President Muhammadu Buhari and his deputy, Prof Yemi Osinbajo, have both done well by declaring their assets as required by law. What Buhari and Osinbajo did, however, only satisfied the minimum requirement.
But this is not a minimum requirement government; we did not clamour for
the minimum. The General and Prof made a promise of publicly declaring
their assets; as far as I am concerned, they have not fully done so, and
it is not too late.
This team should go one step further by making their assets truly public; and it is simple. The same information on the asset forms should just be photocopied and handed over to the media. This takes only one minute; then they would have fulfilled one of their campaign promises.
This team should go one step further by making their assets truly public; and it is simple. The same information on the asset forms should just be photocopied and handed over to the media. This takes only one minute; then they would have fulfilled one of their campaign promises.
Those suggesting that Nigerians should go through the Freedom of
Information Act’s access port must know the task and the wall of
impossibility involved in the process. Nigerians should not be put
through some frustrating and heart-throbbing official rigmarole request
process called the FoI. There is nothing “Free” about accessing wealth
information of big boys in Nigeria, and it must change.
The FoI Act is a bottleneck and baloney. If it works, every information regarding the salaries, allowances and declared assets of all public servants - legislators, governors, local government chairmen, ministers, among others should be public by now. But today, we don’t have that; and we will never have it through the FoI Act. Well, maybe I am not Nigerian enough to navigate the FoI waters.
I still trust Buhari and Osinbajo; I believe in them, and I know they have nothing to hide. We are here just talking about letting our word be our bond and giving no room for second-guessing. When it comes to transparency, President Buhari should not be ordinary; these are extraordinary times in Nigeria
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