The Executive Chairman of the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission, EFCC, Ola Olukoyede has called for a systemic revolution in some institutionalized ways of governance to fight corruption.
He said Nigerians are not innately and could fare better in integrity given a different positive approach.
Olukoyede stated this on Friday in Abuja when he hosted a delegation of senior officials of Katsina State Government, led by the governor, Dikko Umaru Radda.
The EFCC boss who lamented that corruption was feeding much on some defective systems in the country, said progress could only be made when such systems are corrected.
“Fundamentally, there is nothing patently wrong with us as human beings. Nigerians are not different from other people in the world. Nothing is wrong with us as Nigerians.
“We are not patently corrupt. The problem we have is the systems we run. In some of our systems, if we bring an angel to run them, the angel would be contaminated in 24 hours.
READ ALSO: EFCC re-arraigns Nyako, son over N29b fraud
“If we can deal with our systems, put the right thing in place, you will discover that Nigerians are very amenable. You will see people change”, he said.
Olukoyede stated that “none of our cultures, customs and the faiths we practice support corruption, but over the years, Nigerians have institutionalized certain systems that make us vulnerable to corruption such that corruption now seems to be a way of life.”
While lauding governor Radda for his efforts with his state’s Fiscal Responsibility Commission, FRC and Treasury Single Account TSA, he pledged the support of the EFCC to help him drive transparency, financial discipline and accountability in his state.
“We have so much responsibility on our hands in this our own time to make changes. So I am going to encourage and support your good policies.”
“I want to congratulate you on the establishment of the Fiscal Responsibility Commission which will ensure that budgetary allocations are implemented the way they were intended and that people comply with financial regulations.
“Your implementation of the TSA is also part ways of instilling financial discipline and accountability in the system. It is when people do not know what comes in or have control over what goes out that corruption comes in.
“I pledge our support to help you to ensure that there is transparency, financial discipline and accountability in the running of your administration,” he said.
Governor Radda disclosed that the visit was driven by his desire to partner with the EFCC in the fight against corruption in his state and to seek the capacity building of his state’s financial managers by the Commission especially in the areas of identifying leaks in the state’s finances and ways to plug them.
“The main purpose of my visit is to extend our desire to partner with the Commission in the fight against corruption.
“We are a new government and we have a lot to learn as we navigate our administrative responsibilities. I would want our commissioners, accounting officers, procurement officers and those saddled with budget implementation to take advantage of your Academy and acquire the knowledge to do the right thing in their roles,”he said.
He further noted that as a new administration, he is exploring new ways of reducing economic and financial crimes in his government, adding that fighting corruption has become imperative to manage the resources available for development.
Credible News.ng











