Nigeria requests AU to declare corruption crime against humanity

The African Union chairperson Dr Nkosazana Dlamini Zuma (centre)chatting with other delegates before the 29th ordinary session of the Executive council held on July 13, 2016 during the AU Summit taking in Kigali, Rwanda. A Nigerian leader has called on the AU to declare corruption a crime against humanity. PHOTO | CYRIL NDEGEYA

What you need to know:

  • Nigeria blamed the impoverishment of African people on corrupt leaders.
  • Nigerian leader said corruption was the single leading cause of poverty on the continent.

ABUJA, Wednesday

Nigeria has formally requested the African Union (AU) to declare corruption a crime against humanity.

The country blamed the impoverishment of African people on corrupt leaders.

Vice-President Yemi Osinbajo said on Wednesday at the inaugural JF Ade Ajayi Memorial Lecture held at the University of Lagos, that the request had been tabled.

The late Ajayi was one of Nigeria’s foremost history scholars, and former vice-chancellor of the University of Lagos.

Prof Osinbajo said the problem of corruption must be escalated as the vice was clearly the most devastating affliction on the African people.

Corruption, he noted, was the single leading cause of poverty on the continent.

Drawing on the Nigeria situation, he said: “Corruption of a few has cost thousands of lives and billions of dollars, destinies lost and futures destroyed.’’

He also wondered how anyone could explain “the wasteland that is the Niger Delta today’’.

Prof Osinbajo described the “needless elongation of the insurgency in the North East’’ and “continuing human and environmental tragedy in the Niger Delta’’ as two recent tragedies orchestrated by corruption.

The vice-president recalled that some estimates showed that some Niger Delta state earned more than many African countries every year, but they had nothing to show for such fortunes.

“We must demonstrate that it is un-African for leaders to perpetrate the immorality of stealing the future of our children, he stressed.

The vice president hailed the virtues of the late Ade Ajayi as worthy of emulation.

“The legacies of men and women like the great JF Ade Ajayi must be held aloft as the examples of the African moral tradition.’’