The
Peoples Democratic Party has come under criticisms for appointing an
ex-convict, Chief Bode George, into a panel to reorganise its Board of
Trustees.
A
Lagos High Court convicted George in 2009 for fraud after he served as Chairman
of the Board of the Nigerian Ports Authority. He spent two years in prison.
Legal
practitioners as well as civil rights groups, Anti-Corruption Network and
Coalition against Corrupt Leaders, on Sunday, condemned the PDP’s action,
saying the party had no respect for the public.
Executive
Secretary of ACN and former member of the House of Representatives, Mr. Dino
Melaye, and the Chairman of CACOL, Debo Adeniran, said the PDP’s decision was
akin to legalising corruption.
Melaye
said, “Almost everybody in the party (PDP) is an ex-convict, only time will
tell. The party is about corruption, so corruption and corrupt persons mean
nothing to them. He (Bode George) is still carrying our national honours and so
you can see.”
Adeniran
said, “Nobody is expected to associate with a corrupt convict that has not been
discharged of the burden of guilt because such people will not do anything to
discourage similar crimes.
“He
is not going to discourage people of doubting integrity from assuming office as
a political leader. By implication, such characters will infest others with the
criminal virus because he exemplifies corruption. And since like begets like,
whatever decision taken by any committee he is a member can only be seen as
lacking in integrity.”
But
two Senior Advocates of Nigeria, Rotimi Jacobs and Yusuf Ali, who spoke to our
correspondents, differed on the issue.
Jacobs,
who is a counsel for the Economic and Financial Crimes
Commission, while condemning the development, said it was an indication that
the PDP was not sincere in its anti-corruption war.
He
said, “Is that how the PDP will be fighting corruption? Is that how the ruling
party will fight corruption? For a party that is supposed to be fighting
corruption, it is a very sad development. It is the shame of a nation.”
But,
Ali noted that despite his conviction, George had the right to belong to, and
participate in the activities of a political party.
He
added that the appointment was a PDP affair, and that the party was not the
Federal Government.
Ali
said, “The party is not the government. We should not equate the party with the
government. Since he belongs to the party, he can function within the party.
“Even
conviction cannot stop somebody from belonging to a group or a trade union. If
he belongs to a group, he can take part in the activities of the group. It is
different from taking public office.”
Meanwhile,
a member of the PDP BoT, who spoke on condition of anonymity, said the
President suggested George’s name at the meeting where the decision was taken.
The
source said, “The President suggested his name. You know this is politics; the
President is losing followership in the South-West and other zones, so the best
he thinks he can do is to look for those who can work with him.
“If
he thinks an ex-convict is the best person to reorganise his party, so be it.
“Don’t
forget that he said recently that another ex-convict, Chief Diepreye
Alamieseigha is his benefactor.
“Ironically,
both George and Alamieseigha were convicted for corruption. He has the right to
choose his friends.”
When
contacted, the Secretary of the Board, Senator Wali Jibrin, declined to speak
on the matter.
Asked
whether the appointment would not send a wrong signal about the country’s fight
against corruption, he said, “I don’t know anything about that.”
Source:
Punch
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