THE General Abdulsalami Abubakar-led National Peace Committee on the 2015 General
Election has thrown its weight behind President Muhammadu Buhari’s war on
corruption, but has cautioned him against the intimidation of any citizen in the process.
The committee, made up of eminent personalities, was at the Presidential Villa, Abuja,
on Tuesday, for a meeting with the president.
Emerging from the meeting, Catholic Archbishop of Sokoto Diocese, Bishop Matthew
Kukah, told State House correspondents that just like other Nigerians, the committee
was not against Buhari’s fight against corruption, but was keen on due process being
observed.
He observed that the country was no longer under a military administration and,
therefore, everyone must be assumed to be innocent until proven guilty.
Bishop Kukah, who denied that the committee was at the Presidential Villa to intercede
for former president, Dr Goodluck Jonathan, whose administration being probed, said
Jonathan’s commitment to nation building and achievements were spectacular, adding
that President Buhari appreciated that.
He said: “It is not heating up the polity. In our conversation with Jonathan and
members of the parties, I don’t think any Nigerian is in favour of corruption or is against
the president’s commitment to ensuring that we turn a new leaf.
“I think what we are concerned about is process. It is no longer a military regime and
under our existing laws everybody is innocent until proven guilty.
“Again, our own commitment is not to intimidate or fight anybody. The former
president’s commitment and what he did still remains spectacular and I think that
President Buhari himself appreciates that. So, our effort really is to make sure that the
right thing is done.”
Noting that the committee was not at the meeting on behalf of Jonathan, Kukah stated
that even though the committee planned to see the former president in the course of its
work, Jonathan had never contacted it for anything.
“Anybody is free to come to our committee, but President Jonathan never by telephone
or another means talked to the committee. We went to see him, but that was after we
had already seen members of the political party and members of the civil society,” he
said.
Speaking the committee’s engagements, he said: “This is a very planned series of
intervention essentially just to hear out everybody and I think the goodnews is that
Nigerians are committed to a new nation, they are committed to ensuring that the gains
and blessings God has given us come to fruition.”
He explained that the committee was not an intervention body, saying “this is not an
intervention. It is not a hearing out process. When we had election, it was like a
wedding. Now, the reality of government is now the marriage and people need to be
encouraged.
“We need to reaffirm that this is our country and the only thing we can collectively be
opposed to is injustice, iniquity, corruption and in that regard we all had one single
conversation.
“The president has also reaffirmed the need for this committee to continue and the
international committee has very much welcomed the contributions of the committee.
Essentially, we are not policing, but when the need arises, help to build confidence in
the process.”
He revealed that the committee gave the president an update on the relevance of the
peace committee “and how we can help to nurture what God has given to us.”
At the meeting were the chairman and former head of state, General Abubakar, who led
the delegation; the Sultan of Sokoto, Mohammed Sa’ad Abubakar III; the Metropolitan
Archbishop of Abuja Catholic Diocese, John Cardinal Onayeikan; the Primate of Church
of Nigeria, Most Reverend Nicholas Okoh; President of the Christian Association of
Nigeria (CAN), Pastor Ayo Oritsejafor and the Bishop Hassan Kukah, Senator Ben Ndi
Obi and Chief Priscilla Kuye.
Earlier, President Muhammadu Buhari, has said the prosecution of persons who have
stolen national resources will begin in a matter of weeks.
The president declared that his administration was irrevocably committed to doing all
within its powers to break the vicious cycle of corruption, unemployment and insecurity
in Nigeria.
He said those who have stolen the national wealth “will be in court in a matter of weeks
and Nigerians will know those who have shortchanged them.
“Nigeria has to break this vicious cycle before we can make progress,” adding that his
administration was diligently getting facts and figures pertaining to the nation’s stolen
funds, before proceeding to the prosecution of identified culprits.
Buhari told General Abubakar and members of his committee that the Federal
Government, under his leadership, would not only ask for the return of stolen funds that
have been stashed in foreign banks, but would also ensure that those who stole the
funds were put on trial in Nigeria.
The president also said that as part of its actions to address the national problems it
inherited, his administration was reorganising Nigeria’s revenue-generating institutions.
He explained that a single treasury account had been established for all federal revenues
to ensure greater probity, transparency and accountability in the collection, disbursement
and utilisation of national funds.
Buhari added: “We have really degenerated as a country. Our national institutions,
including the military, which did wonderfully on foreign missions in the past, have been
compromised, but we are doing something about it. The military is now retraining and
morale has been resuscitated.
“As Petroleum Minister under General Olusegun Obasanjo in the 1970s, I could not
travel abroad until I had taken a memo to the Federal Executive Council, asking for
estacode. Now, everybody does what he wants.
“That is why security-wise and economically, we’re in trouble.”
Source : Tribune

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