N21bn donation: We can’t probe donors, says INEC
The Independent National Electoral
Commission has said that only security agencies can investigate any
party, person or company that violates any part of the country’s
Electoral Act.
The commission which however admitted
that it had the power to prosecute violators of the Act, explained that
before it could do so, it must have concrete evidence before it.
INEC’s Director of Voter Education and Publicity, Mr. Oluwole Osaze-Uzzi, stated this following an enquiry by The PUNCH
on whether the commission would investigate and prosecute the Peoples
Democratic Party, companies and individuals who donated over N21.27bn to
President Goodluck Jonathan’s electioneering.
Osaze-Uzzi said, “Before you prosecute,
won’t you investigate? Before you prosecute somebody, the person has to
be investigated. If a person shoots another man on the street, the
police cannot just charge him to court. They will have to follow a
process.
“Don’t forget that INEC has no powers to
investigate. But it has powers to prosecute. It is the security agencies
that investigate. We don’t have investigative powers; but we have
prosecutorial powers. If they have investigated and found out that
somebody was wrong, we will prosecute that person.
“It is after investigation that we can prosecute. And there must be an evidence that a crime has been committed.”
When asked if the commission had
contacted any of the security agencies over the issue, he replied: “I
can’t say yes or no as of now.”
A national commissioner in INEC, who
spoke with our correspondent on the condition of anonymity from Canada,
also said he was not aware if security agencies had started probing
anyone over the donations.
He said, “I am not aware whether the PDP
is under investigation for now. I don’t know and I have not asked. I can
find out later or after the holidays.
“Do you know of anybody that spent more
money for the party? Do you know anybody who violated the Electoral Act?
Are you familiar with the law of donation of money to political
parties? If yes, can you tell me one person who has broken that law? Is
it a question of whose money or that they have exceeded the limit? Don’t
deal with morality, deal with legality.
“There is a limit to what a sitting
President can spend. Give me evidence that the President has spent over
what he was supposed to have spent. Unofficially, I don’t know if
investigation by security agencies is now on because I am out of the
country and I have not asked colleagues in relevant departments. There
is a process that would be followed.”
When contacted, the Force Public
Relations Officer, Emmanuel Ojukwu, said the Police did not know about
the donations and the alleged violation of the electoral law by the
donors.
“So far, there is no complainant, before us “Ojukwu added.
Some lawyers, including Senior Advocates
of Nigeria, had on Tuesday called for the prosecution of the PDP and
those who donated the N21. 27bn for electioneering.
They said in separate ineterviews with The PUNCH that the donors breached the Electoral Act by exceeding the limit stipulated by the Electoral Act.
Section 91(9) of the Act reads, “An individual or other entity shall not donate more than N1,000,000 to any candidate.”
Sub-section 10 of the same section adds
that a presidential candidate “who knowingly acts in contravention of
this section commits an offence and on conviction is liable to a maximum
fine of N1m or imprisonment for a term of 12 months or both.”
Section 91(2) of the same Act states,
“The maximum election expenses to be incurred by a candidate at a
presidential election shall be N1bn.”
Meanwhile, the International Society
for Social Justice and Human Rights, has called on the Economic and
Financial Crimes Commission to probe the sources of funds donated for
Jonathan’s presidential campaign.
The Chancellor of the ISSJHR, Dr. Jackson Omenazu, described the development as a flagrant abuse of the Electoral Act.
Omanazu, in a telephone interview on
Wednesday, explained that the donation was aimed at gaining a
‘criminal advantage’ over other political parties.
He observed that since 80 per cent of the
donors had at one time or the other been entrusted with public funds,
the probability was high that some of them must have mismanaged such.
Omenazu said, “ From our investigation,
80 per cent of the donors are those who are being entrusted with public
funds. What they (PDP governors and other donors) have done is to
morally kidnap Mr. President so that he will not be able to ask them to
give account of how they managed public funds at their disposal.
“The PDP governors should have donated
from their individual pockets and not money belonging to their states.
It is a flagrant abuse of the required financial regulations and there
is a need for EFFC’s intervention.
“Mr. President’s silence is a tacit
approval of corruption. Political parties’ fund raising is supposed to
come from the grassroots.”
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