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Five Reasons Nigeria Dropped On Corruption Perception Index - Politics - Nairaland

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Five Reasons Nigeria Dropped On Corruption Perception Index by powerfulguy: 4:52pm On Jan 28, 2021
https://www.nairaland.com/6387288/nigeria-2nd-most-corrupt-country#98514898

The Civil Society Legislative Advocacy Centre (CISLAC)/ Transparency
International (TI) Nigeria on Thursday released its 2020 Corruption Perception Index (CPI).

According to the index, Nigeria experienced a striking decline, the worst the nation has seen since 2015.

The CPI aggregates data from 8 (eight) different sources that provide
perceptions by Nigeria’s business community and country experts on the level of corruption in the public sector.

Transparency International’s 2020 CPI showed that Nigeria scored 25 out of 100 points, dropping to 149 out of the 180 countries surveyed, taking the nation three steps down from the 146 scored in 2019.

A proper examination of the index as published by Transparency International shows that Nigeria’s decline in its corruption fight is predicated on five (5) weaknesses.

Below are the 5 reasons Nigeria dropped on the Corruption Perception Index for 2020.

1. Absence of transparency in the COVID-19 pandemic

According to TI, in response to the COVID-19 pandemic out of Nigeria’s responsibility, there has been a lack of transparency in the emergency response of the government.

Coupled with the gap in coordination, the process has been fraught by the incessant flouting of procurement guidelines, hoarding of relief materials, and diversion of these materials which are then used as personal souvenirs presented to political party loyalists and close associates.

The agency said it is disturbing that in some cases, supplies donated by a group of well-meaning Nigerian business persons, corporate entities, development partners, and others under the Coalition Against COVID-19 (CACOVID) were left inexplicably undistributed, and in some cases rotten, by the federal and state governments.

While these occurrences are not specific to Nigeria, citizens are yet to see concrete action by the anti-graft agencies on these issues.

2. Nepotism in the public service appointments and promotions

In the past year, the anti-corruption agency said it witnessed nepotism and favoritism in the appointment and promotion of some public officers.

For example, all Nigerians remember the controversy which trailed the decision of the National Judicial Council (NJC) when at least 8 (eight) of the 33 judges recommended for appointment by the NJC were either children or relatives of current or retired Justices of the Supreme or Appeal Courts.

The Nigerian Ministry of Foreign Affairs in itself is not an exception with allegations of individuals promoted on the basis of their relationship and other affiliations as against merit and other criteria stated in the rule books.

Reports around the commercialization of employment into various institutions including admission into various tertiary educational institutions put the nation in a bad light. The extortion for the acquisition of services like healthcare, passports renewal, and obtaining of visas creates a negative perception of corruption in Nigeria.

3. Lack of adequate anti-corruption legal frameworks and interference by politicians in the operation of law enforcement agencies

CISLAC/TI said it is not oblivious of some successes recorded by the Nigerian
government such as the Transparency portal managed and implemented by the Office of the Auditor-General.

According to CISLAC/TI, these activities have the potential to bring corruption and wastefulness of the government agencies at all levels to the end.

“We fully support this initiative”.

Important anti-corruption legislations such as the Companies and Allied Matters Act (CAMA, 2020) and the Police Act 2020 undeniably signal a move in the right direction. However, more needs to be done to enact legislation and implement it.

The repeated failure to enact the Proceeds of Crime Act as a legal framework for the management and utilization of recovered assets in Nigeria which is one of the key pillars of this administration’s anti-corruption strategy is inexplicable!

There is still a lack of accountability in some quarters of government, especially in terms of beneficial owners of lucrative government contracts. Out of millions of corrupt transactions experienced annually, only a few hundreds of offenders are investigated, let alone convicted on corruption
charges.

The current scenario where different institutions like the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC), Independent Corrupt Practices and Other Related Offences Commission (ICPC), Code of Conduct Bureau, National Drug Law Enforcement Agency the Nigerian Police, and other agencies overlap with mandates and lack synergy is not sustainable and have proven to be leeway to corruption.

The infighting and politicizing of the anti-corruption agenda may be evident by the way of suspending the Acting Chairman of the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) Mr Ibrahim Magu. The accusation that he failed to give a proper account of assets recovered by his agency is questionably provided no clear legal and policy asset recovery framework exists.

CISLAC/TI pointed out that the theatric handling of the suspension of Mr. Magu could have been done better and this greatly contributes to the negative image of Nigeria’s anti-corruption campaign. The absence of a Whistle Blower Protection Legislation leaves Nigerian anti-corruption agencies deprived of key insider intelligence without which an anti-corruption crusade is a mission impossible.

4: Prevalence of bribery and extortion in the Nigerian Police

The year 2020 witnessed the #EndSARS protests which saw young people across the nation demanding an end to police brutality and corruption. A factor that led to this protest was widespread bribery and extortion by law enforcement officials especially the police.

The first and second national corruption surveys conducted by the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC) in partnership with the government’s National Bureau of Statistics (NBS) and released in 2017 and 2019 both showed the Nigerian Police is the institution with the highest prevalence of bribery amongst the institutions measured.

While there have been commendable efforts by the Police Complaints Response Unit (CRU) in reducing police abuses, there is a need to scale up the efforts of the unit to meet the demands of citizens as contained in the Police Act 2020.

5. Security sector corruption

From violent extremism and insurgency to piracy, kidnapping for ransom, attacks on oil infrastructure, drug trafficking, and organized crime, Nigeria
faces a host of complex security challenges.

These threats typically involve irregular forces and are largely societally based. They are most prevalent and persistent in marginalized areas where communities feel high levels of distrust toward the government—often built up over many years. At their root, these security challenges are symptoms of larger failures in governance.

As many of Nigeria’s security threats are domestic in nature, the Nigeria Police Force (NPF) is often the primary security interface with the public. However, low levels of public trust in the police inhibit the cooperation needed to be effective against these societally based threats.

Nigeria’s security system is also perceived to be politicized. Leaders are often appointed based on their political allegiances rather than on their experience or capabilities in law enforcement. As a result, the quality of leadership at the helm of affairs suffers. Appointees under such circumstances feel loyalty to their political patron rather than to their institutions or citizens. How and to whom the law is applied is not consistent. Norms of professionalism and ethics are weakened.

The problem of non-meritocratic leadership is exacerbated by a command-and-control structure that is opaque, centralized, and often chaotic. security leaders who have not earned their position lose the respect of their colleagues, who are then more likely to abandon a unit when facing an armed threat. Insufficient understanding or commitment to effectiveness among a force’s leadership often
results in the neglect of training. Problems of police engagement with
communities are thus perpetuated.

The continuous opaqueness in the utilization of security votes contributes to corruption perception in the country and this process must be reformed especially when we have security agencies living and working in very poor conditions.

Multiple reports of police officers protesting non-payment of allowances for election duties are now seen. The result of this is the widespread kidnappings, banditry, and terrorism ravaging different parts of the country.

https://www.channelstv.com/2021/01/28/five-key-reasons-why-nigeria-dropped-on-corruption-perception-index/amp/?__twitter_impression=true

4 Likes 2 Shares

Re: Five Reasons Nigeria Dropped On Corruption Perception Index by inoki247: 4:54pm On Jan 28, 2021
we know before say he no fight anything before na shadow he just dey follow...

18 Likes 2 Shares

Re: Five Reasons Nigeria Dropped On Corruption Perception Index by OVB123: 5:10pm On Jan 28, 2021
When he came in 2015, we thought he will make the difference but now what we are seeing is a different ball game.
For me President Buhari is a monumental and a collossal failure.

131 Likes 6 Shares

Re: Five Reasons Nigeria Dropped On Corruption Perception Index by ThreeEyedRaven: 5:11pm On Jan 28, 2021
Someone adviced "You cannot close shop to chase criminals"

Then someone responded

"If you don't chase criminals you will have nothing left in your shop"

Years down the line... the criminals them no catch ..yet nothing remain inside the shop.
Criminalism increased exponentially under them ... More shops were closed due to nothing left to sell

112 Likes 13 Shares

Re: Five Reasons Nigeria Dropped On Corruption Perception Index by Sammy07: 5:12pm On Jan 28, 2021
6. Not obeying court order.
7. Bastardization of the judiciary by the Governors and president.. Giving SUVs out like ... angry


The last hope of a common man

15 Likes

Re: Five Reasons Nigeria Dropped On Corruption Perception Index by valenu(m): 5:17pm On Jan 28, 2021
ThreeEyedRaven:
Someone adviced "You cannot close shop to chase criminals"

Then someone responded

"If you don't chase criminals you will have nothing left in your shop"

Years down the line... the criminals them no catch ..yet nothing remain inside the shop.
Criminalism increased exponentially under them ... More shops were closed due to nothing left to sell

Hahahaha! PDP vs APC

1 Like

Re: Five Reasons Nigeria Dropped On Corruption Perception Index by money121(m): 5:26pm On Jan 28, 2021
Ok
Re: Five Reasons Nigeria Dropped On Corruption Perception Index by NwaNimo1(m): 5:27pm On Jan 28, 2021

19 Likes 1 Share

Re: Five Reasons Nigeria Dropped On Corruption Perception Index by Godpikin4real(f): 5:27pm On Jan 28, 2021
shocked
Re: Five Reasons Nigeria Dropped On Corruption Perception Index by Sabadon(m): 5:27pm On Jan 28, 2021
Forget the long write up....its simply because "NIGERIANS ARE CORRUPT"

8 Likes 3 Shares

Re: Five Reasons Nigeria Dropped On Corruption Perception Index by Baawaa(m): 5:27pm On Jan 28, 2021
U
Re: Five Reasons Nigeria Dropped On Corruption Perception Index by Factfinder1(m): 5:27pm On Jan 28, 2021
Buhari is a failure

5 Likes

Re: Five Reasons Nigeria Dropped On Corruption Perception Index by tesppidd: 5:27pm On Jan 28, 2021
Rubbish.

Is there anything mentioned here that wasn't happening in this country for the past 30 years?

It is called corruption perception. Most people don't even know this;
It doesn't necessarily mean that the country has become more corrupt..

Why the corruption index rises is that corruption activities are making the headlines much more than before.
That is due to Moore exposure.

The number of corruption cases with the EFCC and in the courts is unprecedented in the history of this country.
The number of EFCC prosecutions and convictions is also unprecedented in our history.

A lot of people are so ignorant, they didn't know how this corruption index works.

6 Likes 2 Shares

Re: Five Reasons Nigeria Dropped On Corruption Perception Index by incogni2o: 5:27pm On Jan 28, 2021
Just Five?

I am sure the others are still there, just that Covid caused this five.
Re: Five Reasons Nigeria Dropped On Corruption Perception Index by Starcrest1: 5:27pm On Jan 28, 2021
Nigeria is a naturally corrupt location. People who benefit from corruption never complain about it. People who complain only do so because they are not benefiting. Transparency starts with everybody.

This ain't brilliant.....

7 Likes 1 Share

Re: Five Reasons Nigeria Dropped On Corruption Perception Index by Okortor: 5:28pm On Jan 28, 2021
2. Nepotism in the public service appointments and promotions

This especially

6 Likes

Re: Five Reasons Nigeria Dropped On Corruption Perception Index by AfricanMusicTv: 5:28pm On Jan 28, 2021
Ok
Re: Five Reasons Nigeria Dropped On Corruption Perception Index by Magldsns: 5:28pm On Jan 28, 2021
Casted
Re: Five Reasons Nigeria Dropped On Corruption Perception Index by Factfinder1(m): 5:28pm On Jan 28, 2021
Theres zero transparency in this shitty administration

2 Likes

Re: Five Reasons Nigeria Dropped On Corruption Perception Index by Vickym1(f): 5:29pm On Jan 28, 2021
Everything about this administration is corruption

3 Likes

Re: Five Reasons Nigeria Dropped On Corruption Perception Index by ablejesus26(m): 5:30pm On Jan 28, 2021
ok

It is indubitably crystalline and pellucid that all Apc has to offer is backwardness,languish and lies

nothing more nothing less

how did we even get ourselves into this mess

3 Likes

Re: Five Reasons Nigeria Dropped On Corruption Perception Index by visijo(m): 5:31pm On Jan 28, 2021
The word "bae", used by many as a replacement for "baby", is the Danish word for "poop."
Re: Five Reasons Nigeria Dropped On Corruption Perception Index by baski92(m): 5:31pm On Jan 28, 2021
Baawaa:
U
Are you ok
Re: Five Reasons Nigeria Dropped On Corruption Perception Index by Nobody: 5:32pm On Jan 28, 2021
many talk just one word to describe all this English


BUHARI

2 Likes

Re: Five Reasons Nigeria Dropped On Corruption Perception Index by ChocolateWine(f): 5:33pm On Jan 28, 2021
cheesy

APC explaining corruption.

Ah I forgot, I'm sure it's PDP that caused it.

1 Like

Re: Five Reasons Nigeria Dropped On Corruption Perception Index by gurunlocker: 5:33pm On Jan 28, 2021
grin
Re: Five Reasons Nigeria Dropped On Corruption Perception Index by Nobody: 5:33pm On Jan 28, 2021
Lol. This is a corrupt government sponsored article!!

The ministry of humanitarian affair is currently sharing over 2billion dollars in cash. After sharing over 150million dollars in cash courtesy school feeding when schools where on lockdown. And you only list these light matters as the reason of our dirty looks in world stage?

Here is a picture of Bihari and his best friend, the Guinean President, the most corrupt man on earth current

5 Likes 1 Share

Re: Five Reasons Nigeria Dropped On Corruption Perception Index by Muhylonaire007: 5:36pm On Jan 28, 2021
And they will still tell you that the country is better than the way they met.
Walai, God will punish all of una.

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