EFCC secures 773 convictions in 11 years – Chairman
New EFCC chair, Ibrahim Lamorde, says he was not part of the wasteful trip and didn't collect estacode as claimed
“Economic and financial crimes constitute a great challenge
to the Nigerian economy and our nation’s image, both at home and
abroad.”
The Economic and Financial Crimes Commission, EFCC, on Friday said it
had secured more than 773 convictions and recovered billions of naira
since its inception in 2003. Ibrahim Lamorde, the Chairman of the Commission, disclosed this on
Friday in Sokoto while inaugurating the Usman Danfodiyo University
chapter of `Zero Tolerance Club, an anti-corruption club.
Mr. Lamorde, represented by Osita Nwajah, Deputy Director, Public
Affairs Department of the commission, also delivered a paper entitled: ”
Students should lead the fight against economic and financial crimes.” He said the war against corruption and financial crimes would only be won through collective efforts. “Economic and financial crimes constitute a great challenge to the
Nigerian economy and our nation’s image, both at home and abroad.
‘”The commission has been reorienting Nigerians not only to see the
devastating effects of corruption, economic and financial crimes in all
facets of our lives, but also to rise and do something about it,” he
said. Mr. Lamorde expressed concern on the involvement of students in cyber
crime, and warned them to desist from using the Internet to defraud
innocent people.
”On a daily basis, the commission arrests, detains and prosecutes
offenders in various cases of Internet scams,” he said; adding that 65
per cent of those arrested were undergraduates.
He said it hurts him so much to see the future leaders of Nigeria languish in jail, but added that the law must take its course.
In her contribution, Aisha Larai-Musa, Head of Public Enlightenment
and Re-Orientation Unit of the commission, also decried the high rate of
criminal activities among students of tertiary institutions.
She enumerated some of the crimes perpetrated by the students to
include examination malpractice, advance fee fraud, cyber crime,
extortion, bribery, cultism, identity theft, among others.
She said the inauguration of the club, instituted in collaboration
with the National Association of Nigerian Students, NANS, was part of
efforts to find lasting solution to the problems.
“The club, which is non-partisan and non-profit making, was conceived
to promote awareness on corruption among students in tertiary
institutions,” Ms. Larai-Musa said. In a remark, the Vice-Chancellor of the University, Riskuwa Shehu,
represented by his Deputy, Abubakar Bagudo, urged Nigerians to
“collectively and frontally fight corruption”.
“Unless this is done, the dream of achieving sustainable growth and
development in Nigeria would continue to elude the nation,” Mr. Shehu
warned. The Chairman of the occasion, Abubakar Usman, commended the
commission for introducing the club, saying corruption has become ”a
hydra-headed monster thwarting the socioeconomic development of Nigeria
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