Buhari's failure to name looters as case of another failed promise?
JOHN SILAS looks at the Muhammadu Buhari-led Federal
Government’s failure to publish names of those behind recovered loots
and asks if it is yet another failed promise by the All Progressive
Congress, APC-led government.
Since the inauguration of the All Progressives Congress, APC-led Federal Government with Muhammadu Buhari in charge as President, on May 29, 2015, Nigerians ironically has continued to rue failed promises from a party they had hoped will lead them to the Promise Land.
Since the inauguration of the All Progressives Congress, APC-led Federal Government with Muhammadu Buhari in charge as President, on May 29, 2015, Nigerians ironically has continued to rue failed promises from a party they had hoped will lead them to the Promise Land.
Latest of the failed promises by the Buhari-led government is recent
publishing of recovered assets without names of looters, even when
President Buhari had boasted of publishing the names for all to see.
President Buhari had on May 13, in an interview he granted some
journalists before he departed from London where he attended an
Anti-Corruption Summit, organised by the British Prime Minister, David
Cameron, promised to disclose to Nigerians the amount his government had
so far recovered from those who looted the nation’s treasury and their
names on May 29.
Buhari said: “So far, what has come out; what has been recovered in
whatever currency from each ministry, department and individuals; I
intend on the 29th to speak on these. This is because of all what
Nigerians are getting from the mass media; because of the number of
people arrested, either by the Economic and Financial Crimes
Commission, EFCC, or Department of State Services, DSS. But we want to
make a comprehensive report on the 29th.”
When asked whether he would also publish the names of the looters,
Buhari replied: “Yes, eventually, it has to be done because we want to
successfully prosecute them. But you know you cannot go to the courts
unless you have documents for prosecution. People signed for these
monies into their personal accounts.”
But while Nigerians waited with great expectations to know those who
looted the country dry, their hope yet again, on the D-Day, May 29, the
promised date to name looters, was dashed, as the promised naming of
looters was postponed. The President failed to name looters, promising
that the Minister of Information, Lai Mohammed, will do that in earnest.
While Nigerians waited in patience, what they could only get was lists
of looted assets that were recovered; they cannot tell if the recovered
assets were looted by ghosts or humans, as names of those from whom the
funds and assets were recovered were not mentioned.
But justifying the reason behind President failure to fulfill his
promise to make the names of the looters public, Vice President Yemi
Osinbajo explained that the Federal Government decided not to release
the names of persons from whom the funds and assets were recovered,
because doing so may jeopardize on-going investigations.
Osinbajo who made this disclosure during a meeting at the Presidential
Villa with a delegation of the European Union, EU, led by the EU
Ambassador to Nigeria, Mr. Michel Arrion, said that government released a
list of sums of monies and assets recovered in the past one year, but
left out the names of individuals from whom recoveries were made.
Details of the recoveries, published by the Federal Ministry of
Information, showed that the Nigerian government successfully retrieved
total cash amount N78,325,354,631.82; $185,119,584.61; £3,508,355.46
and €11,250 between May 29, 2015 and May 25, this year.
Also released were recoveries under interim forfeiture, which were a
combination of cash and assets, during the same period:
N126,563,481,095.43; $9,090,243,920.15; £2,484,447.55 and €303,399.17.
Anticipated repatriation from foreign countries totalled: $321,316,726.1; £6,900,000 and €11,826.11.
The Information Ministry also announced that 239 non-cash recoveries
were made during the one-year period. The non-cash recoveries are:
farmlands, plots of land, uncompleted buildings, completed buildings,
vehicles and maritime vessels.
While some Nigerians may be applauding the government for efforts made
so far in recovering stolen assets, numerous others are unhappy that
government failed to make public the names of those involve in the
ignominious act.
For these Nigerians, half-truth remains no truth and so, the
government will only make a good impression by publishing the names of
looters.
To this end, several groups and individuals across Nigeria have
continued to call on President Buhari to fulfill his promise to name
those who stole from the country’s treasury.
Some Nigerians who spoke to The AUTHORITY insisted that the names of
those who returned their loots must be published to make the loot
recovery process more transparent.
Among the groups who want the names of looters published is the
Nigerian Bar Association, NBA, whose president, Mr. Augustine Alegeh,
SAN, said that the revelation is important for citizens to gain closure.
According to NBA president, “for us, it is always important that the
promises our leaders make to the people are kept. I believe that if
there is any legal impediment that prevents the President, who is a
forthright person, from keeping a promise he has made to the Nigerian
people, he should let Nigerians know.
“It is also important that we know the quantum of recoveries made from
various persons so that it will be something that is known to every
Nigerian and there would be no challenge. How did you arrive at the
figures that are out there if you don’t put not just names but reasons?
“Tomorrow, you could hear that all the amounts that Mr. ‘A’ or Mr. ‘B’
looted, nothing was done. You could also start to hear that the loot
recovery was only targeted at those who weren’t supporting the
President.”
Alegeh pointed out that the only instance where the President could
withhold the names was if there was a legal obstacle as certain
transactions with confidentiality clauses, which make it impossible for
government to release the names, saying that if government finds itself
in such case, that it should say so clearly.
Also, the Ijaw National Congress, INC, recently said that the
inability of Buhari to mention the names of the country’s treasury
looters was an indication that the President had succumbed to pressure
from the looters.
The spokesman for the INC, Mr. Victor Burubo, who described the
development as an anti-climax, stated that it was not the first time the
President would be doing so to Nigerians.
He said: “This is not the first time they are doing this to Nigerians.
In the appointment of ministers, the President said he wanted to
appoint spectacular people and this took him six months. But he ended up
appointing run-of-the-mill ministers.
“On the amount recovered as loot, many figures were mentioned but we
have virtually nothing. If the President promised to name the looters
and at the end, he could not do so, it means he has succumbed to the
pressure from the looters.”
Human rights lawyer, Mr. Femi Falana, dismissed the amount the
government said it had recovered as far less than the true amount.
He said: “Let me tell you this: That list is not correct. I know that
the EFCC has recovered about $3.1 billion. I think this is just the
report from a department; it is not a comprehensive one.
“The figure announced has not taken cognizance of the totality of the
fund that has been recovered by all the anti-graft agencies. From the
information at my disposal, the figure announced by the Information
Minister is a fraction of what the EFCC has recovered and deposited in
the Central Bank of Nigeria.”
The Senior Advocate of Nigeria noted that in order not to discourage
more looters from returning stolen funds, the Federal Government might
not want to name the looters yet.
Falana disclosed: “In fact, some of the looters who have stolen the
bulk of the missing money, who are on the run, are being pursued in
different jurisdictions in the world.”
National Publicity Secretary of pan-Yoruba socio-cultural
organisation, Afenifere, Mr. Yinka Odumakin, in his reaction said that
the amount released as recovered loot was less than the total amount of
figures bandied about by the Federal Government and its agencies since
the anti-corruption campaign began.
He said: “As far as we are concerned, there is nothing new on the list
shown to Nigerians. Anybody can just put figures together. Where are
the particulars of the recovery? From who were they were recovered?
“In the last one year, different rumours have been flying about with
regard to those who refunded billions of naira and dollars. The figure
they have released now is too opaque; it is not transparent and does
not lend credence to their claims. Anybody can just write anything and
throw it out.
“We need the particulars; from who were the monies recovered? If they
don’t do that, then, they are just wasting our time; they are just
making a mockery of the whole process. They talked about naming and
shaming, let them release the names. As it is now, there is no
revelation yet before Nigerians.”
Correspondingly, the Ohanaeze Youth Council, OYC, the youth wing of
Igbo socio-cultural organisation, the Ohanaeze Ndigbo, faulted the
government’s failure to disclose the identity of those from whom the
sums and assets were recovered.
The President of the OYC, Mr. Okechukwu Isiguzoro, demanded full
disclosure of the names of looters saying that “Nigerians have been
anticipating the release of the looters’ names for a while now; it is
disappointing that the government only came out with figures. Inasmuch
as the people need to know the amount that was recovered, they should
also know the identity of persons that stole the money.
“In fact, if the Federal Government is sincerely fighting corruption,
it should disclose the identity of those who stole and returned money.
It appears that there is a deliberate attempt to shield looters and that
is totally unacceptable. Nigerian youths are not impressed.”
Also, a member of the federal parliament in the Second Republic and
Convener of the Coalition of Northern Politicians, Academics,
Professionals and Businessmen, Dr. Junaid Mohammed, stated that he had a
“conflicted attitude towards the recovered funds and assets.”
He said: “I don’t believe what is being said to have been recovered
was what was actually recovered. What was stolen was more than what was
recovered. If the government is sincere about recovering the remaining
money, it has to redouble its efforts in recovering, as much as
possible, all that was stolen and return same to the national treasury.
“I am not a lawyer, so I wouldn’t want to venture into a legal opinion
of the status of those who have stolen the money. But if the law makes
it difficult to disclose the names of those who stole the money, their
identities and their names will be endangering the case itself. But,
please, let the names be disclosed.”
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