Several managers contravene the obligation to declare assets to the Court of Auditors

2023-04-27 05:14:09

In Niger, several personalities failed to “respect the obligation to declare assets” during the exercise of their functions during the year 2022, reveals a report by the Court of Auditors.

For the year 2022, 570 taxable persons filed their declarations with the Court, including 536 for initial declarations and 34 for updates, underlines the judicial institution in its latest report which it presented to the press. , Thursday, April 20, 2023, during a press conference at its headquarters.

“At the level of the Executive, all ministers complied with the obligation to declare their assets, except Mr. Gado Sabo Moctar, Minister of Equipment; as for Mr. Ikta Abdoulaye Mohamed, Minister of Justice, Keeper of the Seals, the update of his statement should reach the Court of Auditors no later than January 23, 2023. However, for this general report, only account only declarations that reach the Court of Auditors by 31 December 2022 at the latest.

As the update reached the Court on March 7, 2023, it will be taken into account in the 2023 general report”, informs the Court.

At the level of the Legislative, informs the 2022 report of the Court of Auditors “only Mr. Seini Oumarou, President of the National Assembly, a few members of the office (Mr. Kalla Hankouraou, Mr. Alkabouss Djalaoui, Mr. Oumarou Yahaya, Mr. Soumana Sanda, Mr. Alio Namata) and Mr. Lamido Harouna, Chief of Staff of the President of the National Assembly, transmitted their declarations of assets to the Court”.

“At the Constitutional Court, only the First President, Mr Bouba Mahamane, submitted to the obligation to declare assets”, we learn from the same source, who adds that at “the Court of Cassation, the First President, Mr. Abdou Dan Galadima, and all the other magistrates both at the headquarters and the prosecution have complied with the obligation, with the exception of Mesdames Maiga Zeinabou Labo and Abdourahamane Amina Moussa, and Messrs. Moutari Abdou and Samaila Abdou Dan Gallou” .

At the Council of State, the report continues, “in addition to the First President, Mr. Nouhou Hamani Mounkaila, seven (7) other members out of sixteen (16) complied with the obligation to declare assets”. Issaka Mahaman Nassari, Guéro Dan Mallam Hamed Moussa, Yahaya Maman Bachir, Gréma Ari Lawan Oumara, Hassane Djibo, Moussa Waziri Ibrahim, Boubé Mamane”, details the official document.

The Court of Auditors was able to set a good example, to believe its report, because, he underlines, “the First President, Professor Oumarou Narey, and all the other magistrates both at the headquarters and the prosecution have complied with the obligation “, which is not the case of Mr. Maty El Hadji Moussa, President of the National Human Rights Commission (CNDH) and Mrs. Ali Mariama, President of the High Court of Justice (HCJ) who, according to the report , are the only ones not to have respected this obligation of the law among the other Institutions of the Republic.

“At the level of the courts and tribunals, only ten (10) magistrates out of 478 identified have filed their asset declarations. They are Mrs. Malam Manzo Hadiza and Messrs. Ousmane Baydo, Ibrahim Mahamadou, Alhassane Moussa, Moumouni Hamidou, Karimoun Salifou, Manzo Djibrillou, Abdou Ibrahim, Alkassoum Issoufou, Malam Ynoussa Adamou”.

The Court of Auditors is the highest jurisdiction for the control of public finances. It exercises jurisdictional competence, supervisory competence and advisory competence.

It judges the accounts of the State, local authorities, public establishments and enterprises, independent administrative authorities and any body benefiting from the financial assistance of the State and its subdivisions.

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