We will not make public the details of assets declared by President Muhammadu Buhari and Vice President Yemi Osinbajo- CCB
The Code of Conduct Bureau says it will
not make public the details of assets declared by President Muhammadu Buhari
and Vice President Yemi Osinbajo due to limitations in federal laws covering
such release, the office has said.
The
presidency said those details will be made available after the Code of Conduct
Bureau authenticates claims in the declaration forms.
There has
been controversy following the inability of President Buhari and his Deputy
Osinbajo to release details of their assets since their inauguration May 29,
despite the promise to do so.
OFFICIAL
PORTRAITS OF BUHARI, OSINBAJO
Buhari
pledged to publicly declare his assets despite the lack of a law requiring him
to do so as the 1999 Constitution stated that office holders declare their
assets, without requiring them to do so publicly.
A civil
society group, Stop Impunity Nigeria, an affiliate of the Centre for Social
Justice, had on June 1, 2015 applied to the CCB to request copies of the
completed assets declaration forms by the President and his deputy.
The
application, signed by the Lead Director of the Centre, Eze Onyekpere, was
pursuant to the provisions of the Freedom of Information Act, FOIA, 2011.
But, in its
response CCB/HQ/670/G/1/104 dated June 10, 2015 and signed by Ijeanuli Ofor on
behalf of the Chairman, the CCB declined the request, citing the absence of
prescribed law by the National Assembly authorizing the release of such
information to the public.
The Bureau
however, conceded the right by Nigerians under section 1(1) 3 and 4 of the FOIA
2011, to “access or request information, whether written or not in written
form, in the custody of any public agency”.
According to
the Bureau, regardless of this, ‘’sections 12(1) (a) (v), 14(1) (b) and
15(1)9a) of the same Act empowered it to decline any request, which it
considered an invasion of personal privacy.
“Assets
declarations by public officers contain such personal information, which falls
within the exemptions to the disclosure of information in the FOIA,” the Bureau
added, explaining further that, paragraph 3(c of the Third Schedule, Part 1 of
the constitution (as amended) empowered it to “make assets declarations of
public officers available for inspection by any citizen of Nigeria only on
terms and conditions prescribed by the National Assembly.
“However, the
terms and conditions under which that can be done have not yet been prescribed
by the National Assembly.”
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