The Economic and Financial Crimes Commission, EFCC says, the Commission has designed a new corruption prevention model to complement its enforcement activities.
The EFCC Chairman Abdulrasheed Bawa who spoke through his Chief of Staff, Hadiza Zubairu Gamawa at the ongoing capacity building workshop for members of boards of parastatal, commission and government agencies, organised by the Bureau of Public Service Reforms, said it has been established that it was far cheaper to prevent than fight corruption.
He said he reiterated his statement before the Senate at his confirmation that “I am going to fight corruption, not corrupt persons.”
According to him, “the prevention model will incorporate fraud risk assessment and proactive measures to address corruption vulnerabilities in public corporations, particularly revenue-generating agencies.”
“The EFCC will work with these institutions to identify corrupt conduits, and ensure they are eliminated from the system,” Bawa said.
Speaking further, he disclosed that the Commission will be conducting quarterly workshops on the ills of economic crimes for enhanced public consciousness of the malaise.
The anti-corruption czar also took time to x-ray the activities of the agency and the special powers conferred on it by Section 7 of the EFCC Act. “It is the responsibility of the EFCC to be proactive and deny the perpetrators of economic crime access to enjoy the proceeds of crime,” he said.
The Director-General, Bureau of Public Service Reforms (BPSR) Dasuki Ibrahim Arabi applauded the Chairman and the Commission for the presentation.
He added that the Bureau was pleased that the succession plan of the EFCC worked perfectly as the recent change in leadership has not affected its effectiveness.
The workshop is themed: Strengthening the Capacity of Board Members of Parastatals and Commissions on Organizational Effectiveness and Corporate Governance.
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