On Tuesday, the senate passed a bill to amend the
Independent Corrupt Practices and other Related Offences Commission (ICPC) act.
But little was known about the details of what the senators
passed in the “committee of the whole” when they considered 70 clauses seeking
to amend the principal act of ICPC.
What was widely reported was that the upper legislative
chamber amended section 25 of the law establishing the anti-graft commission to
imprison writers of false petitions for two years without an option of fine.
While presenting his report, Abdu Kwari, chairman of the senate anti-corruption committee, had said there was a need to make the punishment for writing false petitions stringent to deter people from misleading the commission.
Contributing to the debate, Adamu Aliero, senator
representing Kebbi central, said people, including senators, suffer in the
hands of the commission as a result of false petitions.
Details of the bill obtained by TheCable show how the
senators whittled down the chairman’s powers.
By virtue of the modifications, the ICPC chair will be a
figurehead and will be susceptible to contestations within the commission.
ICPC CHAIR’S POWERS WHITTLED DOWN
Section 7(1) of the ICPC principal act provides that “the
chairman may issue administrative orders to be called ‘standing orders’, which
shall conform with the provisions of the general control, training, duties and
responsibilities of officers of the commission, and for such other matters as
may be necessary or expedient for the good administration of the commission and
to ensure the efficient and effective functioning of the commission.”
However, the senate amended the provision and substituted
“chairman” with the word “commission”.
The amendments made by the senators provide that the
commission would have “deputy commissioners, assistant commissioners,
superintendents, assistant superintendent, senior investigators, investigators”
in section 4(7) – the make up of the anti-graft agency.
Also, in the principal act, section 4(2) provides “that the
chairman and any four members of the commission shall constitute a quorum”, but
a new subsection 2(a) was added which reads: “The proceedings of the meeting of
the commission shall be as provided in the schedule to this act”.
‘LENIENT’ PUNISHMENT FOR BRIBERY
Section 22 (3) of the principal act provides that “any
public officer who, in the course of his official duties, inflates the price of
any goods or service above the prevailing market price or professional
standards shall be guilty of an offence under this act and liable on conviction
to imprisonment for a term of seven years and a fine of one million naira”.
The N1 million fine was reduced to N500,000 without an
option of jail term in the amendment considered and passed by the senate.
CONSTITUENCY PROJECT CONTROVERSY
Members of the national assembly and the ICPC, which has
worked to expose corruption in the constituency projects scheme, have been at
loggerheads.
In September 2022, the ICPC said it recovered N2.8 billion
worth of assets earlier diverted under the constituency projects scheme.
At the time, the commission said it had tracked 2,444
projects awarded between 2019 and 2021.
Akeem Lawal, ICPC’s director of operation, said it
discovered cases of “bribery, signing off projects as completed, false
certification of projects, vague description of projects, failure to deduct and
remit appropriate taxes, and projects sited on private property of sponsors
around project delivery”.
Lawal said under the Constituency and Executive Projects
Tracking Initiative (CEPTI), it was found that some of the projects were
nominated in companies which they had interests in.
Advertise on NigerianEye.com to reach thousands of our daily users
No comments
Post a Comment
Kindly drop a comment below.
(Comments are moderated. Clean comments will be approved immediately)
Advert Enquires - Reach out to us at NigerianEye@gmail.com