Buhari’s appeal
Senate should accede to President’s request on passage of anti-corruption and other bills
President Muhammadu Buhari’s appeal to the National Assembly to
expedite the passage into law of some bills before the lawmakers is
welcome. The president made the request during a dinner he held in
honour of the National Assembly members at the Presidential Villa,
Abuja, as part of activities to mark his one year in office.
These include: the bill for Acts of Domestication of Agreements for
Avoidance of Double Taxation between Nigeria and South Korea, Spain and
Sweden, respectively; the Federal Capital Territory Appropriation Bill
2016; Money Laundering (Prevention and Prohibition) Bill 2016; Mutual
Legal Assistance in Criminal Matters Bill 2016; and the Statutory Budget
of the Niger Delta Development Commission 2016.
All these bills are important in their own right. Indeed, the
president’s appeal is all the more appreciable against the backdrop of
the fact that the National Assembly will complete one legislative year
on June 9. Some of these bills have been pending before the lawmakers
for months. Time is of the essence and the earlier these bills are
passed into law, the better for a government that is running against
time.
We need to domesticate the agreements reached between the country and
other countries to stem double taxation, which is inimical to doing
business. We cannot get the desired response on investments, whether
from foreign or local investors, if the taxes are not streamlined. No
investor wants to reel under the yoke of double or multiple taxation.
Also, there are issues begging for attention in the Federal Capital
Territory (FCT) which can only be addressed after funds have been
approved and released.
With regard to the Niger Delta, there is a lot to be done in the
region which is the goose that is laying the golden egg for the nation.
The Niger Delta Development Commission was created essentially to
accelerate the pace of development in the region. The country needs to
cool frayed nerves in the area and this cannot be possible unless the
National Assembly gives its consent to its statutory budget.
Perhaps most important of the bills that the president wants the
lawmakers to pass into law are the Mutual Legal Assistance in Criminal
Matters Bill and the Money Laundering (Prevention and Prohibition) Bill
2016.
It is instructive that the two bills were the first sent to the
Senate by the president for formal consideration. They were sent on
January 27. The Money Laundering Bill seeks to repeal the Money
Laundering (Prohibition) Act 2011 as amended in 2012, to “make
comprehensive provisions to prohibit the laundering of criminal
activities, expand the scope of money laundering, and provide protection
for employees of various institutions, bodies and professions who may
discover money laundering”.
The second bill, as the president noted in his letter to the Senate,
“seeks to facilitate the provision and obtaining by Nigeria of
international assistance in criminal matters.” These include “the
recovery, forfeiture or confiscation of property in respect of offences,
the restraining of dealings in property or the freezing of assets that
may be recovered, forfeited or confiscated in respect of offences.”
Without doubt, Nigeria needs these laws in view of the prevalence of
corruption in the country. David Cameron, the British Prime Minister,
drove the point vividly home when he told the Queen that Nigeria is
“fantastically corrupt”. Cameron was right; except that he did not say
that the present government in the country has been fighting the
cankerworm.
These laws are important to us because many of our politicians and
public officials who pilfered the treasury stashed their loot in foreign
countries and unless we have some legal understanding with these
countries, it would be difficult to retrieve our assets. Those who have
their own loot within we can easily deal with using the Money Laundering
Bill.
We urge the Senate to accede to the president’s request by expediting
action on these bills. The country needed them as early as yesterday.
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