ibori recommended waziri for efcc job- obasanjo
Former
 President Olusegun Obasanjo has said the appointment of Mrs. Farida 
Waziri as the chairman of the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission 
slowed down the fight against corruption in the country.
 Obasanjo, in an exclusive interview he granted Zero Tolerance,
 a magazine published by the EFCC,  said Waziri was a wrong successor to
 Mallam Nuhu Ribadu, the pioneer chairman of the anti-graft agency.
The former President, whose 
administration established the  EFCC and the Independent Corrupt 
Practices and Other-Related Offences Commission, added that  he was 
aware that convicted  former Delta State Governor,  James Ibori, played a
 major role in  her  appointment.
He said, “I know that the woman they 
brought in to replace Ribadu was not the right person for that job  
because I understood that one of those who head-hunted her was Ibori. 
If  Ibori, who is now in a UK (United Kingdom) prison for fraud, 
head-hunts somebody who will fight corruption in Nigeria, then you can 
understand what happened.”
  To butress his argument that Waziri 
was a wrong person for the job, he challenged the publication to “go and
 look at her track record.”
 “Go and look at the condition or the 
qualification; go and look at the type of interaction that anybody 
holding that job will have with a similar organisation elsewhere; did 
Waziri have that type. What connection did she have with the FBI, what 
relationship did she have with Metropolitan Police in London. It’s not a
 picnic,”Obasanjo  added.
Waziri, a retired senior police officer,
 was appointed head of the EFCC in 2008 after the controversial exit of 
 Ribadu, who was  also a former police officer.
Obasanjo  commended   Ribadu, saying his
 performance as the  EFCC boss helped reduce corruption in Nigeria and 
improved her rating by the Transparency International.
He said, “When I was there, the EFCC and
 ICPC worked tirelessly and we moved this country from the corruption 
perception index being number two from the lowest to number 45 from the 
lowest. We should have graduated from being number 45 to being number 50
 to being number 60, to being number 100. But we are not doing that, 
rather we have started sliding down.”
The former President flayed  the manner 
Ribadu was removed from office, saying he cautioned  the late President 
Umaru Yar’Adua against  his  removal.
Obasanjo said if given the opportunity 
again, “I will reappoint Mallam Ribadu and I will not dismiss him the 
way he was dismissed from the EFCC.”
He, however, criticised  Ribadu for hobnobbing “with people he had declared as corrupt.”
Asked to rate the incumbent EFCC 
Chairman, Ibrahim Lamorde, on the fight against corruption, Obasanjo, 
said he did not know how to score him.
  But he recalled that Lamorde was directly involved  when he requested the anti-graft agency to investigate him.
He said, “I was investigated. I told  
the EFCC to investigate me. I told the  EFCC to carry out clinical 
investigation and they did.
 “They also did same with all people on 
my farm. One of them was telling me the other day how Lamorde called him
 three times and took statements from him. The EFCC even made sure they 
did not submit that report to me; they waited until I left and updated 
their report after going round the world and saying look this is the 
report. Nobody should be below board in the fight against corruption.”
 The Egba chief  also  expressed 
concerns about the perceived corruption in the judiciary, saying  it 
required the efforts of all Nigerians to check the trend.
In a separate interview with Zero Tolerance, Waziri denied that Ibori supported her appointment as the EFCC chairman.
 She said, “I never knew him. I never knew James Ibori.
 “Let me ask you, if I was in league 
with Ibori and was not sincerely pursuing him, would he have run, gone 
out of this country to Dubai in the United Arab Emirates?
 “It is all lies of the enemies.  By the
 time I write my book,  the truth will prevail. I never knew Ibori; look
 I believe what is worth doing at all is worth doing well. I don’t 
believe in half measures. By my training and upbringing, I can never 
betray my country for anyone.”
 Justifying her appointment, Waziri said she secured the first conviction  in the history of the  EFCC.
“N190bn, one single recovery from one 
person that went to jail was during Farida Waziri. That is why it is 
good to have changes in an organisation”, she added.
Waziri faulted the manner she was sacked
 by the Goodluck Jonathan administration despite committing more than  
30 years  to serving the nation.
 She said she learnt  of  her removal  
in November 2011  in the news media and stated that she did  not deserve
 the humiliation since she had not been found wanting for any 
misdemeanour.
“If you are removed like that, it has a 
tendency to scare some people. I wasn’t bothered that I left because my 
philosophy of life is simple, ‘what has a beginning has an end,’’  
Waziri said.
Meanwhile, the EFCC has said that it secured 80 convictions in eight months.
The 80 were part of the 368 cases charged to court.
In a statement by its Acting Head of 
Media and Publicity, Wilson Uwujaren, the commission said it had also 
recovered N6,583,108,350 ; $19,251,519; 20,520 Euros and £19,000.
“Beyond the recovery, the EFCC 
intensified the prosecution of politically-exposed persons, failed bank 
executives, captains of industry, beneficiaries of fraudulent oil 
subsidy payments and senior civil servants involved in pension fraud.
“A number of cases for which 
investigations have been concluded, would be charged to courts across 
the zones where the Commission maintains offices as soon as the courts 
resume from recess.
“The commission deplored attempts by 
mischievous elements to distract it by imputing political motives to 
some of its investigations.”
 

 
 
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