As the
face-off between the Office of the Attorney General of the Federation (AGF) and
the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) deepens, the Special
Assistant to President Muhammadu Buhari on Prosecution, Chief Okoi Obono-Obla,
has accused the anti-graft commission of compromising some of the high profile
corruption cases it is handling.
Obono-Obla
told Saturday Tribune in a telephone interview on Friday that the reason the
anti-graft agency had refused to hand over files of high-profile corruption
cases to the office of the AGF as requested was because they might have been
compromised.
According
to Obono-Obla, who was reacting to a statement made by a Senior Advocate of
Nigeria (SAN), Mr Femi Falana, on Channels television on Friday morning that
the EFCC is not answerable to the AGF, said the AGF, as the Chief Law Officer
of the country, has the constitutional supervisory role over the anti-graft
agency and all other agencies involved in the fight against corruption.
He
stressed that the EFCC is under the supervision of the AGF as Section 174 of
the 1999 Constitution (as amended) gives the AGF the powers to institute, take
over or discontinue any criminal proceedings in the country.
Obono-Obla,
who was recently appointed as the chairman of the Presidential Panel on
Recovery of Public Property, said the inability of the EFCC to conclude the
prosecution of the many high-profile corruption cases is giving the present
administration a great concern.
According
to him, Section 150 (1) of the Administration of Criminal Justice Act (ACJA)
2015 clothes the AGF with powers to issue advice or such other directive to the
police or any other law enforcement agency in respect of an offence created by
an Act of the National Assembly.
“AGF may
request from the police or any other agency for the case in any matter in
respect of an offence created by an Act of the National Assembly and the police
or other agency shall immediately send the case file as requested.
“The EFCC
may have compromised some of the high-profile corruption cases. That is why
they did not want to release the case files to the AGF as requested,” he said.
However,
efforts by Saturday Tribune to get in touch with the Senior Special Adviser to
the AGF and Minister of Justice, Comrade Salisu Othman, to confirm whether the
EFCC had handed the AGF case files of high-profile corruption cases as
requested, proved abortive as he refused to answer several calls made to his
phone.
He was
reported in the media to have said that the issue between his boss and the
acting chairman of the EFCC, Ibrahim Magu, was an official matter, which was
being handled officially.
Othman
said there was no cause for alarm since the parties involved were working for
the same government. (Saturday Tribune)
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