THE Socio-Economic Rights and
Accountability Project says it is giving the Code of Conduct Bureau only
14 days to commence the probe of Nigeria’s past and serving public
officials indicted in the PanamaPapers scam.
The group, which decried the extent to
which Nigerian public officials had gone in breaching the code of
conduct by going to conceal stolen wealth in offshore jurisdictions,
said it would sue the CCB if a probe of those indicted in the
PanamaPapers did not start in 14 days.
In a statement on Sunday by its
Executive Director, Adetokunbo Mumuni, SERAP said it was important for
the CCB to leverage on the revelations in the PanamaPapers in
demonstration of its readiness to combat the abuse of asset declaration
requirements by Nigerian public officials.
It said unless the CCB probed and
prosecuted the high-ranking public officers indicted in the
PanamaPapers, it would lose public credibility.
It urged the CCB chairman, Mr. Sam
Samba, to “use your good offices and leadership to urgently investigate
current and immediate-past high-ranking public officers named in the
PanamaPapers and others that are maintaining and operating or have
maintained and operated foreign accounts in other safe havens and
secrecy jurisdictions, and to where appropriate, refer such officers to
the Code of Conduct Tribunal for prosecution.”
The statement added, “We would be
grateful if the bureau could begin to take these steps within 14 days of
the receipt and/or publication of this letter.
“If we have not heard from you by then
as to the steps the bureau is taking to address the concerns raised in
this letter, the Registered Trustees of SERAP shall take all appropriate
legal actions to compel the bureau to effectively discharge its
constitutional and statutory mandates in this instance.
“SERAP also believes that bodies like
the Code of Conduct Bureau should now seize the opportunity and use its
mandate to react to this international scandal by taking concrete and
proactive steps to address increasing breaches of constitutional
provisions by high-ranking public officers.
“This action will be entirely consistent
with the Nigerian 1999 Constitution (as amended), the law establishing
the bureau, and will meet demands by Nigerians for improvement in
transparency regarding asset declaration and sanctions of public
officers for breaches.”
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