Whistleblowing: If There’s The Will, 9th Assembly Can Enact The Law – Shehu Sani
Senator Shehu Sani, who represented Kaduna central in the 8session of the Senate, has said that the 9th National Assembly can successfully pass the Whistleblower Protection Bill before the end of their legislative tenure if there is the political will to do so.
Senator Sani, who stated this while participating in a Radio Town Hall meeting on Whistleblowing organized by the Progressive Impact Organization for Community Development (PRIMORG), in Abuja, said the Whistleblower Protection Bill currently before the National Assembly can scale through if there is concerted effort in spite of the time left.
Sani, while urging the legislative and executive arms of the Government to use their cordial relationship to speed up the passage of the whistleblowing and whistleblower protection bill, stressed that operators of both tiers of government must always bear in mind that power is transient.
According to him; “They (NASS) should speed up and make sure the whistleblower law comes into being since both the National Assembly and the Executive portray themselves to be one.
“It is possible to make the whistleblower law within two to three weeks because you do first reading, you do a second reading, then you do public hearing, you do harmonization between the two houses and then you send it to the president.
“You can achieve it, but if you don’t want to achieve it, after the public hearing you will never hear anything about it again and then when you try to raise it they will tell you to turn off the mic.”
Sani noted that the Federal Government is not pushing hard enough for the passage of a whistleblower law due to fear of the law going against them.
According to him; “Already, the government has seen that the fight against corruption is something they should do themselves and in that sense, they are afraid of a law that would make it impossible for them to do what is called selective justice.”
Speaking in turn, an Abuja-based legal practitioner, Nelson Kebordih said that the enthusiasm that the whistleblower policy came with have diffused following the lack of legal framework, adding that the country was losing a lot due to the current state of things.
Kebordih called on the legislature to ensure that the long-awaited law contained proper protection mechanisms before passage, adding that incentive for whistleblowing and how to access it must be transparent in the law to encourage citizen’s participation and ownership of the program.
On her part, a Media Consultant and Activist, Princess Halima Jubril described the lack of legislation for whistleblowing in Nigeria as unfortunate.
Jubril who noted that poverty was a big factor that is deterring citizens from blowing the whistle on corrupt acts, however, stated that the spirit of many Nigerians who are been demoralized by the shortcoming of the whistleblowing policy can be reawakened if they are assured of adequate protection and proper legislation.
Similarly, the Editor of the Nigerian Pilot Newspaper, Emmanuel Ibeleme encouraged journalists to be courageous in their job despite facing remuneration challenges.
Ibeleme urged journalists not to stay on the job if not motivated to avoid destroying the profession.
His words: “If you are not well paid in an organization that cannot motivate you to do what you should do, not what you want to do, then you go and look for something else to do instead of staying there and desecrating the profession”.