From Okwe Obi, Abuja
An elder statesman, Dr Chike Obidigbo, has described the prosecution of former Anambra State Governor, Willie Obiano, by the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) as politically motivated.
Obidigbo, in a statement yesterday, regretted that the anti-graft agency seemed to have become a willing tool in the hands of desperate politicians and malicious businessmen with an axe to grind against their opponents.
“For EFCC to keep losing many court cases shows that all is not well with the commission’s standard operating mechanism,” he contended.
Obiano is standing trial at the Federal High Court, Abuja, on charges of allegedly stealing the state’s security votes amounting to N4bn while in office as governor from March 2014 to March 2022.
Obidigbo argued that the idea of prosecuting state governors after their tenure runs counter to the spirit and letter of the Nigerian Constitution.
He asserted that there was no way the same constitution that grants immunity to state chief executives would empower an external body to subject them to post-service inquisition, insisting that the EFCC should stop overstepping its constitutional bounds by arrogating to itself a superior role over the state House of Assembly.
He stated: “A lot of things are going topsy-turvy in this country. The harassment of state governors after their tour of duty is in total violation of constitutional provisions. In the presidential democracy which we pretend to practise, the legislature is the main organ of oversight on the activities of the executive.
“In recent times, EFCC has transformed itself into attack dogs, going after former governors in search of what is not missing. Governors are elected to serve the people, and as such, the people are better placed to police the governors through their representatives in the legislature.
“Security votes have been rendered opaque by the constitution, which categorises them as funds in a blind budget. So, if the constitution empowers state governors to implement the blind budget as they deem fit, EFCC should have no business searching for departed sums.”
He remarked that Obiano’s predicament is particularly distressing, not only because of the amount of money under investigation but also because the former governor is being punished by those who believe that the Anambra North Senatorial District, where he hails from, has nobody to come to his aid.
While reminding EFCC and its sponsors that there is God, Obidigbo noted: “There is no way a former governor should be dragged up and down in the name of fighting corruption without the input of his home state.
“It is based on this reality of political witch-hunt that I have decided to urge EFCC to leave Willie Obiano alone immediately.
“Why should Nigerian authorities derive pleasure in punishing her citizens, particularly Ndigbo?
“Obiano should be allowed to enjoy his deserved rest and take care of his health.
“He served his people to the best of his ability. As an elder, I am very concerned that the first governor to emerge from my zone should be subjected to this demeaning treatment.
“After all, how does N4bn compare to the hundreds of billions stolen by other governors? If after eight years as a state governor, all he could not account for, by EFCC’s reckoning, is a mere N4bn in today’s Nigeria, Obiano should be congratulated as a saint rather than persecuted. He should therefore be left alone to enjoy his liberty after a very stressful eight-year tenure.”
Furthermore, he wondered why former presidents, who enjoy the same constitutional immunity as state governors, are not subjected to post-service inquisition. He called on the National Assembly to ensure that the EFCC does not become an emerging danger to Nigeria’s democracy.
He noted that instead of serving as a deterrent, the EFCC’s investigation of former governors after their tenure only expands the circle of corruption, as operatives resort to extortion, blackmail, and the use of faceless individuals and groups to intimidate suspects.