20 million Nigerians to join war against corruption as YIAGA and MacArthur Foundation collaborate

Uncategorized

•YIAGA Executive Director Samson ItodoYouth Initiative for Advocacy, Growth & Advancement (YIAGA) with support from the MacArthur Foundation has launched #BounceCorruption. Bounce Corruption is designed to mobilise citizens especially youth to lead the war against corruption and impunity as well as hold public institutions and officials accountable at the local and national level. The project seeks to build resistance against corruption by exposing corrupt practices and demanding prosecution of indicted suspects.

Through #BounceCorruption, YIAGA will establish resource platforms effective anti-corruption campaigns and public outreach. The platforms will promote anti-corruption efforts by other stakeholders fighting against corruption and promoting public accountability. More importantly, #BounceCorruption will aspire to inculcate the values of integrity, patriotism, transparency and accountability in citizens. #BounceCorruption will facilitate collaboration and networking with different stakeholders involved in the campaign against corruption and impunity in Nigeria.

Decades of institutional weakness and bad leadership have fueled rent seeking behaviours and corruption in Nigeria. The return of democracy in 1999 birthed new reforms and anti-corruption programs by former President Obasanjo to clean the public service and stop the hemorrhage in public resources. But ‘politics’ and political calculations soon short-lived many reforms and the anti-corruption program. Under the immediate past administration, corruption reached new heights due to the reluctance of the state to combat the menace.

Nigeria is experiencing an unprecedented resurgence in the fight against corruption under the President Muhammadu Buhari administration. The present administration has demonstrated strong will to fight corruption through the prosecution of high profile individuals alleged to have been involved in corrupt practices. Two executive bills aimed at strengthening the legal architecture against corruption have been presented to the National Assembly for passage. Nine mutual agreements and treaties on corruption have been signed as well as the launch of a National Anti-Corruption Strategy. A Presidential Advisory Committee on Anti-corruption was constituted as part of the Federal government’s effort to reinvigorate anti-corruption. According to the Federal Government, N430 billion (in naira and foreign currencies) were recovered as proceeds of corruption between January 1 – August 30, 2017. 137 convictions were secured during the same timeline.

Despite the efforts of the Federal government, there is stiff opposition against its anti-corruption program. The fight against corruption is being threatened by the lack of diligent prosecution by the state, delay in the prosecution of high-profile cases, bottlenecks in freezing and recovery of stolen assets etc. Worst still is the politicisation of the anti-corruption war without quickly rooting the fight in the Nigerian people. YIAGA recognises that the fight against corruption cannot succeed without the support, partnership and collaboration of citizens. No anti-corruption program or campaign succeeds without citizen’s engagement. It is therefore important for citizens who are the main victims of corruption to rise against corruption.

YIAGA believes fighting corruption requires a bifurcated approach. This involves tackling the kleptocratic attitude of public officials, systemic fiscal leakages and impunity through the instrumentality of the rule of law and the evolution of new norms, attitudes and behaviours that abhors corruption. Exposing corrupt practices and advocating for the prosecution of corrupt individuals is another approach of tackling corruption. Guided by this, the project is designed as a citizen’s movement to achieve the following objectives;

1. Frame corruption as a socio-economic and political problem demanding urgent wide public support;

2. Unveiling and exposing corruption at local, state and National level;

3. Empower citizens to fight corruption and impunity

The goal of Bounce Corruption is to strengthen anti-corruption in Nigeria by amplifying corruption investigations and empowering and mobilising citizens especially Nigerian youths to demand accountability. Our approach entails promoting the role of traditional and social media in anti-corruption programing, campaign, advocacy, and learning; promoting partnership between media and youth groups on anti-corruption and empowering and strengthening community systems for accountability and anti-corruption. Through Bounce Corruption, 20 million Nigerians will be mobilised to rise against corruption in their community through radio, social media and public debates. 40 Bounce Corruption radio ambassadors from the 36 states of federation have been selected and trained on using radio for anti-corruption advocacy. The project will also increase the demand for accountability and prosecution of corruption cases through whistleblowing, campaigns and public interest litigation. Lastly, #BounceCorruption will facilitate access to information on corruption and anti-corruption efforts through using data, technology, media reporting of corruption cases.

1 thought on “20 million Nigerians to join war against corruption as YIAGA and MacArthur Foundation collaborate

  1. The Federal Government is not making any effort to eradicate corruption and it cannot do that. Nigeria and civil service is more that 1000 years in Nigeria. The youths today do not know history and should stop discussion on what they do not know. It is a personal affair to deal with corruption. As a youth in 1960-1964 I used to ask my father to claim transport journey from Zaria to Katsina or Zaria to Kaduna. He told me to claim from Zaria to Kaduna. Being indigene of Katsina it is legitimate I claim the fare to Katsina. But the disembarking point is Kaduna. In 1967 I bought fried groundnut at Mina railway station. I was given change and I did not count until the train departed. There was an addition of one shilling. On my final return trip from Lagos, I disembarked at Mina and tried to locate the lady selling the fired groundnut. I could not locate her. I then threw the one shilling on the floor calling Allah to witness. It is my knowledge of Islam that saved me. Is Islam taught today?

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.