By LEKE BAIYEWU
Human rights lawyer and Senior Advocate
of Nigeria, Mr. Femi Falana, speaks on corruption in the public service and the
temple of justice in this interview with LEKE BAIYEWU of
the PUNCH newspaper.
You recently called for payment of tax
by religious organisations. Why did you say that, since they are non-profit
making organisations?
Religious bodies are not money-making
ventures stricto sensu. The traditional churches, i.e. the Catholic
Church and the Anglican Church, have remained largely conservative with respect
to the commercialisation of religion. But some of the prosperity churches have
to pay tax because they are smiling to the banks. For example, the Pope doubles
as the Head of the Roman Catholic Church worldwide and a Head of State but he
flies the Alitalia Airline, the Italian commercial airline. The same goes for
the head of the Anglican Communion, the Archbishop of Canterbury.
But today, there is a craze among the
leaders of the prosperity churches for private jets. At home and abroad, they
pay prohibitive fees for parking the jets at local and international airports.
Since they earn fat incomes, they should pay tax to the state for development.
It is unjust and illegal to tax the poor congregants, while multi-billionaire
pastors or bishops are not subjected to any form of taxation. Many of us
attended missionary schools and received treatment in hospitals founded by
churches. The fees were largely cheap and affordable. But today, the secondary
schools and universities established by prosperity churches charge tuition fees
on commercial basis.
There is nothing religious in those
centres of commerce. It is so bad that the children of poor members of
the congregation, who are even exceptionally brilliant, are driven away from
such institutions on ground of poverty. My wife was on the board of one of
those universities. She pleaded that the children of the poor be given
scholarship or made to pay substantially reduced fees. She was asked not to
bring radicalism to the church. She had to withdraw from the board.
Happily, Bishop Hassan Kukah and some
religious leaders have spoken against the primitive accumulation of wealth by
their colleagues. If religious leaders make money from their business outfits,
they should pay taxes.
If a church is so rich to the extent of
presenting a jet as birthday gift to its pastor, it should be able to pay
appropriate taxes commensurate with its status as a rich religious centre. It
is clearly stated in several parts of the Holy Bible that tithes are for taking
care of the poor and the priests, as well as Levites who minister unto the
Lord. Tithes are not supposed to be diverted for the establishment of
commercial farms, bakeries and other businesses.
Many have scored the Nigerian judiciary
low in terms of justice dispensation, particularly on corruption. Can you say
the nation’s temple of justice is still efficient?
No doubt, there are bad judges but we
must never be tempted to dismiss the Nigerian judiciary because we have some
good judges. In the last eight years, the Economic and Financial Crimes
Commission has concluded over 200 criminal cases. All the 37 ministries of
justice in the country, put together, cannot boast of that figure. Even by
global standard, that is a record which few institutions can beat. But because
of the difficulty in the prosecution of cases involving politicians and other
powerful people in the society, we dismiss the judiciary.
I know a judge in the High Court of
Lagos State who has convicted powerful 419 kingpins and ‘queenpins,’ public
officers and bank officials. Instead of encouraging the judge, it has been said
that he cannot be elevated to the Court of Appeal because he is not from Lagos
State. Even, the system is trying to frustrate him from transferring to his own
state of origin.
Why is it difficult for successive
governments to checkmate corruption, even when several hidden facts have been
unearthed?
With respect to corruption, we have
never had it so bad. In the First Republic, it was 10 per cent. In the Second
Republic, it graduated to 20 per cent. Under the Gen. Ibrahim Babangida junta,
corruption was institutionalised. President Olusegun Obasanjo’s administration
consolidated corruption. For reasons best known to him, President Umaru
Yar’adua allowed the Independent Corrupt Practices and other related offences
Commission and the EFCC to be taken over by very corrupt aides.
Some of the governors under
investigation posted their police orderlies and relations to man departments in
the EFCC. While President Goodluck Jonathan has re-organised the EFCC,
corruption is now carried out with impunity to the extent that the battle
against corruption has been lost completely. It is as if no one is in control.
Can you imagine that an ambassador of a foreign country has dragged a minister
to the Presidency for corruption? Apart from the loss of over N2tn to the fuel
subsidy scam last year, the Auditor-General of the Federation has just
disclosed that N4.2tn collected by MDAs was not remitted to the Federation
Account from 2006-2009.
The Nigeria Extractive Industries
Transparency Initiative (NEITI) reported that oil companies have failed to pay
into the Federation Account about $10bn from 1999 to 2008. The Nuhu Ribadu-led
Petroleum Revenue & Special Task Force claimed that the nation has been
short-charged to the tune of almost $100bn. All the people indicted in the
cases of Siemens, Halliburton and other scandals are walking freely.
A reputable economist, Mr. Henry Boyo,
said last week, that duty waivers running into several billions of Naira are
granted to the rich by the Federal Government, while the poor people are
burdened with all kinds of taxes and levies. The Central Bank Governor, Mr.
Lamido Sanusi, has suggested 50 per cent reduction in the workforce as a
stratagem to divert attention from the reckless looting of the economy by the
parasitic bourgeoisie. That call came from the blues, as facts emerged that the
CBN is involved in the illegal withholding of part of the N4.4tn diverted from
the Federation Account. The statement was also made to cover up the role of the
bank in the illegal release of N2.3tn for fuel subsidy in 2011, when N245bn was
appropriated. It is a grave criminal offence to release any public funds
without a legal warrant.
So, the heads of the federal ministries
of petroleum resources and finance that recommended the illegal payment and the
CBN, which released the funds, have questions to answer. But, these guys are
displaying arrogance by making provocative statements.
As far as I am concerned, the Federal
Government has, as a result of local and international pressure, provided an
enabling environment for fighting the menace of corruption. We have a corpus of
comprehensive legislations to tame the monster. But, Nigerians expect the
government to fight corruption. No government does that. In the case
of Nigeria, the media and a few individuals called anti-corruption crusaders
were fighting corruption and abuse of office to a reasonable extent. With
respect, the media houses are largely owned by some of those who are being
investigated or prosecuted. So, the battle is no longer fought by the media
with the commitment of the past.
The bar has no serious programme on
judicial corruption because some leaders of the legal profession are deeply
involved in corrupt practices. They serve as couriers for corrupt judges. Worse
still, senior lawyers manipulate the legal system to frustrate the prosecution
of powerful people in the society by filing frivolous interlocutory applications.
In other countries, lawyers are recommended for discipline for filing processes
designed to waste the time of the court. No lawyer should be allowed to
manipulate the legal system in favour of his or her client to the detriment of
the society.
In essence, the battle against
corruption has to be waged by Nigerians and not by the government. And the
concept of the rule of law transcends obedience of a few court orders by the
government. It is a way of life. It is about compliance with the law by all and
sundry, the government and the governed. The exclusion of certain people from
arrest or prosecution is antithetical to the rule of law. Whereas the law is
higher than individuals, however powerful they may be in a civilized society,
the contrary is the case in a neo-colonial society like ours.
What I am saying is that certain
institutions and individuals are higher than the law in Nigeria. Hence, they
are entitled to immunity for life.
Prof. Akin Oyebode recently argued that
the problem was not corruption but impunity. Why has the menace become
pervasive even in a democratic system?
Professor Akin Oyebode’s prognosis
cannot be faulted. Corruption is a manifestation of impunity. The Appropriation
Act contains the details of the budget. The diversion of money that has been
appropriated or the refusal to remit funds earned by the MDAs is the height of
impunity. The system is too weak to punish criminality. Hence, impunity has
become the order of the day. The menace of corruption has become rampant
because of the lack of political will on the part of the government to arrest
the culture of impunity. No society can have political stability without the
observance of the rule of law.
There are several calls by stakeholders
to cut down the size of government. What is the best to way to go about the
reduction?
There is no doubt that the size of
government is bloated. But, the CBN governor was patently wrong when he asked
for 50 per cent reduction of the workers in the civil service. The available
record shows that there are about 100,000 civil servants, while there are about
970,000 public officers, including political office holders. Only a tiny
segment of the 70 per cent of the recurrent expenditure, which goes for
maintaining the bureaucracy, is allocated for the payment of salaries and
allowances of civil servants.
In 2012, whereas the CBN allocated
N300bn for itself, the National Assembly got N150 bn. It has been revealed that
the CBN under Sanusi has increased its workforce by over 1,000 employees. Up
till now, the report of the committee on the restructure of the public service
has not been implemented by the government. The report has largely addressed
the bloated bureaucracy.
If you believe the CBN governor that
the National Assembly takes 25 per cent of the budget, then, the CBN takes 50
per cent because its budget is 100 per cent higher than that of the National
Assembly. These figures do not take cognisance of ghost workers, pension fraud,
and non-remittance of huge funds to the Federation Account.
However, I believe that the public
service has to be re-organised and restructured for optimal performance. Those
who were sacked or downsized or retrenched should be reposted to other areas of
the economy, which may require their services. But if you send them to the unemployment
market, armed robbery and kidnapping will be intensified.
Strengthening of the judicial system and the law enforcement agencies is key to successfully managing corruption in nigeria. I have an article on how best to achieve that. For more info, interested parties should contact me on dr.cookey@yahoo.com
ReplyDeleteDetailed analytical expression by my comrade.No real change is ever achieved without sweat and blood, the masses of our people are groaning under the pains of poverty while the "leaders" are all smiling to the banks. We better wake up from the arena of docility that has landed us in the bay of stupidity. This is the only country on earth that will be using over 10 billion US dollars to buy petrol from abroad while selling crude of 2.3 million b/p/d and keep lying that refinery projects are rocket science just to create money for the "boys". The most funniest comment of 2012 is when Mrs Okonjo-Iweala said that out of 232 billion paid to their friends and cronies, 29 billion Naira had been recovered, help me to ask her can she pay World Bank contractors such money without verification and later turn around to recover paid money?
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