The
promoters of Nigerian Peace Corps have said they carried out ‘intense
lobbying’ of lawmakers before they rammed through a bill that seeks to
upgrade their non-governmental organisation into a federal law
enforcement agency.
PREMIUM TIMES reported Saturday that members
of the Peace Corps, led by its national commandant, Dickson Akoh, bribed
lawmakers with job slots and cash reward to secure votes needed to pass
the Nigerian Peace Corps Bill.
The Senate approved the
harmonised version of the controversial bill on Tuesday, despite deep
scepticism from its own committee on Judiciary, Human Rights and Legal
Matters that the proposed para-military agency offers virtually no
unique service to the public.
In a statement to PREMIUM TIMES on
Sunday, the group’s spokesperson, Milicent Umoru, denied any illicit
motives on the part of the Peace Corps and lawmakers prior to the
passage of the bill.
“In advanced democracies of the world,
people lobby legislators to pass bills,” Ms. Umoru said. “And that is
exactly what Dr. Akoh and those who believe in the nobility of this
project did.”
The spokesperson said purported enemies of the
Peace Corps erroneously tagged the pressure her organisation mounted on
senators as “bribery.”
Ms. Umoru, however, failed to explain if
offering cash to lawmakers while promising them other favours was an
acceptable component of lobbying in a decent society.
Moreover,
Ms. Umoru said promoters of the Peace Corps will remain resolute in
their pursuit of presidential assent to the bill, although she did not
highlight unique impacts a nationalised Peace Corps would engender for
the country.
Questions about why a country crippled by fiscal
challenges occasioned by a bloated civil service would need another
paramilitary department even as existing ones become increasingly
exorbitant to run have continued to pop up.
David Umaru, the
committee chairman who was mandated by the Senate to look into the
significance of the Nigerian Peace Corps Bill, delivered a scathing
review of the paramilitary group when he laid the findings of his
committee before the Senate Tuesday.
“The powers, functions,
e.t.c., of the Peace Corps call for concern and this committee would
wish that they are subjected to further examination,”Mr. Umaru,
APC-Niger East, said.
But Ms. Umoru said Mr. Umaru was only expressing his opinion, mocking the senator for being in the minority.
“Umaru
is entitled to his opinion as guaranteed by the Constitution,” Ms.
Umoru said. “But thank God, in a democracy, while the minority may have
their say, the majority will certainly have their way.”
Ms. Umoru
also dismissed an observation by Mr. Umaru that the Peace Corps in
Nigeria had departed from the principles of its sister organisation in
the United States.
“Nigerian Peace Corps, though patterned
after its America counterpart, its current proactive leadership under Dr
Akoh has positively redefined its concept to suit our local
environment,” she said.
Mr. Akoh, 43, started the Peace Corps in
Nigeria in 1994, running it for four years until 1998 when he formally
registered it as a non-governmental organisation.
Amongst the
objectives of the organisation were capacity building for youth
creativity and intervention; capacity building for youth development and
empowerment in agriculture; and peace education and conflict
resolution.
According to documents from the Office of the
National Security Adviser, Mr. Akoh originally named his group Nigerian
Leadership and Marshall Corps when he first floated it in 1994.
In
the ensuing years, the former Nigerian Army cadet officer, gave his
group different names until he finally settled on the Nigerian Peace
Corps in 1998.
Afterwards, Mr. Akoh began mobilising the youth for different paramilitary missions across the country.
The
organisation told PREMIUM TIMES earlier this year it had no fewer than
113,000 regular officers and volunteers scattered across its formations
in the 36 states of the federation and Abuja.
But existing
security agencies and the Ministry of Interior, under which a
nationalised Peace Corps would be domiciled, refused to warm up to the
group.
The security agencies, especially the State Security
Service and the police, warned that the Peace Corps could prove
detrimental to the country’s national security because the organisation
was founded by disgruntled ex-servicemen who were either compulsorily
retired or dismissed from service.
At a House committee hearing
during consideration of the bill, the Office of the Head of Service
(HoS) said several government agencies with similar mandates as Peace
Corps already exist and listed the Ministry of Youth Development and
Ministry of Employment, Labour and Productivity and Ministry of
Environment as examples.
Other existing law enforcement agencies
include: Ministry of Education, Institute for Peace and Conflict
Resolution, National Orientation Agency, National Poverty Eradication
Programme and, National Directorate of Employment. The list is far from
being exhausted, the head of service said.
Consequently, the HoS
urged lawmakers to consider “the implications of the proposed creation
of Nigerian Peace Corps on the cost of governance and duplication of
duties of existing agencies.”
Law enforcement agencies have
taken measures against the Peace Corps since at least 2003 when the
State Security Service arrested Mr. Akoh and shut down his offices
across the country.
He resumed operation in 2007. But when the
SSS clamped down on his organisation again, he launched a civil lawsuit
which has dragged since then.
This year alone, the police have detained Mr. Akoh at least twice.
At
the first incident, armed officers from police, SSS and the Nigerian
Army stormed the head office of the Peace Corps and took Mr. Akoh and
more than 40 others into custody.
The head office was also shut by the police, and has not been reopened ever since.
But
in her statement Sunday, Ms. Umoru said the agencies “are either
ignorant of the core mandate of the Corps arising out of sheer
misinformation or they willingly elected to be on the same page with
those who have sworn on their grandfathers’ graves to serve as
undertakers for the Corps.”
Meanwhile, the man amid the storm,
Mr. Akoh ,also said he will not be intimidated by the “false
allegations”, saying his organisation will remain focused on its mission
to give a decent future to Nigerian youth through law enforcement and
community service.
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