Chairman
of the CCB, Mr. Sam Sada, who spoke exclusively to Vanguard through his Special
Assistant, Mr. Gwimi Sebastian Peter, said only the National Assembly is vested
with the powers to decide the terms and conditions under which such documents
could be made public.
The
chairman said even though the Constitution of Nigerian made it clear that the
agency should make available to the citizens the assets declared by public
officials, the same law vested the National Assembly with the power to decide
the terms and conditions for making such materials public.
Sada
explained that the CCB was ready to comply with the terms and conditions
specified by the National Assembly on the matter but would only do so once the
law was amended.
He said:
“While the Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria (1999) and the Code
of Conduct Bureau and Tribunal Act give the bureau powers to receive assets
declarations, verify, examine, keep in custody and enforce compliance when
there is a breach, the responsibility of determining how and on what terms
asset declarations will be made accessible to the public was left to the
National Assembly.
“Several
National Assemblies have come and gone since the establishment of the CCB without
addressing the matter.”
When his
attention was drawn to the provisions of the Freedom of Information Act, which
makes it compulsory for the CCB to make available to media houses and other
interested Nigerians the assets of public officers, the chairman said the FOI
Act could not override the provisions of the Nigerian Constitution.
He said
that there was a lacuna in the FOI Act, which makes it difficult for the bureau
to make public the assets declared by public figures.
Regarding
what Buhari and his vice submitted to the agency, the chairman said while it
was rather too early for Nigerians to ask the President and his vice to make
public their assets, it was necessary for them to exercise some patience and
see what the two leaders would do after having voluntarily filed their assets
with the CCB.

0 comments:
Post a Comment