Abubakar Malami (AGF) |
The Attorney-General of the
Federation and Minister of Justice, Abubakar Malami, SAN, confirmed the receipt
of 311,797,866.11 million dollars of the Abacha assets repatriated from the
U.S. and the Bailiwick of Jersey. Malami made the confirmation in a statement
issued by Dr Umar Gwandu, his Special Assistant on Media and Public Relations
on Monday in Abuja.
According to Malami, the amount
increased from over 308 million US dollars mentioned in the press release
issued in February to 311,797,866.11 million dollars following the accrued
interest from Feb. 3 to April 28 when the fund was transferred to the Central
Bank of Nigeria’.
“In line with the 2020 Asset Return
Agreement, the fund has been transferred to a Central Bank of Nigeria Asset
Recovery designated account and would be paid to the National Sovereign
Investment Authority (NSIA) within the next fourteen days. “The NSIA is
responsible for the management and execution of the projects to which the funds
will be applied”.
Malami said the government of
Nigeria has committed that the assets will support and assist in expediting the
construction of three major infrastructure projects across Nigeria.
“The projects are the Lagos – Ibadan
Expressway, Abuja – Kano Road, and the Second Niger Bridge,’’ he explained. He
said that the federal government is in the process of establishing a Project
Monitoring Team to oversee the implementation of the projects and report
regularly on progress made to the public. “To ensure transparent management of
the returned assets, the government will also engage a Civil Society
Organisation (CSO), who has combined expertise in substantial infrastructure
projects, civil engineering, anti-corruption compliance, anti-human trafficking
compliance, and procurement to provide additional monitoring and oversight
functions. “The process for the engagement of the CSO monitor has already
commenced with the adverts placed in two Nigeria newspapers –Daily Trust and
the Punch of March 4 and a Notice of Extension on April 17, the Federal Tender
Journal March 9 and 23, the Economist March 14. “The advert can also be found
on the website of the Federal Ministry of Justice – www.justice.gov.ng” It
would be recalled that the recovered funds were laundered through the US banking
system and then held in bank accounts in the Bailiwick of Jersey.
In 2014, a U.S. Federal Court in
Washington D.C. ordered forfeiture of the money as property involved in the
illicit laundering of the proceeds of corruption arising in Nigeria during the
period from 1993 to 1998 when Late Gen. Sani Abacha was Head of State. In 2017,
the federal government filed a case in the Bailiwick of Jersey to assert its
authority as the owner of these funds and as the victim of the action of
Abacha.
Malami urged for greater cooperation
and mutual respect amongst countries in the implementation of expeditious
cooperation measures already set out in the United Nations Convention Against
Corruption and in the implementation of the Global Forum on Asset Recovery
(GFAR) principles on the repatriation of stolen assets. He further assured
Nigerians that the Federal Government would ensure that the returned assets are
transparently managed.
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