The Centre for Information Technology and Development (CITAD) on Tuesday joined the global observance of the 2025 International Anti-Corruption Day with a renewed call for government at all levels to fortify accountability systems, deepen digital transparency, and protect citizens’ participation in governance.
Marking the day themed “United Against Corruption for Development, Peace and Security,” CITAD said corruption remains one of Nigeria’s most dangerous roadblocks to progress—crippling public institutions, worsening service delivery, fueling insecurity, and eroding trust in democratic processes.
In a statement signed by its Executive Director, Y.Z. Ya’u, the organization noted that despite ongoing efforts by anti-corruption agencies and civil society groups, corruption persists across procurement systems, public financial management, election processes, and emerging digital governance structures.
CITAD expressed particular concern over the rise of digital-era corruption—ranging from opaque data management and misuse of surveillance tools to manipulation of cybercrime laws and weak regulation of government digital infrastructure.
“As Nigeria advances its digital transformation, accountability within the digital ecosystem is not optional; it is essential,” the statement stressed.
The organization also condemned the growing use of digital platforms and security institutions to suppress dissent, describing such practices as direct threats to democracy. It urged government authorities to uphold online freedoms and protect activists, journalists, whistleblowers, and citizens who expose corruption.
CITAD outlined key recommendations for federal, state, and local governments, including strengthening transparency frameworks, enhancing digital accountability in procurement and public data management, and fully implementing the Freedom of Information (FOI) Act to guarantee open access to public records.
The group also called for stronger protection mechanisms for whistleblowers and online critics, investment in civic and digital literacy—especially for youth and women—and deeper collaboration among government institutions, civil society, the media, and development partners.
Additionally, CITAD urged anti-corruption agencies to intensify investigations into technology-enabled corruption, enforce whistleblower protections, and resist political interference that weakens accountability structures.
With Nigeria confronting economic hardship, security pressures, and governance concerns, CITAD warned that the cost of corruption has never been more severe. It called for a unified national effort that is transparent, inclusive, and digitally responsive.
The organization reaffirmed its commitment to building a society anchored on integrity, transparency, and active civic participation—where citizens can speak out without fear of retaliation.