Oyo State joins ICPC’s anti-graft drive as Information Commissioners pledge commitment to fighting corruption and ensuring good governance.
The Independent Corrupt Practices and Other Related Offences Commission (ICPC) has enlisted state Commissioners for Information across the country in the renewed fight against corruption.

In a release on Saturday, 6th September 2025, signed by the Oyo State Commissioner of Information, Prince Dotun Oyelade, who attended the ICPC Roundtable Meeting in Abuja with other commissioners of information across the country, noted that while corruption remains a defining challenge at the federal level, the real battleground lies at the state and local government levels due to their proximity to the grassroots.

At the meeting, the Commissioners and the ICPC resolved to take several far-reaching measures, including:
Sustaining collaboration and synergy between the ICPC and State Information Commissioners to spread anti-corruption messages using state-owned media platforms.
Implementing deliberate and sustained communication strategies to build public trust, legitimacy, and collective action against corruption.
Embedding anti-corruption messages into government information management processes.
Sensitizing and mobilizing citizens to demand accountability, participate in governance, and report corrupt practices.
Building capacity and providing training for state and local government officials on strategic communication, transparency, and anti-corruption tools.

Promoting ethical re-orientation by embedding values of integrity into governance, schools, and community structures.
Partnering with media and civil society to amplify government efforts and provide independent assessments.
Communicating anti-corruption messages in local languages commonly spoken in communities.
Launching grassroots-focused campaigns and creating a WhatsApp platform for constant engagement between states and the ICPC.
Translating ICPC publications and Information, Education, and Communication (IEC) materials into local languages for wider reach.
Providing airtime on public radio and television stations for anti-corruption programmes and sensitization campaigns.
Organizing thematic advocacy campaigns targeted at schools, Ministries, Departments, and Agencies (MDAs) to drive behavioral change and ethical reorientation.

The resolutions, according to Prince Oyelade, are aimed at strengthening the collective will to combat corruption, particularly at the grassroots level where its effects are most felt.
In his closing remarks, the ICPC chairman, Dr Musa Adamu Aliyu, SAN said that the roundtable engagement with commissioners of information all over the country is deliberate as it’s one of the vital steps that the agency is pursuing to reduce corruption to its barest minimum and save Nigeria from avoidable international embarrassment.
In his own address the minister of information and orientation, Alhaji Mohammed Idris Malagi agreed with the ICPC chairman that having a synergy with state commissioners of information is important and promise to work relentlessly with his state colleagues to actualize the objectives of the roundtable meeting.
