THE near future of some former
ministers and top government officials appears to be behind bars as
President Muhammadu Buhari on Wednesday confirmed that he had started
receiving some documents, which showed that they were thieves.
The President vowed that the ex-ministers
would be prosecuted based on the indicting documents while the proceeds
of their fraud would be repatriated to government coffers from their
multiple foreign accounts, which he said were opened for the purpose of
laundering money.
Buhari said the documents at his disposal
indicted some former ministers and other top government officials of
massive fraud, including oil theft.
“Some
former ministers were selling about one million barrels per day. I
assure you that we will trace and repatriate such money and use the
documents to prosecute them. A lot of damage has been done to the
integrity of Nigeria with individuals and institutions already
compromised,” the President said.
He spoke at an interactive session with
Nigerians in Diaspora at the Nigerian Embassy in Washington DC, United
States of America, as part of his four-day official visit to the
country.
He also said that while many Nigerians
had nicknamed him “Baba Go Slow” because of the delay in forming his
cabinet, he would prefer to be “slow and steady” in taking decisions.
He said the government officials who had
been stealing Nigerian oil also opened as many as five bank accounts
abroad for the purpose of laundering the money they made from their
thievery.
The President said, “We are now looking
for evidences of shipping some of our crude, their destinations and
where and which accounts they were paid and in which country.
“When we get as much as we can get as
soon as possible, we will approach those countries to freeze those
accounts and go to court, prosecute those people and let the accounts be
taken to Nigeria.
“The amount of money is mind-boggling but
we have started getting documents. We have started getting documents
where some of the senior people in government, former ministers, some of
them operated as much as five accounts and were moving about one
million barrels per day on their own. We have started getting those
documents.
“I assure you that whichever documents we
are able to get and subsequently trace the sale of the crude or
transfer of money from ministries, departments, Central Bank, we will
ask for the cooperation of those countries to return those monies to the
Federation Accounts.
“And we will use those documents to arrest those people and prosecute them. This, I promise Nigerians.”
Buhari faulted the mode of operation of
the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation, saying his administration
would check the excesses of the corporation.
The President restated his position that removal of subsidy would bring more hardship on Nigerians.
He however said he would study the debate and take a decision based on his experience.
He said, “Who is subsiding who? But people are gleefully talking ‘remove subsidy.’ They want petrol to cost N500 per litre.
“If you are working and subsidy is
removed, you can’t control transport, you can’t control market women,
the cost of food and the cost of transport.
“If you are earning N20, 000 per day and
you are living in Lagos or Ibadan, the cost of transport to work and
back, the cost of food. You cannot control the market women because they
have to pay what transporters charge them.
“If there is a need for removing subsidy,
I will study it. With my experience, I will see what I can do. But I am
thinking more than half of Nigerians cannot afford to live without
subsidy.
“Where will they get the money to go to
work? How will they feed their families? How will they pay rent? If
Nigeria were not an oil producing country, all well and good.
“Our refineries are not working. We have a lot of work to do.”
Buhari decried those he said had started
calling him “Baba Go Slow” because he has yet to form his cabinet, weeks
after his inauguration.
He said, “Within the past two weeks, I am
being asked when I am going to form my cabinet. And in some quarters
they are now calling me ‘Baba Go Slow.’
“I am going to go slow and steady.
Nigerians should be patient to allow this administration put some sense
into governance and deal with corruption.”
He also pledged to study the Diaspora Bill with a view to signing it into law as being demanded by the Nigerians in Diaspora.
The President advised the Nigerians in
Diaspora looking for government jobs back home to suspend their
ambition, saying the national economy was in a bad shape and that it
would take his administration about 18 months or more to resuscitate it.
He, however, promised that some of them
would be engaged by the Federal Government as consultants to enable them
to contribute their quota to national development.
The Senior Special Assistant to the
President on Media and Publicity, Mallam Garba Shehu, later issued a
statement quoting Buhari as saying that his administration would trace
the accounts of individuals who stashed away ill-gotten oil money,
freeze and recover the loot and prosecute the culprits.
The statement read in part, “Corruption in Nigeria has virtually developed into a culture where honest people are abused.
“250,000 barrels per day of Nigerian crude are being stolen and people sell and put the money into individual accounts.
“The United States and other developed
countries are helping us to trace such accounts now. We will ask that
such accounts be frozen and prosecute the persons. The amount involved
is mind-boggling.”
One former minister, who served in the
ex-President Goodluck Jonathan’s administration, in his reaction on
Wednesday, said Buhari was not a frivolous person and that his
allegations against former ministers should not be trivialised.
The ex-minister however added that it was
only former ministers who had access to oil that could have been
engaged in the stealing of the product.
The minister, who is from the South-West,
but who asked not to be named, told our correspondent that Buhari,
being a cautious leader, could not have made a general statement tagging
all ex-ministers as crude oil thieves.
“It
is only someone who has access to oil that could steal it. I won’t
believe that the President made a general statement calling all
ex-ministers thieves. The President Buhari that I know doesn’t speak
anyhow. This is a serious allegation that we should not trivialise,” he
said.
Also a former junior minister, also from
the South-West geo-political zone, told one of our correspondents on the
phone late on Wednesday that he could not defend anybody because he did
not know those that Buhari was accusing.
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