They issued the warning at a two-day integrity innovation lab conference for public servants organised by civil technology organisation, Accountability Lab Nigeria, in partnership with MacArthur Foundation and Ford Foundation in Abuja.
The two-day conference aimed to give the nation robust, solution-oriented conversations for public servants to enable them build the knowledge and equip themselves with tools to influence norms and change behaviors by promoting accountability, integrity and ethical leadership in their duties.
The anti-graft agencies referred the civil servants to several sections of their establishment Acts, and the punitive measures recommended for anyone found to have erred and corruptly enriched his or herself in the cause of procurement processes.
EFCC Chairman Ola Olukoyede, who was represented by an official of the agency, Dr. Johnson Eze, urged Nigerians to key into the fight against corruption.
The EFCC chairman highlighted several efforts the commission was making to tackle different windows of financial corruption, stressing that while a particular window was detected and closed, criminals created others, especially through the digital space to further perpetuate corrupt practices.
He said: “Very often, the person who is screaming at the rooftop, like a child, is the one stabbing somebody in school. We are expecting that one agency will be able to cure every malaise. But I tell you straight up: it is not possible.
“That is why, if there’s anything that I will, point blank, be saying today, it is hold your end. Then we probably will have a chance to fight corruption.”
Olukoyede debunked the belief that the EFCC was playing double standards in the fight against corruption.
He reminded Nigerians about the law that presumes every suspect innocent until otherwise proven, adding that Nigeria is guided by law that citizens and agencies must abide by.
The ICPC Chairman, Dr. Musa Aliyu, who was represented by Clifford Oparaodu, said the commission had been deeply involved in monitoring procurement processes in the public service arena.
He urged civil servants to always abide by the established rules to always foster a clean financial management system.
The Director General of the Bureau of Public Service Reforms (BPSR), Dasuki Arabi, who was represented by the Head of Audit, Emmanuel Achoda, stressed the need to address perceived gaps in service delivery challenges in the nation’s public sector.
He said: “Globally, public service delivery has remained a great challenge. There is perceived dissatisfaction by citizens on service delivery leading to public mistrust and lack of confidence in the integrity of public officers.”
“It’s pertinent to state that for any public institution to attain a world-class standard comparable to any of the developed countries, it must have reliable public officers to drive the objectives and goals of government.
“Upholding integrity in the public service is apt and very strategic to good governance. This accounts for why countries with high level of moral integrity will exhibit lower levels of corruption.”
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