Must Read: 11 Things Saraki Wants Nigerians To Know about Fighting Corruption

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The Senate President, Dr. Abubakar Bukola
Saraki,On
Monday, May 15th, 2017,
spoke extensively about how to fight corruption in Nigeria at
the launch of a book authored by Senator Dino Melaye, entitled,
‘Antidote of Corruption.”

Below are the following highlights from the Senate President’s speech:

#1 On the Relationship Between Corruption and Development:
“What
got me thinking was the chicken and egg puzzle that that statement
immediately raises. Do countries become more corrupt because the people
are poor or are the people poor because their country is corrupt? We may
never be able to answer this question to everybody’s satisfaction.”

#2 On Why Corruption Needs to be Viewed Through the Lens of ‘Human Development’:

“If
the purpose of government is to improve the quality of lives of its
people, then any conversation about corruption must focus primarily on
how it affects human development, whether it is health, wealth or
education.

#3 On the Progress Nigeria Has Made with fighting Corruption Under President Buhari:
“…one
area I believe we have made remarkable progress in the past two years
of the President Buhari-led administration is that corruption has been
forced back to the top of our national political agenda. Every single
day, you read the newspapers, you listen to the radio, you go on the
internet, you watch the television, the people are talking about it. The
people are demanding more openness, more accountability and more
convictions. Those of us in government are also responding, joining the
conversation and accepting that the basis of our legitimacy as
government is our manifest accountability to the people.”


#4 On why Governments Across All Levels Must Join the Fight Against Corruption:

“We
acknowledge that if we want Nigerians to trust their government again,
then government at all levels must demonstrate that we are not in office
for the pursuit of private gains, but to make our people happier by
helping them to meet their legitimate aspirations and achieve a higher
quality of life…Nigeria and Nigerians have not accepted corruption as
normal; we recognize it as a problem; that we are determined to make a
break with our past and live by different rules.”

#5 On Why Deterrence is a Better Approach to Fighting Corruption:

I
am convinced that we must return to that very basic medical axiom that
prevention is better than cure. Perhaps, the reason our fight against
corruption has met with rather limited success is that we appeared to
have favoured punishment over deterrence… We must review our approaches
in favour of building systems that make it a lot more difficult to carry
out corrupt acts or to find a safe haven for corruption proceeds within
our borders. In doing this, we must continue to strengthen
accountability, significantly limit discretion in public spending, and
promote greater openness.”

#6 On What the National Assembly is Doing to Fight Corruption:

“We
in the National Assembly last week took the first major step in this
direction towards greater openness. For the first time in our political
history, the budget of the National Assembly changed from a one-line
item to a 34-page document that shows details of how we plan to utilize
the public funds that we appropriate to ourselves.”


#7 On Anti-Corruption Legislation Being Considered by the Senate:

“At the moment, we are considering for passage into law the following bills:
The Whistleblower Protection bill, which I am confident will be passed not later than July 2017.
The Proceeds of Crime bill
The Special Anti-Corruption Court, which would be done through constitutional amendment and;
The Mutual Assistance in Criminal Matters Bill. “

#8 On What the National Assembly Intends to do Moving Forward:

“…the
National Assembly is driven by the saying that “whoever comes to equity
must come with clean hands.” Having demonstrated our commitment to
transparency and a more open legislature, we will be operating on a
higher moral ground in carrying out our oversight duties as prescribed
by the constitution.”

#9 On Bureaucratic Processes and Corruption:
“We
need to simplify our bureaucracy and administrative procedures. Because
it is in the complexity and red-tapes that corrupt officials profit.
However, I also strongly suspect, while not justifying anything, that
majority of these low level corruption are largely powered more by need
even more than greed.”


#10 On How Providing more Opportunities Nigerians will Fight Corruption:

“If
we are able to build a quality public education system, especially at
the basic and secondary level, which would not require parent to pay
through their nose for their children’s education; if we are able to
build an efficient public health system that provide insurance covers to
ordinary citizens so that when they fall sick, they can access quality
healthcare without running from pillar to post looking for money; if we
are able to build a system that guarantees food and shelter to everyone;
if we are able to do all these, we would have gone a long way in
removing much of the driving force for corruption at this level.”

#11 On Transparency International’s Corruption Perception Index:

“On
the Transparency International Corruption Perception Index. It is
important to note… that the year-on-year report does not fully reflect
or account for the progress being made in the fight against corruption. I
believe the key challenge here is also because ‘perception’ is largely
subjective… while relying on perception, I think it is important for TI
and other such organisations to improve on their methodology by
developing more robust parameters that reflect the progress that some
countries are making in respect to corruption.”

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