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Thursday 10 May 2012

We’ll Come After You, EFCC Warns Civil Servants



Leadership Editors's picture
 

The chairman of the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission, Mr. Ibrahim Lamorde, has counselled public servants not to indulge in any form of corruption and economic crime.
Lamorde stated this yesterday at the 4th national retreat on ethics and transparency for civil servants in Lagos. “EFCC is using the forum provided by this retreat to serve notice to all public servants at all levels of government that we will come after you if you compromise your positions and engage in fraudulent or corrupt practices,” the EFCC helmsman, who was represented by Dr. Jimmy Imo, his chief of staff, warned.
The three-day retreat with the theme “Credible and Transparent Conduct of Public Officers in Nigeria as key to National Transformation” was organised by the Office of the Accountant-General of the Federation in conjunction with the Centre for Economic Research and Policy Development.
“In those days if you wanted a job done efficiently, especially for the benefit of the citizenry, the Nigerian civil service could be trusted to creditably carry out the job. Today, the reverse is the case,” Lamorde said.
He said all that must change if the transformation agenda of President Goodluck Jonathan is to succeed. “To bring about the economic transformation of Nigeria, public servants must act ethically at all times in the discharge of their roles. No nation has ever developed or can sustain its development without a vibrant and credible public service,” he said.
He regretted that recent developments in the country show that public servants have abandoned the pursuit of excellence on the altar of greed and corruption. “It is because some public servants failed to act creditably that poverty prevails in the land and millions of young men and women who are graduates continue to roam our streets in search of elusive jobs.
The epileptic power supply, the near-total decay of infrastructures in the country from our roads, pipe-borne water, schools and hospitals – are all the consequence of the failure to act creditably,” he stated.
Lamorde charged participants to come up with practical measures to reverse the ugly trend.
Also speaking at the event was Senator Omar Hambagda, who represented Senate President David Mark. He bemoaned the erosion of the country’s value system. He said the country now values money and material things above integrity and hard work, warning that, if nothing concrete is done to restore our value system, the future of the younger generations was at risk.
Another speaker at the event was the head of service of the federation, Alhaji Isa Bello Sali, who was represented by Dr. M. Idris. He said the guiding principles of work ethics and values in the federal civil service include stewardship, trust, engagement, professionalism, accountability, leadership, selfishness, integrity, justice and fairness.
“I want to assure you that we will continue to place a very high premium on these virtues and will not condone apathy, lethargy and corruption as we set out to transform the service to meet the developmental agenda of government,” he said.
SOURCE: Leadership Newspaper, 10 May 2012. http://www.leadership.ng/nga/

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