The Vice-President, Prof. Yemi Osinbajo, has advised
political parties to refrain from diverting fund meant for public services into
party campaigns, disclosing that the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission,
EFCC, is investigating some Peoples Democratic Party, PDP, stalwarts because
the party diverted money meant for public services to fund political campaigns
or other questionable purposes.
Speaking yesterday at the 2016 Annual
Conference of the Inter-Party Advisory Council, IPAC, held at the Yar’Adua
Centre, Abuja, Osinbajo dismissed claim that the anti-corruption war was
selective and targeted at members of the main opposition party, noting that it
was aimed at bringing sanity to the polity in order to sustain democracy in the
country.
He spoke through his Special Assistant on
Political Parties, Senator Babafemi Ojudu, expressing consternation over the
manner fund budgeted for arms procurement to fight insurgency were diverted
into political campaigns and funneled into private accounts of chieftains of
the erstwhile ruling PDP.
“Politics and elections should not
be about going to war or the depletion of public resources. Never again will
government agencies be used in favour of any political party to win elections.
The war against corruption is not targeted at the opposition parties.
“What government is doing now is that money
meant for essential services should not be diverted to fund campaigns or to any
other purpose,” he said.
Explaining further on the anti-corruption
drive, Osinbajo disclosed that investigations had revealed that huge sums of
money voted for security were diverted into private pockets while part of the
money was used for election campaigns by the PDP-led government.
He stated that there had to be a stop to the
malfeasance, adding that IPAC should play a critical role in educating
political parties and the general public on the issue so that democracy can
survive in Nigeria.
The Vice-President recounted the terrible
experience of the military in the hands of Boko Haram insurgents during the
regime of former President Goodluck Jonathan, when some soldiers went into
battle with obsolete weapons.
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