
According to him, Africans were highly cultured people and disciplined to the extent that they hardly cheat each other in any form of transactions.
In his reaction to the British Prime Minister’s ‘fantastically corrupt’ remark on Nigeria, Omogbehin called to memory how Britons, during the pre-colonial era would exchange commodities with cowries and in the process cheat Queen Elizabeth of England.
Eze Afrika

He argued that the word ‘Corruption’ was not known in Africa, but in Europe, particularly England, because of their unwholesome practices in those days.
Omogbehin wondered how the British Prime Minister, David Cameron dared pass such demeaning remark on Nigeria, when they deliberately introduced bureaucratic bottlenecks to block stashed looted funds from returning to nations of origin, noting that the receiver of looted funds was also corrupt.
“When you talk of corruption, the giver and the taker commits the same offence. When government takes corruption crusade abroad, they promised to cooperate and return stashed funds, but they will deliberately frustrate the efforts of government”, Omogbehin maintained.