The African Democratic Congress has accused the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission of carrying out selective investigations, alleging that the anti-graft agency was behaving like a political hit squad for the ruling All Progressives Congress.
The party warned that this dangerous trend was eroding public trust in the institution and undermining the real fight against corruption.
In a statement by its National Publicity Secretary, Mallam Bolaji Abdullahi, the ADC said the EFCC’s recent pattern of action—including reopening closed cases, digging up old files, and targeting opposition members—was not the work of an impartial anti-corruption body but the “work of a political enforcer.”
“In recent days, several senior members of the opposition Coalition have received EFCC summons that are clearly politically motivated. These are not fresh cases arising from new evidence but new files opened in reaction to emergent political affiliations to intimidate key opposition figures,” the statement added.
The ADC recalled that the EFCC was created to be a fearless defender of the Nigerian people’s trust by applying the law evenly to all, friend or foe, ruling party or opposition. However, the party claimed that vision had been compromised, with the commission now operating like an APC department, deployed to silence critics and opposition figures “thereby achieving what the government cannot achieve through public debate.”
“Meanwhile, we have observed how investigations into ruling party allies quietly fade away while opposition figures are dragged before the court of public opinion with sometimes decade-old allegations that have been hastily revived and dressed up as fresh evidence. This is selective prosecution, and selective prosecution is the death of justice.”
“It does appear that in today’s Nigeria, one’s guilt or innocence depends on one’s party membership, not evidence. For example, since a certain former governor defected to the APC with his state’s entire political machinery, the EFCC’s investigations into his administration have vanished from public view.”
“Not a question has been asked. Not a document leaked. Not a single update. Yet the same EFCC still somehow find means to reopen old cases against opposition leaders and pursue the stale allegations against them.”
“It does not augur well for the EFCC if people think that all you need to point the accusing hands of the Commission in your direction is to stand opposed to the ruling party and all that it takes for protection is to align with the government.”
“Unfortunately, this is the widely established perception in Nigeria today, which the commission by its recent actions, including the ongoing surreptitious harassment of opposition leaders, has given credence to,” Abdullahi said.
The ADC called on Nigerians, civil society organisations, and the independent media to resist what it described as a dangerous slide into dictatorship and the misuse of public institutions for partisan objectives.
“The EFCC does not belong to the APC. It belongs to the Nigerian people. It is funded by taxpayers, not the ruling party,” the party insisted.