Nigeria sacks 'corrupt' minister
Posted: Wed Mar 23, 2005 9:35 am
Story from BBC NEWS:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/pr/fr/-/1/hi/w ... 373963.stm
Nigerian President Olusegun Obasanjo has sacked Education Minister Fabian Osuji following an anti-corruption investigation.
Mr Obasanjo said Mr Osuji had bribed senior MPs a total of $400,000 (£212,000) to ease the passage of an education budget.
Nigeria must not "wallow in corruption" if it wants debt relief, he added.
Mr Osuji, released on Sunday after being held by government investigators for several days, has made no comment.
He is the second minister to be dismissed for alleged corruption since Mr Obasanjo took power in 1999 pledging to clean up Nigeria's political class.
In a television and radio address, Mr Obasanjo accused Senate President Adolphus Wabara and six other MPs of taking bribes from Mr Osuji.
"It is a disheartening event that the number three man in the government hierarchy [senate president] in the country is involved in this sordid matter," Mr Obasanjo said.
He revealed that Mr Osuji would be prosecuted by an independent commission on corrupt practices.
Mr Wabara denies that any money changed hands while he tried to smooth the passage of the education bill.
Responsibility
Nigeria's National Assembly would be handed a dossier detailing the six MPs' role in the scandal, while other government officials would be dealt with separately, Mr Obasanjo said.
In a stark warning to other ministers suspected of corrupt practices, Mr Obasanjo said investigations would continue into other areas of parliament and government.
"It is the responsibility of the National Assembly to cleanse itself, to show to Nigerians that it deserves their respect, to rebuild public confidence and to flush out those members who continue to derogate and degrade its integrity and stature," he said.
And he warned that Nigeria's attempts to gain international debt relief would be harmed by continuing corruption within the political elite.
"The legislature cannot wallow in corruption and expect the outside world to take our pleas for debt relief very seriously."
Nigeria, which is Africa's largest oil producer, is seen as one of the world's most corrupt countries, according to watchdog Transparency International.
Mr Obasanjo wants to root out corruption as he campaigns for the reduction of the country's $35bn (£18.5bn) foreign debt
http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/pr/fr/-/1/hi/w ... 373963.stm
Nigerian President Olusegun Obasanjo has sacked Education Minister Fabian Osuji following an anti-corruption investigation.
Mr Obasanjo said Mr Osuji had bribed senior MPs a total of $400,000 (£212,000) to ease the passage of an education budget.
Nigeria must not "wallow in corruption" if it wants debt relief, he added.
Mr Osuji, released on Sunday after being held by government investigators for several days, has made no comment.
He is the second minister to be dismissed for alleged corruption since Mr Obasanjo took power in 1999 pledging to clean up Nigeria's political class.
In a television and radio address, Mr Obasanjo accused Senate President Adolphus Wabara and six other MPs of taking bribes from Mr Osuji.
"It is a disheartening event that the number three man in the government hierarchy [senate president] in the country is involved in this sordid matter," Mr Obasanjo said.
He revealed that Mr Osuji would be prosecuted by an independent commission on corrupt practices.
Mr Wabara denies that any money changed hands while he tried to smooth the passage of the education bill.
Responsibility
Nigeria's National Assembly would be handed a dossier detailing the six MPs' role in the scandal, while other government officials would be dealt with separately, Mr Obasanjo said.
In a stark warning to other ministers suspected of corrupt practices, Mr Obasanjo said investigations would continue into other areas of parliament and government.
"It is the responsibility of the National Assembly to cleanse itself, to show to Nigerians that it deserves their respect, to rebuild public confidence and to flush out those members who continue to derogate and degrade its integrity and stature," he said.
And he warned that Nigeria's attempts to gain international debt relief would be harmed by continuing corruption within the political elite.
"The legislature cannot wallow in corruption and expect the outside world to take our pleas for debt relief very seriously."
Nigeria, which is Africa's largest oil producer, is seen as one of the world's most corrupt countries, according to watchdog Transparency International.
Mr Obasanjo wants to root out corruption as he campaigns for the reduction of the country's $35bn (£18.5bn) foreign debt