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Home»Current Affairs»Why World Bank Grants Are Marred In Corruption – ICPC
Current Affairs

Why World Bank Grants Are Marred In Corruption – ICPC

Alexandra UmehBy Alexandra UmehJune 27, 20233 Mins Read
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Professor Bolaji Owasanoye
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ENUGU, Nigeria (VOICE OF NAIJA) – Professor Bolaji Owasanoye, Chairman of the Independent Corrupt Practices and Other Related Offences Commission (ICPC), has said that many grants from the World Bank are marred in corruption.

The Chairman of the anti-corruption body said this when he hosted a delegation of the Economic and Organized Crime Office of Ghana recently.

Prof Owasanoye, a Senior Advocate of Nigeria (SAN), said the political economy of the international ecosystem was not designed for developing countries to progress in the fight against corruption.

“We have to understand as developing countries that the political economy of the international ecosystem is not designed for us to progress no matter how hard we try.

“It is enlightened self-interest. For example, Nigeria borrowed one billion dollars in 1978. As at 2006, when we had the write-off, Nigeria was owing 32 billion dollars and it is designed in that way because of their rules of engagement and dispute resolution. The rule uses the IMF and the World Bank to whip you into line when you want to challenge the debt.

READ ALSO: Senate Amends ICPC Act, Slams 2 Year-Jail Term On False Petitioners

“How many countries have taken the World Bank to court? Does it not have failed loans? Many of the loans the World Bank grants are marred in corruption but nobody has the courage to take them to court because those issues are usually politically determined,” he said.

He lamented how developing countries get swayed by outcomes of international surveys, adding that it was wrong to use perception surveys to compare experience surveys.

The ICPC boss said: “In developing countries, we are driven by the outcomes and report of international surveys. International surveys are not innocent, and it is naïve to think they are otherwise. If you do not create a system where your voice is heard, a kind of platform where you say your own and refuse to be driven by the outcome of those reports, you will continue to be apologetic.

“I was in Abidjan last year and I spoke in a panel that had representatives from Transparency International and I told them it is wrong to use perception survey to compare experience survey, it is like comparing sleep with death.

“Is it not strange that Transparency International will rank countries that are losing assets as more corrupt than the countries receiving the stolen properties? And under the common law, both the thief and the receiver of stolen properties are both guilty. But when they rate us, they will rate the receiving countries as being more honest but those of us whose properties are stolen every day are rated to be more corrupt.

“We must have a home-grown approach because it makes our work easier. We try to do our own survey where we talk to people, document and publish it so that when someone throws TI’s index to my face, I will tell them I have my own survey before you form an opinion.”

Independent Corrupt Practices and other Related Offences Commission (ICPC) Professor Bolaji Owasanoye World Bank
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Alexandra Umeh

Alexandra Umeh is based in the eastern region of Nigeria. She covers politics, news writing, feature stories, among others. She has multitasking skills and can easily adapt to any working condition. She enjoys reading and writing.

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