NewsFRC, ICPC sign Strategic MoU to Strengthen Accountability and Intensify Anti-Corruption Enforcement

December 9, 2025by PG0

Nigeria’s anti-corruption framework received a major boost on Monday as the Fiscal Responsibility Commission (FRC) and the Independent Corrupt Practices and Other Related Offences Commission (ICPC) marked International Anti-Corruption Day with the signing of a landmark Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) aimed at deepening institutional collaboration, strengthening public finance oversight and enhancing enforcement outcomes.

At the signing ceremony, the Executive Chairman of the FRC, Mr. Victor Muruako, and the Executive Chairman of the ICPC, Dr. Musa Adamu Aliyu, SAN, described the pact as timely and symbolic, noting that it reinforces national and global commitments to transparency, integrity and prudent management of public resources. Both chairmen reaffirmed their agencies’ shared resolve to confront fiscal misconduct, eliminate waste and strengthen accountability in line with the Constitution and existing anti-corruption laws.

Under the new MoU, the two agencies will collaborate in capacity building, joint investigations, intelligence sharing, asset recovery and coordinated enforcement. The ICPC’s training arm, the Anti-Corruption Academy of Nigeria (ACAN), will provide specialised training for FRC personnel in forensic investigations, financial crime detection, digital evidence handling and prosecution support. Both institutions will also exchange resource persons for workshops, stakeholder engagements and public enlightenment programmes.

The agreement further establishes clear modalities for joint investigations and operations where violations fall within the mandates of both the Fiscal Responsibility Act, 2007, and the ICPC Act, 2000. It creates a structured pathway for mutual assistance in tracing, freezing, confiscating and recovering looted public funds, while guaranteeing confidential and law-compliant sharing of intelligence, financial records and technical information.

According to both agencies, the collaboration is expected to close operational gaps, eliminate institutional silos and significantly improve Nigeria’s anti-corruption response by reinforcing coordination across oversight and enforcement mechanisms.

The MoU, which may be terminated by either party with 30-day written notice, marks an expanded phase of cooperation between the two institutions and signals renewed momentum in the national drive to improve transparency, strengthen financial discipline and safeguard public resources.

Present at the ceremony from the Fiscal Responsibility Commission were Barr. Charles Chukwuemeka Abana, Director of Legal, Investigation and Enforcement; Bede Ogueri Anyanwu, Deputy Director, Strategic Communications; Mr. Bello Gulmare, Deputy Director, Monitoring and Evaluation; and Mr. Ugo Chinemerem Uzoma, Deputy Director, Protocol and SERVICOM. The ICPC delegation included Sir Clifford Okwudiri Oparandu; Mr. Henry Emore, Director of Legal; Mr. Shehu Yahaya, FSC, Director, Policy and Standards; Mr. Ibrahim Garba Kajaya, Head of Procurement; Mr. Ambrose Songo, FCAI, Head of Audit; Mr. Sunday Ibrahim, representing the Director of Finance and Administration; Mr. Bashir Dagoro; and Mrs. Chinyere Emeoha, Deputy Director, Human Resources.

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