Could Tough Anti-Corruption Laws and an Exclusive Anti-Corruption Court Safeguard Nigeria‘s National Treasury?

John Egbeazien Oshodi

Abstract


In this paper corruption in Nigeria is expressed as realistically unmanageable and there is no current aggressive way of reducing its spread. The nation has been judged to be surrounded by corruptible persons, especially in public leadership. In this paper a line of unusual legal and therapeutic methods are suggested. It is being offered in this paper that the nation should develop in-house forensic institutions for corruption suspects and convicts following a battery of psychological testing on the mental condition of corruption suspects (i.e., the malady of Corruptomania) to determine underlying impulsive and social personality related predispositions. In this article assumptive lines of anti-corruption fights are proposed such as the death penalty. Instituting some special courts will quicken the implementation of hard core punishment like the death.

Keywords: hospitals, forensic, special courts, corruption, legal,  corruptomanic, sharia, Nigeria.


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ISSN (Paper)2224-3240 ISSN (Online)2224-3259

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