infraction by lenders,
are the critical areas that rogues
within the system utilized she
explained.
She stated that the Commission's
intervention has led to the recovery of
over N114billion(about $700 million USD)
and prosecution of four bank chief
executives, 11 directors and one chief
executive of a stockbroking firm on 188
count charges.
Waziri said with the firm efforts of
various regulatory agencies to cleanse
the system, the investment climate is
now open to foreign investors who are
interested in doing genuine business in
Nigeria . She called for international
cooperation among law enforcement
agencies to support business
transactions and check trans-border
crimes,
In her words, from a transnational
perspective, if it is accepted that the
financial system impacts not just on the
economy, but also the politics and
polices of countries, then it is
necessary that innovative solutions in
law enforcement should also follow suit.
. I will suggest in this context that
countries must resolve that as a matter
of protocol, rather than upon request,
Suspicious Transaction Reports that
might impact on each other must be
shared promptly. For instance if Country
gets a Suspicious Transaction Report
that has a Nigerian element, then
country as a matter of protocol must
share that Suspicious Transaction Report
with Nigeria even where Nigeria has not
made a request for such. This will
enable countries keep track of illicit
economic activities even across their
borders and might even be the basis of
triggering fresh investigations. In any
case, it is irrefutable that the
barbarians within the system often
launder the proceeds of their crimes
across transnational borders and this
mode of cooperation will be useful in
tracking deposits and assets.
From a practical point of view, this
mode of cooperation is further
recommended by the fact that looted
funds are often re-routed to designated
financial safe havens and tracing or
investigating it is often a frustrating
experience. If the safe havens become
unattractive with the attendant
difficulty in spiriting away looted
funds, investigating and prosecuting
several shades of financial crimes
should be relatively easier.
Permit me to inform the audience about
the creation of a Transactions Clearing
Platform (a Business Help Desk) that the
EFCC has recently created. When I took
over the helm of affairs at the EFCC,
one of the things that struck me was
that we required a more innovative
approach to fighting cybercrime as well
as the utilization of preventive
measures in addressing economic crimes.
On the generic level, the EFCC has
launched an anti-corruption Revolution
Campaign (ANCOR) which is aimed at
Nigerians effectively participating in
and taking ownership of the fight
against economic, financial crimes and
corruption.
As to specific business transactions,
Nigeria for long has been identified
with fraudulent letters (aka 419) and
business proposals and as a result the
EFCC has now put in place a mechanism
for the smart utilisation of technology
to tackle the problem. An adjunct
service arising therefrom is a
Transactions Clearing Platform (TCP) of
the EFCC that will assist individuals
and companies undertake basic due
diligence in respect of business
proposals received from or intended for
execution in Nigeria.
I therefore invite you to visit our
website (www.efccnigeria.org) and take
advantage of this service. With the
EFCC's Transactions Clearing Platform,
we will be proud to say that only a
person who wants to be defrauded by
scammers will be so defrauded as a
result of ignoring the service we are
providing, she added.
Femi Babafemi
Head, Media & Publicity
7/10/09
|