September 27, 2012 by Agency Reporter
President
Goodluck Jonathan has declared his assets and has no case to answer, Dr
Sam Saba, the Chairman of the Code of Conduct Bureau, has said.
“As far as we are concerned, Mr
President has declared his assets, though not publicly. There is no law
that says that you should declare your assets publicly; it simply states
that you should declare your assets.
“What is important is that he has
declared his assets and when we go through his form and we discover any
area that is questionable, then we will take him to court,’’ he said.
Saba spoke through Alhaji Ibrahim Manzo,
the Federal Commissioner representing North-West in the CCB, who
represented him at a Compliance Training Workshop for Public officers on
Wednesday in Abuja.
He said the Bureau was doing its bit,
but that the public was not doing its own part by refusing to blow the
whistle on defaulters.
Saba, who noted that the fight against
corruption was the collective responsibility of all patriotic Nigerians,
said Nigerians should wake up to the task.
He said the aim of the training was to
sensitise public officers to the importance of assets declaration and
what was required of them while filling the form.
“If they know what they are being asked
and how to answer correctly, it will lessen our work and reduce the
burden of taking people to court for non-compliance,’’ he said.
He said education was the key to
understanding any issue, adding that the Bureau organised the
enlightenment programme in the hope that the National Universities
Commission would help in sending the message across through education.
Prof. Julius Okojie, the Executive
Secretary of the NUC, said the root of corruption in the country was
lack of provision of basic necessities of life and lack of knowledge of
basic societal norms.
Okojie said an individual’s behavioural
pattern was determined by the society because “what the society defines
as right, is what the people follow’’.
He said, “We know that there are issues,
but we must endeavour to be on the side of truth. When we learn to be
honest and stand on the side of truth, this country will be better for
all of us.’’
Alhaji Kabir Mashi, the Acting Chairman
of the Federal Inland Revenue Service, described the compliance
programme as “a very good and noble development’’, adding that with
interaction, there would always be a better understanding of critical
issues.
He said there were many questions that
were yearning for answers concerning the responsibility of the public
regarding the CCB operations and what was required of the citizens.
Mashi, who said the programme would help
in understanding the Bureau, gave the assurance that FIRS would ensure
compliance with the Bureau’s requirements.
The Comptroller General of the Nigeria
Customs Service, Abdullahi Dikko, who was represented by Comptroller
Nuhu Isa, urged the public to be proactive by declaring their assets
instead of waiting to face the law.
SOURCE: The Punch - Nigeria's Most Widely Read Newspaper27 September 2012.
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