The Economic and Financial Crimes Commission is pressing for a whistleblower protection law in Nigeria, arguing that people who expose corruption need legal cover before they will feel safe coming forward. EFCC chairman Ola Olukoyede has urged the National Assembly to enact the legislation as part of the wider fight against financial crime.

His message is that the country’s anti-graft effort depends heavily on insiders who report wrongdoing, yet those same people often have the least protection. Without a clear law, the commission says, potential informants weigh the risk of speaking up against the danger it could pose to their jobs, safety and livelihoods.
Why the EFCC wants whistleblower protection
Olukoyede has called for a legal framework that would make it mandatory for law-enforcement agencies to shield whistleblowers once a law is in place. He also wants clearer channels for reporting and a defined process for deciding and paying any incentives, so that tips can be handled consistently rather than case by case.
The commission frames the move as a way to strengthen transparency. A formal system, it argues, would encourage more credible reports, speed up investigations and reduce the sense that coming forward is a gamble taken alone.
The risks whistleblowers face
Analysts note that while Nigeria has run a whistleblowing programme, it still lacks a comprehensive legal framework to protect those who use it. People who report corruption can face harassment, the loss of their jobs and, in extreme cases, threats to their safety. That gap, critics say, discourages exactly the kind of information the system needs.
A reworked whistleblowing bill has been signalled for the National Assembly, with officials indicating it would be re-presented for legislative action. Supporters hope a fresh draft can finally turn a long-running policy into enforceable law.
How the current programme has worked
Nigeria’s existing whistleblowing policy, introduced to encourage tips on stolen or hidden public funds, has helped authorities trace assets and open cases over the years. But it has operated as a policy rather than a law, which supporters say limits how far it can protect the people it relies on. Promised rewards have sometimes been slow or disputed, and informants have had little legal recourse when they faced retaliation. Backers of a dedicated statute argue that putting the programme on a firm legal footing would settle questions about incentives, define who qualifies for protection and give the courts clear ground to act when a whistleblower is targeted.
How Nigeria compares in the region
Olukoyede has pointed out that only a few countries within the Economic Community of West African States have enacted whistleblower protection laws, naming Ghana and Senegal as among the rare examples. He presents that as evidence that Nigeria has room to lead rather than lag on the issue.
Why it matters
Corruption drains public funds that could otherwise reach schools, hospitals and infrastructure, and insiders are often the only people who can flag it early. A whistleblower protection law would give those individuals a clearer shield and a defined route to report what they know. Whether the National Assembly acts on the EFCC’s appeal will help shape how confidently Nigerians feel able to speak up in the years ahead.