We have been following
events in the ongoing trial of the Senate President with keen interest. We are
delighted to see that the Senate President is finally standing trial for
alleged breaches of the Code of conduct Act despite all the preliminary
objections raised by the defence against the trial. It is healthy for our
democracy. Nothing else has reinforced the common man’s belief in the rule of
law than the sight of a Senate President in the dock.
However, the most curious event so far in the entire
episode was the decision of the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC)
to drop the corruption charges against the Chairman of the Code of Conduct
Tribunal (CCT).
Just when Nigerians were trying to make up their minds if
the anti-corruption crusade of the current government is a sincere campaign or
a political witch hunt aimed at whipping perceived political enemies into line,
the events in the Saraki trial have removed any doubt as to the true
colouration of the campaign.
In specific terms, we would like to state unequivocally
that the EFCC’s decision to drop such serious charges against a public officer
is suspicious. It is even more so when the charges are dropped in the
prevailing circumstance of the Saraki trial. Indeed, Nigerians have noted that
the CCT chairman began to work doubly hard to hasten Saraki’s troubles following
that EFCC decision.
There is a video in circulation on social media that
betrays the CCT’s judge hostility to Saraki’s team. It shows how the CCT
Chairman was asking Saraki’s lawyer to sit down, in a personal and
confrontational manner unbefitting for Umar’s position , effectively depriving
the Senate President of fair hearing. We are forced to ask the question that
has been on most people’s lips: what level of horse trading has happened
between Umar and the forces against Saraki? Could the newfound zest evident in
Umar’s handling of the Saraki case be linked to the EFCC’s decision to drop the
corruption case against Umar, especially given Umar’s aggression toward Saraki
happened just after the EFFC’s publicised ‘pardon’? We call the EFCC and indeed
the FG come clean on such coincidence in the Saraki trial.
While we believe that the anti corruption war must go on
unhindered, but we cannot fold our hands and watch state institutions like EFCC
dabble into any back room politics or “rub my back, I rub your back” judgement
pact with CCT Chairman Danladi against an accused person.
EFCC owes the public a duty to explain why they have to
drop the case against Danladi Umar at such a crucial stage of the Senate
President’s trial.
Nurudeen Agoro
Spokesperson
Come Clean Nigeria
comecleanng.com
Spokesperson
Come Clean Nigeria
comecleanng.com
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