A total of 22.5 million euro has been recovered by the Federal
Government from the confiscation on money laundered by General Sani
Abacha.
Speaking at the ministerial platform in Abuja, the
Minister of Justice, Mohammed Adoke said a total of 175 million euro was
also recovered from the family of the late head of state following a
confiscation order by the Supreme Court of Liechtenstein.
Mr Adoke listed measures taken by the federal government to reform the nation’s criminal justice system.
General
Abacha had ruled Nigeria as a military Head of State between November
17, 1993 and June 8, 1998, when he died suddenly of a heart attack. As a
result, General Abdulsalami Abubakar became the head of state and
within a short time, he re-established democracy in Nigeria, arranging
for general elections that resulted in the emergence of Olusegun
Obasanjo assuming the presidency as the democratically elected leader of
the country in 1999.
Before Mr Obasanjo took office, Mr
Abubakar’s government had delivered a clear message that the late Abacha
had looted huge sums, and they had to be restored. Members of the
Abacha family and some of their accomplice then ‘voluntarily’ returned
about $1 billion to the Federal Government. In 2002, the Obasanjo
administration tentatively came to an agreement with the Abacha family
to return another $1 billion out of the $1.1 billion that had been
identified, traced and frozen, with the quid pro quo that the Abachas
would be allowed to keep balance that had been assessed not to be of
criminal origin.
The arrangement was not well received by the
masses. Although the proposal caused a massive outcry for seeming to
reward the theft of public funds, it was subsequently rejected by the
late dictator’s son, Mohammed Abacha, who continued to maintain that all
the assets in question were legitimately acquired. The highest sum that
had in the past been traced to the family ranged from $3 billion to $5
billion, which includes money allegedly derived from misappropriation of
funds from the Central Bank of Nigeria, bribes received from
multi-nationals, among others.
The Swiss government last December
said that it has so far returned to Nigeria the sum of $700 million
stolen by the late dictator and deposited in several Swiss banks. In
addition to freezing about $640 million, the Swiss judicial authorities
handling the case have also indicted Mohammed Abacha and Atiku Bagudu
under Swiss legislation regarding money laundering, fraud and taking
part in a criminal organisation.
Source: http://www.leadershub.org/news/nigeria-recovers-more-billions-of-abachas-loot/
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