THE FIGHT AGAINST CORRUPTION IN NIGERIA: A FOCUS ON VICTIMS AND THEIR RESTITUTIONARY RIGHTS
Abstract
One of the campaign promises of the Buhari regime is to fight corruption in all facet of the country. So far, all the anti-corruption agencies have been working hard to accomplish this aim. Chief among them is the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) and the Independent Corrupt Practices Commission (ICPC). This article tries to x-ray briefly some of the requirements of the Acts establishing these agencies. The Acts provide for forfeiture and recovery of stolen resources but no mention of the restitution of the victims of corruption. In all, the pattern of fighting corruptionin Nigeria is focused on the offenders, and recovered loots are turned over to the federal government. Not much is provided on the restitution of victims who own the stolen or recovered money or whose money was used to purchase recovered properties. And this is coming in an era when there are calls for a shift from criminal justice to victim justice. The deepest desire of any victim, no doubt, is to be returned back to what he used to be or would have been if that wrong was not done him. This paper tries to glance into the possibility of restitution for victims of corruption in Nigeria. It concluded that justice is not done where the offender is punished but the victim is not restituted or restored. In this light, it recommended amongst other things that where the Acts establishing the anti-corruption agencies in Nigeria did not specifically consider restitution of victims, the courts, through judicial activism should insist on the restitutionary rights of the victims of corruption in Nigeria.
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