Nigerian
President Muhammadu Buhari made tackling corruption one of the key priorities
of his government, but there have been more high-profile arrests than
convictions
|
From the lowest local
magistrates all the way up to the Supreme Court in the capital Abuja, the
wheels of justice can turn painfully slowly in Nigeria.
AFP
report continues:
Patience
is a necessity when cases are frequently adjourned for want of a document, an
official, a witness or even a defendant.
The
lengthy process -- where cases can take years, if not decades, to resolve --
often resembles a maddening, judicial Groundhog Day.
But
while Nigeria is not alone in having a dysfunctional court system, its ability
to cope with a slew of corruption cases is coming under scrutiny as elections
approach in 2019.
The
Chief Justice of Nigeria, Justice Walter Onnoghen, said recently there were
1,124 corruption cases before the courts.
For
some that is a sign that President Muhammadu Buhari is following through on his
election campaign pledge to get tough on those behind the rampant theft of
public funds.
Dozens
of high-profile figures, many of them part of the previous administration of
Goodluck Jonathan or linked to his People's Democratic Party, have since been charged
and put on trial.
Buhari
has called corruption "Nigeria's number one enemy" and said his
government was tackling it "in earnest" by tightening financial
procedures and closing loopholes.
But
there have so far been more high-profile arrests than convictions -- and that
could be problematic should Buhari decide to seek re-election, analysts said.
- 'Shoddy' investigations
-
The
74-year-old Buhari recently acknowledged long-standing problems of delays,
under-funding and under-staffing in the courts, and the need for institutional
reform.
Idayat
Hassan, head of the Centre for Democracy and Development in Abuja, said making
substantial in-roads into the backlog before 2019 would be a "challenge to
the system".
Some
corruption cases date back as far as 2003, when Buhari was making his first --
unsuccessful -- bid for the presidency.
But
during the 2015 election campaign, Buhari and his All Progressives Congress
(APC) party promised to overhaul the police and justice system.
They
also pledged to strengthen the main anti-corruption bodies, the Economic and
Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) and Independent Corrupt Practices Commission
(ICPC).
Buhari
last month accused "corrupt elements" of using "any weapon to
fight back, mainly judicial obstruction and political diversion".
But
political analyst Chris Ngwodo said: "There's been a lot of noise and
sloganeering... This administration has talked a good game. But it hasn't
followed up in taking much action."
Hassan
said some of the EFCC investigations had been exposed as "shoddy",
allowing experienced defence lawyers to seek adjournments to buy time for their
wealthy clients.
Clement
Nwankwo, executive director at the Policy and Legal Advisory Centre in Abuja,
also suggested there had been too much focus on show than substance.
"There's
so much effort to claim credit by arresting people and announcing arrests.
There's no proper investigation," he said.
- Political impact -
The
APC's 2015 election manifesto promised the creation of special courts to hear
corruption cases but it has yet to be implemented.
Should
Buhari decide to seek a second term, how he and his party position themselves
on the fight against corruption will be revealing.
The
former army general has had a no-nonsense reputation for probity since he headed
a military government in the 1980s.
Matthew
Page, a former US State Department official and a specialist on corruption and
Nigeria, said the arrests and charges still gave Buhari a political bounce. He
blamed inexperienced or possibly "compromised" judges for slowing
down prosecutions.
But
with so many people on trial from the previous government and the now main
opposition, Buhari and his administration have been accused of a political
witch-hunt.
The
perception of settling scores has even been enhanced because of Buhari's delay
in taking action against his own political allies accused of corruption.
"In
that sense, it will be much more of a struggle to convince people that he's a
uniquely incorruptible president... in 2019," said Ngwodo.
Nwankwo
said the repeated delays and lack of convictions risked eroding the already
flimsy trust of Nigerians in their leaders and institutions.
As
time passes without a conviction, the more there is a "trail of concern
about the process of the arrest and all the parade of suspects", he added.
"That
leads to suspicions that it might just be a political game to hoodwink citizens
into believing there's actually a government effort to tackle corruption,"
he added.
Prosecutions need to be seen to be occurring and institutions equipped to do so but currently, the opposite is the case, he added.
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