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What Corruption Is Doing To Us - Saraki

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Senate President Bukola Saraki on Monday raised the alarm that Nigeria was seriously slipping into danger as corruption in the country is taking a dangerous dimension.

Saraki said that corruption ha eaten so deep into the system that it has now become very difficult for the three tiers of government-the Federal, State and the Local Government-to pay salaries and meet their financial obligations to the people they are supposed to serve.

Currently, about 22 states are owing workers just as many local government councils have not also paid salaries. The Federal Government has reportedly relied on bank draft and treasury bills to meet its obligations with regard to salaries.

While speaking with the Chairman of the Independent corrupt Practices Commission (ICPC) Mr. Ekpo Nta, who led top officials of the agency on a courtesy visit to the Senate President, Saraki said corruption was assuming a worrying dimension in the country.

Saraki disclosed that the eighth Senate has a position on zero tolerance for corruption.

"We want to make it a priority. For us,  we have realised that it is truly endangering the entire system. It is affecting our national development.

"The cost of corruption on our national life is beyond financial cost.

"You see in some states now that they are not paying salaries, it had led to poor funding of the education and health sectors and it’s affecting cost of governance and failure of public institutions and infrastructure.

"For the eight senate, making the fight against corruption a priority is a must and we are committed to that.

"There are  things we ought to do that would help prevention especially among the professionals.

"Bankers who notice that the account of an Assistant Directors is running into billions of Naira should have a way of blowing the whistle.

"We have to be creative to bring everybody along.

"Our goal is to work with you to reduce significantly,  the level of corruption in this country," he said while promising that the current Senate would work with the ICPC and other anti-graft agencies to fight the corruption.

Nta told Saraki that the Act that established ICPC enacted in 2000 actually addressed corruption directly and that the United Nations convention against corruption came four years later in 2004.

He said corruption has always lived with Nigerians, expressing belief that Nigerians would resolve it.