I have been
reliably informed that Mr. John Ohireime Asein who was appointed Director –
General of the Nigerian Copyright Commission (NCC) in January, 2019 has been
openly boasting in Abuja that nobody can touch him despite the well known acts
of unmitigated corruption and abuse of office he is alleged to be embroiled in.
I am told that he is telling anyone who cares to listen, to forget the rule of
law as he has a “solid” godfather who will make sure nothing happens to him!
Who is this almighty godfather who keeps John Asein above the laws of the
Federal Republic of Nigeria?
Like the
typical Nigerian public officer caught with both hands in the cookie jar, I
know that Mr. Asein may have told his godfathers, friends and family that some
people who are jealous of him are after him, maybe because of his good looks,
the office he occupies, the state he comes from or his religious affiliation. I
have also heard that he has told everyone he meets that Tony Okoroji is
determined to take over his office. Believe me, I do not want Asein’s job.
I am one of
the most defamed Nigerian citizens. I understand the huge pain and consequences
of defamation of character. I have had to go to court over and over again to
clear my name. I will not write this piece to tarnish the name of an innocent
man without evidence and without giving the man a chance to defend himself.
I gave John
Asein a chance to defend himself. The fact is that in January this year, I
received information that a civil society and anti-corruption group, Peace
& Development for Africa Initiative was set to give Mr. Asien an ultimatum
to resign his position or face prosecution for corruption and abuse of power. I
was surprised because the development was in tandem with independent
information which I had. On January 30, 2020, I went to Abuja where I met Dr.
Tonye Clinton Jaja, the Chairman of the NCC Governing Board. I showed Dr Jaja a
document with very detailed and disturbing information about the conduct of Mr.
Asein, his DG. After reading the document, Dr. Jaja was clearly very worried.
He then placed a call inviting his DG to his office. In my presence, the document
was handed over to Mr. Asein. As Mr. Asein read the document, I watched him.
His hands were shaking. He was stammering. He presented no defence or
explanation whatsoever for what he had been accused of.
I told the
DG how terribly disappointed I was with him. I had before seen John Asein as a
brilliant Nigerian. When as a young officer at the NCC, he was sanctioned in a
way I believed was unjust, I came fully to his defence. I travelled to Abuja
several times at no cost to him to plead his case until the sanctions against
him were lifted. When he was made the NCC DG, I celebrated. I even met with him
in Abuja and wished him well.
On January
30, Mr. Asein came to see me in my hotel room at Reiz Continental Abuja, on the
evening of the same day we both met his Chairman. I did not see a man repentant
or apologetic about what he had done. To me, his main concern was that he had
been caught. He did not want the information to become public. He asked what I
could do to save him.
Why is the
conduct of the NCC DG important to me? Apart from being a Nigerian who wants
our nation to work, I was one of the people who campaigned vigorously for the
establishment of the NCC. To get the government to set up the institution, I
carried placards and led dangerous demonstrations. I was in the committee that
drafted the law setting up this important national institution. Our vision was
to have a vibrant organization that fights the infringement of Nigeria’s
creative works and launches the nation into the mainstream of the world
creative and knowledge economy.
Unfortunately,
the NCC has been inflicted with bad leadership. While Nigeria’s great creative
minds are suffering, rather than fight the piracy of Nigeria’s creative works
and other types of copyright infringement for which the organization has been
set up, the NCC may have become a den of thieves and the crucible of scams. The
interest of the NCC leadership appears to be to grab all “grabbable”. What is
going on is costing the creative industry and our nation dearly in billions of
dollars in lost revenue.
Mr. Asien
should stop running around complaining about those he thinks want to take his
job. He should stop leaning on his so-called godfathers to save him. He should
come clean, face the issues and answer the many questions he has been avoiding.
Did John Ohireime Asein with IPPIS No 101108 continue to collect salaries from the Nigerian Copyright Commission several months into 2016 after retiring as staff of the commission on December 31, 2015? If he did, it is stealing, a criminal offence for which he ought to go to jail. A simple inquiry at the Federal government’s Integrated Payroll and Personnel Information System (IPPIS) should establish whether this allegation is true or made up.
Did John Ohireime Asein with IPPIS No 101108 continue to collect salaries from the Nigerian Copyright Commission several months into 2016 after retiring as staff of the commission on December 31, 2015? If he did, it is stealing, a criminal offence for which he ought to go to jail. A simple inquiry at the Federal government’s Integrated Payroll and Personnel Information System (IPPIS) should establish whether this allegation is true or made up.
From January
10, 2017 to January 8, 2019, John Asein held the fulltime position of Executive
Director of REPRONIG, a CMO for Nigerian authors and publishers regulated by
the NCC. Did he continue to act on behalf of REPRONIG and as sole signatory to
the REPRONIG UBA account No 2004467988, long after assuming office as NCC DG?
Has he signed REPRONIG funds in dollars to himself? If he did, it is a
bewildering example of conflict of interest and fraud with extensive
consequences which might lead to jail time. Again, a simple review of the bank accounts
of REPRONIG should establish whether this allegation is true or fiction.
How much is
involved in the controversial deal between the Nigerian Copyright Commission
(NCC), Agency Francaise De Development (AFD), Punuka Attorneys and KPMG
brokered by Mr. John Asein? Who received what in the contentious deal? Which
other person in the NCC management or governing board is aware of the details
of this transaction?
As a public
officer, is John Asein at the same time Director of a private company known as
Books & Gavel Ltd contrary to Article 030424 of the Public Service Rules? A
check at the CAC can determine that.
There is
also the question of whether John Asein has contravened Section 4(1) of the
Code of Conduct for Public Officers. Has he been receiving pension as a retired
public officer and at the same time receiving remuneration as a serving public
officer? Did he declare his assets upon his appointment as DG?
These are
just some of the many questions to which clear answers can be provided by Mr.
Asein. His staff understand what is going on. Does John Asein have the moral
standing to lead his staff or caution them when they do wrong? I am afraid that
the NCC today lies comatose.
Asein
obviously believes that with his godfather, he does not need to answer the
questions begging for him to address. He may be correct to believe that with
his godfather he is above the law because details of the alleged transgressions
of Mr. Asein have for some time been with some government agencies whose hands
appear to have been tied, making them unable to do what they ought to do. Who
is tying the hands of these agencies?
We have come
to the time when as a nation we must decide whether to fight corruption or to
keep our mouths shut. Is President Buhari’s anti-corruption war just a talking
point? Who is this big godfather of John Ohireimi Asien that has made him above
the laws of the Federal Republic of Nigeria?
See you next
week.
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