 A conglomeration of about 107 anti-corruption crusade groups led by crime and corruption monitors has impressed on the incoming administration of President Le Bollah Amitunibutu ensure the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission is cleaned up of entrenched corrupt leadership symbolized by its current chairman, Abdul Rashid Bauer. The group pointed out that EFCC is an important government agency in Nigeria, established primarily to read the Society of Corruption and not conceived as an agency for settling schools for political godfathers. The convener of the comrade Israel Ouijayan, who read the statement in Lagos, warned that if a government agency expected to fight crime is found going about its business in a manner that mimms which hand and selective justice while also being unable to deal with the corruption going on within its own workforce, the nation is added for real-time crisis, conflict of confidence. He also noted that thus far the government's claim of making the fight against corruption and related practices a top priority, EFCC, the agency charged with the execution of the war is in questions over mountain allegations of monumental corrupt practices. It is important to note that in Nigeria, despite government's claim of making the fight against corruption and related practices a top priority, the EFCC as an agency charged with the execution of the war is in question over mountain allegations of monumental corrupt practices that includes, one, the allegation that about 80 percent of cases under the EFCC investigations are not taken to court, EFCC offices have now literally become the courtrooms. Last week also as you will recollect, the Zanfa State Governor, Bello Matawale openly alleged that Abdul Rashid Bahar, the EFCC chairman demanded the sum of two million dollars from him and he said he has evidences as bribe to stop a purported probe against him. Three, even before Abdul Rashid Bahar was presented as substantive chairman, he has been arrested and detained by the anti-graph agency in 2019 for selling at least 244 trucks, what about 20 to 30 million Naira each, to its proxies at 100,000 Naira per unit. All include OSCs by the federal government, violating section 31, section 2 and section 4 of the EFCC Act of 2004.