It is certainly a season of mind-boggling cash hauls in Nigeria. Thanks
to a Whistle Blower, the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission, EFCC,
recently unraveled a staggering $43.4 million (about N14 billion) warehoused inside
the infamous ‘’Apartment 7B’’ at Osborne Towers, Ikoyi, Lagos. Prior to the #IkoyiGate
cash haul, the EFCC also uncovered bundles of naira notes totaling about N450 Million inside ‘Ghana-must-go’ bags at shop LS64 Legico Plaza,
Nigerian Air force Camp, Victoria Island, Lagos State. A whopping $9.8 million
(about N3 billion) was also recovered
from the former Group Managing Director of the Nigerian National Petroleum
Corporation, NNPC, Mr. Andrew Laah Yakubu, on February 3, 2017; while N250 million was hauled from the popular
Balogun Market, also in Lagos. Not forgetting the N49 million cash that was reclaimed by the EFCC at the Kaduna
Airport a while ago. The federal government also submits that $151 million (N46
billion) was seized from a fake account in an unnamed commercial bank. All in
all the Nigerian government brags that thanks to the whistleblowing policy, at
the conservative parallel market rate of N306
to the US dollar, the least value of the humongous cash so far confiscated
amounts to N73 billion in the last four months (December 22, 2016 to April 2017).
Whistleblowing
is undoubtedly the trending buzzword in Nigeria. As a matter of fact, the
policy recently led to the discovery of counterfeit and unregistered products worth over
Nigeria’s Whistleblowing
Policy
Information available at the Federal Ministry of Finance, FMF website says the whistle blowing programme is ‘’designed to encourage
anyone with information about a violation of financial regulations,
mismanagement of public funds and assets, financial malpractice, fraud and
theft to report it.’’ The Nigerian whistleblowing policy encourages
whistleblowers to provide information in respect of (1) mismanagement or
misappropriation of public funds and assets, (2) collection or soliciting of
bribes, (3) diversion of revenues, (4) making of fraudulent and unapproved
payments, (5) splitting of contracts, and (6) procurement fraud, amongst
others. Individuals with “authentic information about violation, misconduct, or
improper activity which can impact negatively on the Nigerian people and
Government” can report it through any of the following channels – FMF-Whistle secure
website (http://whistle.finance.gov.ng), email (whistle@finance.gov.ng) or by Phone (+2349098067946). For phone calls: Monday - Friday
10.00am to 3.00pm except on public holidays).
Nigeria’s Growing
Whistleblowing Industry
With a promise to give a whistleblower responsible for providing
information that directly leads to the return of looted fund or asset anywhere
between 2.5-5.0% of the value of the recovered looted fund or asset, whistleblowing
is arguably the most lucrative career in Nigeria right now. In order to qualify
for the reward, the whistle blower must provide the government with information
it does not already have, and could not otherwise obtain from any other
publicly available source to the government.’’ The Nigerian government says its
whistleblowing platform received a total of 2,251 communications - enquiries,
tips, compliments and general advice from the public. In essence, 282 Nigerians
provided 154 actionable
intelligence in three months (December 22,
2016 to April 2017). Not to be outdone, the Inspector General of Police, Mr.
Ibrahim Idris recently urged whistleblowers to report the misconduct of
policemen to the appropriate quarters. Members of the public can report
malfeasance and corrupt tendencies of Nigeria Police personnel to the Police
Complaint Rapid Response Unit (PCRRU), through any of these
- phone lines, SMS, WhatsApp, Blackberry Messenger (BBM), Emails, Facebook,
Twitter platforms.
Whistleblowing, Panacea
For Mopping Up Illegal Weapons in Nigeria?
Encouraged
by the seeming success of whistleblowing in recovering looted funds, Nigeria’s
National Security Adviser, NSA, Major General Babagana Monguno is said to be
tinkering a whistleblowing template that will boost the prevention and mopping
up of the surplus illegal weapons in Nigeria. Recall
that during the launch of the integration of Nigeria into the ECOWAS-EU small
arms project, held at the ECOWAS Commission, Abuja on February 19, 2017, the Chairman
of the Presidential Committee on Small Arms and Light Weapons, (PRESCOM), Ambassador
Emmanuel Imohe, bandied a conservative guesstimate of over 1.3 million illicit weapons in Nigeria.
Let us not get overly excited over the efficacy of whistleblowing
in reining in proliferation of weapons in Nigeria. I give a couple of classic
example. In the Niger Delta, parts of Southern Kaduna and the middle belt
(Benue, Nasarawa, Plateau states) ravaged by sporadic herdsmen-farmers internecine
conflict, locals seldom trust government security agencies to protect them
hence they resort to self-defence. Common sense reckons that it is somewhat improbable
for these locals to snitch or blow the whistle on members of the community to
stockpile cache of weapons with which they would use to fight off intruders. Similarly,
it is an open secret that some notorious criminals and fĂȘted militant
leaders declared wanted by Nigerian security agencies walk freely. Their
communities, friends and loyalists mark their birthdays in grand style. People,
including security agents see them but it appears everyone turns a blind eye.
It
is the responsibility of the potpourri security and intelligence agencies in
Nigeria to mop up proliferation of illegal weapons in Nigeria. Last time I
checked Nigeria parades the Defence Intelligence Agency (DIA), Air force
Intelligence, Naval Intelligence, Directorate of Military Intelligence (DMI),
the National Intelligence Agency (NIA), the
Department of State Security (DSS) formerly called State Security Service
(SSS), the Nigeria Police Force Criminal Investigation and Intelligence
Department (FCIID), the Nigeria Security and Civil Defence Corps (Directorate
of Intelligence and Investigation), Nigeria Customs (Customs Intelligent Unit
or CIU), Nigeria Immigration Service (HQ National Intelligence Unit),
amongst others. Whistleblowing or not, these agencies must up their game,
spread their dragnet, do what they are paid to do and not abdicate their responsibility
to so-called whistleblowers.
Whistleblowing in Nigeria,
A Risky Adventure
Through
open source intelligence, I figured out that the whistleblower who tipped off
the EFCC on the money warehoused in ‘’Apartment 7B’’, is plausibly a security
guard who worked at the posh Osborne Towers. This calls into
question the best practice of utmost privacy in such issues. With this information,
it is not impossible to unravel the identity of this supposed whistleblower. Unless
he relocates abroad, having blown his cover, dude will probably not be sleeping
with both eyes closed henceforth. A typical corrupt Nigerian ‘big man’ is unscrupulous,
desperate, vindictive, and bloodsucking; human life means nothing to them hence
eliminating anyone who snitches or stands on their way is elementary. This is
why protection of whistleblowers is very important especially in our clime
where insecurity is pervasive. More often than not, Nigerians are wary of
reporting suspicious persons or activities to the security agencies because
confidentiality is not always guaranteed. There are instances where people
report goings-on to the police and before you say Jack, the suspect tracks down
the individual who reported the matter to the police. This means that an
insider privy to the event leaked the information to the suspect, usually at a
fee. Only a whistleblower that is not driven by pecuniary interest in which
case she or he hides under anonymity or one that is kamikaze will damn the
consequences of his actions. In the absence of a whistleblowing protection law,
a Nigerian whistleblower is on his own, what is referred to ‘’OYO’’ (On Your
Own) in our local parlance. It is definitely not a job for the faint-hearted. Recall that a whistleblower, one Mr. Aaron Akase, a staff
of Police Service Commission, PSC, who reportedly revealed serious allegations of possible fraud in the PSC but was
humiliated, placed under indefinite suspension from work without salaries and faces
threats to his life. The case of the suspended House of
Representatives member, Mr. Abdulmumin Jibrin who leveled allegations of
‘’budget-padding’’ on the leadership of the House of Representatives is another
classic example of the hunter becoming the hunted.
Whistleblowing
Best Practice
Whistleblowing best practice demands that inter-alia
whistleblowers must be safeguarded against any form of retaliation - threats,
harassment and demotion, amongst others while also ensuring confidentiality to
the fullest extent possible and ability to anonymously report malfeasance and
corrupt tendencies. The Nigerian government should take a cue
from the United States ‘’Whistleblower
Protection Act’’, a federal law that protects
federal whistleblowers who work for the government and report agency
misconduct. A US federal agency violates the Whistleblower Protection Act if it
takes or threatens to take retaliatory action against any employee/applicant
because of disclosure of information by that employee/applicant. Also, President Barack
Obama’s Presidential Policy Directive 19 (PPD-19), titled "Protecting
Whistleblowers with Access to Classified Information", ensures that
employees (1) serving in the Intelligence Community or (2) who are eligible for
access to classified information can effectively report waste, fraud, and abuse
while protecting classified national security information and prohibits retaliation
against such employees. Despite the aforementioned laws in the United States
guaranteeing protection and safety, it is not a piece of cake being a
whistleblower in the States how much more in Nigeria where a whistleblower
protection law is wanting.
Conclusion:
Our
problem in Nigeria is not paucity of good policies but implementation and
penchant to put the cart before the horse. The
Ministry of Finance will do well to articulate a comprehensive policy rather
than simply providing whistleblowing frequently asked questions (FAQ). While
the government basks on the success of the whistleblowing policy, it must
ensure that the programme is sustainable and that whistleblowers are guaranteed
protection from intimidation, threat or victimization. A
Whistleblower Protection Bill was passed by the 7th National Assembly in 2015,
and a sequel sponsored by Senator Biodun Olujimi meant to protect persons who
expose financial improprieties and corruption in public and private
organizations also passed second reading in the Senate since October 2016.
On this note, we urge the Senate to liaise with
President Buhari to ensure speedy signing of the bill into a law. This
will encourage more whistleblowers to come forward. It is not enough to recover
so-called looted funds or illegal weapons, it is important that Nigeria’s
criminal justice system is rejigged to ensure diligent prosecution of culprits,
swift dispensation of justice while also ensuring that the rule of law prevails.
Written by:
Don Okereke, a leading security analyst/consultant, writer, an ex-serviceman, is
CEO Holistic Security Background Checks
Limited, a value and solution-centric Security, Risk Management and Information
Product Company. Don can be reached via his Twitter handle: @DonOkereke
very nice information on whistle blowing policy
ReplyDeleteWhistleblower definition as it sounds as whistle-blower refers to the person who “blow the whistle” or “Raise the Voice” against anything which is not Right or not legal.
ReplyDelete