Asset declaration: CCB gives Buhari, Osinbajo, others Tuesday deadline to submit forms
Oyetunji Abioye, John Alechenu, Sunday Aborisade and Ade Adesomoju, Abuja
The Code of Conduct Bureau has said
President Muhammadu Buhari, Vice-President Yemi Osinbajo, governors and
other public officers whose tenure ends on May 29 must submit their
end-of-tenure asset declaration forms on May 28, 2019.
However, other public officers, mainly
members of the outgoing 8th National Assembly, who were inaugurated on
June 9, 2015 have up till June 8, 2019, a few hours to the expiration of
their tenure to declare their assets, Saturday PUNCH has learnt.
Paragraphs 1 to 16 of the Part II of the
Fifth Schedule of the Nigerian Constitution list the categories of
public officers who must periodically declare their assets to the CCB.
But those affected with the wind-down of
the 2015 – 2019 political dispensation by virtue of the constitutional
provision are the President, Vice-President, President and Deputy
President of the Senate, Speaker and Deputy Speaker of the House of
Representatives and Speakers and Deputy Speakers of state Houses of
Assembly and all members of legislative houses.
The rest are Governors and Deputy
Governors, the Attorney General of the Federation and Attorney General
of each state, ministers, commissioners and Secretary to the Government
of the Federation.
Paragraph 11 of the Part 1 to the Fifth
Schedule to the constitution compels public officers to declare their
assets to the CCB “immediately after taking office and thereafter:
“(a) at the end of every four years; and
“(b) at the end of his term of office,
submit to the Code of Conduct Bureau a written declaration of all his
properties, assets, and liabilities and those of his unmarried children
under the age of eighteen years.”
The “guidelines” for assets declaration
accessed on the website of the bureau on Friday says a declarant must
declare their assets within 30 days of being issued the assets
declaration form.
Paragraph 2, of the guidelines reads,
“Every declarant is required by law to declare his/her assets/liability
including that of his spouse(s) who is not a public officer and children
under 18 years, honestly, sincerely and submit same to the bureau
within 30 days of the receipt of the forms.”
Paragraph 7 of the guidelines added,
“Every public officer is to note that it is the requirement of the law
to declare his/her assets/liabilities on:
“(a) assumption of office;
“(b) At the end of his term of office,
“(c) At interval of four years for public officers on continuous
employment of government whether federal, state or local government:
“(d) and at such other intervals as the Bureau may determine from time to time.”
Speaking with one of our correspondents
on Thursday, the Chief Press Officer of the CCB, Mrs Charity Utok,
said the incoming political office holders were given up to three
months to make their declarations to the CCB, while the outgoing ones
must do so as soon as they “step out” of office.
She said the implications of not making
the declaration or not making it at the appropriate time would be
filing charges against such defaulters at the Code of Conduct Tribunal.
Utok said, “They can be sworn in, and
within three months they have to declare their assets, otherwise the
bureau will drag them to the Code of Conduct Tribunal.
“It is applicable to all public
officers, both political appointees and elected officers – from the
councillors to local government chairmen, commissioners, members of the
state Houses of Assembly, governors, members of the National Assembly,
ministers, Vice-President and President.
“For those who are finishing their tenure, they must declare as soon as they step out.”
She explained that the first tenure of
President Buhari and that of Vice-President Osinbajo would end on
Tuesday, May 28, 2019, hence the Tuesday deadline for the two of them to
submit their asset forms for the end of their first tenure.
He added, “Anyone who fails to declare their assets will be taken before the tribunal.
“Those in the asset declaration section
of the tribunal will compile their names and they will be charged before
the tribunal for trial.”
CCB state directors insist no going back on deadline
Following the directive, state directors of the CCB in various states, who spoke with Saturday PUNCH,
stated that the Bureau had said there was no going back on Tuesday, May
28, 2019 deadline set for the submission of asset forms.
The Director of the CCB in Bauchi State,
Ibraheem Mahmood, said, “The headquarters of the Bureau has set aside
Monday 27th and Tuesday 28th May as the last date they want all forms of
the elected officials to be submitted to them.”
He said, “The outgoing governor and the
deputy also assured me that they will submit their own today (Friday)
because they have collected the forms and sent their people for guidance
on how to go about it. We have guided them and they said they will
submit it today.”
Also reacting on Friday, the Director of
CCB in Gombe State, Panyi Baira, said, “Although the deadline is yet to
pass, they are complying with the bureau. They will comply before the
May 28 deadline.
However, sources within the bureau in the state were complaining that the level of total compliance was minimal.
CCB demands bank statements, title documents
Meanwhile, findings by Saturday PUNCH
revealed that governors, ministers and other political office holders
were expected to submit their six-month bank statement alongside their
asset declaration forms.
They will be required to appear later
before CCB team in their states to present title documents of some of
the assets they claim belong to them in the asset forms.
Governors rush to meet submission deadline
Outgoing and returning governors have
intensified their efforts to meet Tuesday deadline for submission
of their asset declaration forms.
While Governor Simon Lalong of Plateau
through his Senior Special Assistant on Media and Publicity, Mr Mark
Longyen, said he would meet the deadline in response to an inquiry by
one of our correspondents in Jos on Friday, Governor Rochas Okorocha of
Imo State, who spoke through his media aide, Anayo Chukwu, said he
would do the needful before leaving office.
Ogbonnaya Ikokwu, the Chief Press
Secretary to Abia State Governor Okezie Ikpeazu, Mr Enyinnaya Appolos,
said the governor would summit his form to the CCB before the
expiration on Tuesday.
He said, “The governor is a law-abiding
citizen, he has no problems with compiling with what the law says
regarding the declaration of his assets. We will surely summit the form
before his second term inauguration.”
Benue State Governor Samuel Ortom said he had complied with the constitutional provision on asset declaration.
The Special Adviser to the governor on Media, Tahav Agerzua, disclosed this on Friday.
Senators, Reps, rush to meet deadline
Findings by Saturday Punch showed that
elected senators and House of Representatives members had started making
frantic efforts to fill and submit their assets declaration forms to
the Code of Conduct Bureau before the June 11 inauguration day for the
Ninth Assembly.
Investigations by our correspondents
during the week revealed that many of the incoming and returning federal
legislators were already complying with the mandatory constitutional
requirement.
Some of the new lawmakers who spoke with Saturday PUNCH said they would do everything possible to submit the documents before the day of inauguration.
It was learnt that the management of the
nation’s apex legislative institution even made it easier for the
incoming federal parliamentarians by procuring the forms from the CCB
and distributing to them during their orientation programme held in
April.
Speaking on behalf of his colleagues,
the Chairman, Forum of House of Representatives First-Time Members, Mr
Olubunmi Tunji-Ojo, said newly-elected lawmakers had started complying
with the constitutional guidelines.
He told our correspondents on Friday
that his members were doing everything possible to ensure they meet up
with the constitutional requirements before the day of inauguration.
Tunji-Ojo said, “We are all bound by the
rules and regulations of this country as law-abiding citizens. Nobody
is above the law. If anybody has nothing to hide, then he or she could
come clean.
“We have to declare what we have as
assets and let the government have the records. It is part of fighting
corruption. We must fight corruption in a pro-active manner.”
Also reacting to the issue on behalf of
the National Assembly management, the Director of Information, Rawlings
Agada, said, “It is part of the decision that we took during the
orientation by making the forms as part of the requirements for their
registration.
“As a matter of fact, the management was
proactive by going to the Code of Conduct Bureau to collect the forms
and make them available to the elected lawmakers during the orientation
in April.”
Anti-graft agency to invite those with established cases after May 29
Meanwhile, the Economic and Financial
Crimes Commission and the Nigerian Financial Intelligence Unit have
intensified surveillance on financial transactions by outgoing
government officials, Saturday PUNCH has learnt.
Towards this end, operatives of the EFCC
and their counterparts in the NFIU have been asked to be on the lookout
for evidence of looting of public funds/any suspicious financial
activity by outgoing government officials, especially state governors.
An operative in one of the agencies, who
spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not authorised to speak
to the media, said the anti-graft agencies had gathered evidence against
a number of outgoing governors and were on the lookout for last minute
transactions “which could serve as icing on the cake on some of these
cases.”
A source in the NFIU, who explained the situation to Saturday PUNCH,
in Abuja, on Friday, noted that the unit was not leaving anything to
chance as it was working with sister agencies at “home and abroad” to
halt money laundering and terrorism financing.
“All transactions which fall into
certain categories are reported to us. On our part, we analyse the
information and forward same to the appropriate security agency for
further action.”
When asked if there was a special
attention on governors, he said, “It doesn’t matter whether the person
is a governor or an ordinary person on the street who is being used as a
front within or outside this country, provided the transaction goes
through the financial system, it will be flagged and we will get those
involved.”
An EFCC operative who spoke on condition
of anonymity because of the sensitivity of the issue said, “We have
outgoing governors who are unaware we have built cases around their
illegal activities while they were in government.
“Making the names of such people public at this point is like asking them to go into hiding.”
Attempts to get a reaction from the
spokesperson for the NFIU, Sani Tukur, were futile. Calls to his mobile
telephone number indicated that it was switched off; a response to a
text message sent to him was still being awaited as of the time of
filing this report.
However, the acting Media Head of the EFCC, Tony Orilade, while responding to enquiries from Saturday PUNCH
as to whether the commission was going to arrest any of the outgoing
governors and how many of them were involved, said, “We don’t discuss
ongoing investigations on the pages of the newspapers.
“If we have done our investigations and
we have a prima facie case on anyone, of course, we will go after them
at the expiration of their immunity on May 29th.
“Whoever has a case based on our
discreet investigations, we will wait till when they no longer have
immunity before inviting them for questioning.”
Speaking on the issue, the Executive
Director, Civil Societies Legislative and Advocacy Centre, Auwual Musa,
said, “We will expect a lot of activity from the EFCC as soon as the
handover process is completed.
“Some of these outgoing governors don’t deserve to walk free with the amount of public funds they converted to private use.
“It will be an opportunity for this
administration which has made the fight against corruption one of its
campaign promises to prove to Nigerians that belonging to the ruling
party is not equal to immunity from prosecution.”
CCB ignores request for Acting CJN Tanko Muhammad’s assets declaration form
Meanwhile, the CCB has shunned the request by Saturday PUNCH for the assets declaration form submitted by the Acting Chief Justice of Nigeria, Justice Tanko Muhammad.
The bureau had, as of Friday, yet to
respond to the newspaper’s letter which was received by the office of
the Chairman of CCB, Prof. Muhammed Isah, on April 25.
The request by the newspaper was
anchored on the provision of the Freedom of Information Act, 2011, which
makes it mandatory for the bureau to respond to a request made on the
strenght of the Act within seven days.
A public institution such as the CCB,
from which information is sought under the FoI Act, must either provide
the requested information or give the reasons on why such request cannot
be granted, within seven days.
But 30 days after the SATURDAY PUNCH’s letter was received by the CCB chairman, no response has been given to the request.
In its letter dated February 24, 2019
and received by the CCB chairman the next day, the newspaper, had said
of the request for the Acting CJN’s assets declaration form, “We
respectfully ask you to make this available as this would deepen
transparency and accountability, which are what the Federal Government
under President Muhammadu Buhari preaches”
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