The former Executive Secretary,
National Universities Commission
(NUC), Professor Munzali Jibril,
OFR, has listed remedies for
Corruption, Bad Governance and
Insurgency to include the removal
of immunity clause from the
constitution of the Federal
Republic of Nigeria through an
amendment of Section 308 and
Conversion of the Sagay Advisory
Committee Against Corruption
into a powerful Anti-Corruption
Commission through an executive
bill.
nd Delivering the 22 Combined
Convocation Lecture of the
University of Maiduguri, held on
Friday 15 April, 2016 with a theme
Ni g e ri a : Co rr u p ti o n , Ba d
Governance and Insecurity'',
Professor Munzali said that the
functions of such Commission
should include coordinating the
fight against corruption, as well as
the establishment of a strong and
effective system for the detection,
exposure and punishment of
corruption.
The former NUC Scribe stated
that the required leadership to
confront and fight corruption
which was lacking before had now
been brought forth at the centre by
the last elections. He explained
that, for the Government to
achieve this, there must be support
from all and sundry, to bring about
the desired change in attitudes,
processes and procedures and to
build institutions that are strong
enough to withstand attempts that
may be made by future dictators
who might want to return the
nation to the status quo ante.
Professor Munzali observed that,
on the political front, the Nigerian
people had taken an important step
towards ensuring that henceforth
elections are free, fair, credible
and acceptable, adding that there was need for improvement on the
achievements recorded by
Professor Attahiru Jega-led INEC.
He noted that one of the fall outs of
that election ought to be the
restoration of internal democracy
within political parties and the
elimination of god-fatherism and
the misuse of incumbency to cling
to power.
On the nation's economy,
Professor Munzali advised that
there was need for the Federal
Government to either ban imports
of goods which the country could
produce or tax them so highly that
it won't make economic sense for
any consumer who earns his
money legitimately to buy them,
adding that the Government
should take all measures to protect
its local textile and other industries
against cheap Chinese and other
imports and smuggled goods.
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