CIFCFIN equally petitioned the Association of Professional Bodies of Nigeria (APBN) to examine the issues raised and advise ICAN to suspend further implementation of the CFAN certification programme pending the clarification of its legal and regulatory basis.
The Chartered Institute of Forensics and Certified Fraud Investigators of Nigeria (CIFCFIN), has frowned at the highly publicised training programme of the Institute of Chartered Accountants of Nigeria (ICAN) leading to the designation, Certified Forensic Accountant of Nigeria (CFAN), adding that the certification programme has caused serious concerns within the forensic and fraud investigation ecosystem.
He said that the central issue is one of statutory mandate, professional identity, and protection of the public from avoidable confusion.
Giving a background to the status of CIFCFIN, he said the Institute was established under the Chartered Institute of Forensics and Certified Fraud Investigators of Nigeria (Establishment) Act, 2022. “The Act created a specialised professional institute for the training, regulation, supervision, certification, and advancement of forensic and fraud-investigation practice in Nigeria,” he explained.
According to the Registrar, the Institute’s statutory mandate covers the professionalisation of forensics and fraud investigation, including specialist education, certification, standards, ethics, competence, and regulation in “this multidisciplinary field.”
Drawing attention to the official ICAN faculty page, Mr Salifu noted that it expressly advertises a “Training programme for the Certified Forensic Accountant of Nigeria (CFAN).”
He therefore said it is “imperative that the legal and professional basis for the designation be publicly clarified.”
While acknowledging ICAN as an important statutory professional accountancy body, with a long-standing role in the development of accountancy education and practice in Nigeria, he said the existence of a broad accountancy mandate does not “automatically displace or override a later and specific statutory mandate granted to a specialist institute in the field of forensics and fraud investigation.”
He said in law and professional regulation, specialist statutory mandates must be respected. “Where an Act of the National Assembly creates a dedicated institute and assigns it responsibility for a specialised profession, other bodies should avoid actions, titles, or certification arrangements that may create the impression of parallel statutory authority.”
In light of the forgoing, Mr Salifu raised four major issues to be urgently addressed.
One, whether ICAN is authorised by law to award or confer the designation of Certified Forensic Accountant of Nigeria (CFAN). Two, whether the designation conflicts with, duplicates, or encroaches upon the statutory certification and regulatory mandate of CIFCFIN. Three, whether persons awarded the designation are subject to the statutory standards, ethics, disciplinary processes, and professional regulation applicable to forensic and fraud investigation practitioners in Nigeria and finally, what safeguards are in place to prevent the public, employers, courts, regulators, and international partners from being misled.
The Registrar believes that Nigeria needs stronger, not competing professional institutions in the fight against financial crimes. “The appropriate path is constructive engagement, statutory compliance, and institutional collaboration. CIFCFIN and ICAN can collaborate on capacity building, research, continuing professional development, fraud prevention, forensic accounting education, and professional referral arrangements. Such collaboration must, however, be founded on respect for the law, clear boundaries of professional authority, and protection of the public interest. The rule of law, professional integrity, and public protection must remain paramount.”
CIFCFIN equally petitioned the Association of Professional Bodies of Nigeria (APBN) to examine the issues raised and advise ICAN to suspend further implementation of the CFAN certification programme pending the clarification of its legal and regulatory basis; Convene a meeting of the relevant professional bodies, including CIFCFIN and ICAN, within seven (7) days, with a view to resolving the issues amicably and preserving institutional harmony and provide appropriate guidance to member bodies on the need to operate within their respective statutory mandates and professional jurisdictions in order to promote cooperation, mutual respect, and harmonious professional relationships.

