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SERAP seeks details of recovered loot, alleged N51bn payments to individuals

President Muhammadu Buhari, GCFR

* ‘The public has a right to know how recovered N800 billion loot has been spent,’ says group

Isola Moses | ConsumerConnect

Demanding due process and transparency in the expenditures from the recovered looted funds and management of the nation’s commonwealth, the Socio-Economic Rights and Accountability Project (SERAP) has sent a Freedom of Information (FoI) Act request to President Muhammadu Buhari to announce details of the loot recoveries thus far.

Specifically, the group has requested President Buhari “to direct Mr. Abubakar Malami, SAN, Attorney General of the Federation and Minister of Justice and Mrs. Zainab Ahmed, Minister of Finance, Budget and National Planning to publish a comprehensive list of names of people from whom N800 billion in looted funds have been recovered, the details of spending of the money and the dates of the recovery,” report says.

According to SERAP, the President should “direct appropriate anti-corruption agencies to promptly, thoroughly and transparently investigate allegations that payments totalling N51 billion were made into individual accounts in 2019.”

Recall that Mr. Ibrahim Magu, Acting Chairman of EFCC and Commissioner of Police, at a media briefing Thursday, June 11, 2020, to mark this year’s Democracy Day in Abuja, FCT, said that within the last five years, the anti-corruption Commission had seized many proceeds of crimes included estates, ships, petrol stations, schools, hotels, shopping malls and pieces of jewellery.

Magu had announced “we have recovered assets in excess of N980billion and quite a large array of non-monetary assets like properties, estates, private jets, oil vessels, filling stations, schools; hotels; trucks and other automobiles; pieces of jewellery; plazas, shopping malls, electronics, among others.”

Similarly, SERAP noted that in Buhari’s nationwide speech on the occasion of the Democracy Day June 12, he disclosed that “the government’s anti-corruption fight has yielded over N800 billion in recovered loot.”

The group also related that “BudgIT, a civic tech organisation, recently reported that the open treasury portal by the Federal Government has allegedly shown that payments totalling N51 billion were made into individual accounts in 2019.”

SERAP, in a letter dated June 13, 2020, and signed by Kolawole Oluwadare, Deputy Director, stated: “Publishing the details regarding the N800 billion recovered loot and investigating the alleged suspicious payments into personal accounts would be entirely consistent with fundamental principles of due process, and Nigeria’s international anti-corruption commitments.”

According to the group in the letter copied to Mr. Malami and Mrs. Ahmed, “the information will also reveal the truth of where the money is going and why it is there, and allow Nigerians an opportunity to assess the impacts of any projects carried out with the recovered loot and the alleged payments into individual accounts.”

The letter read in part: “The public has a right to know how recovered N800 billion loot has been spent, and the details and purpose of the alleged payments into individual accounts.

“As a signatory to the UN Convention against Corruption, the African Union Convention on Preventing and Combating Corruption, and the African Charter on Human and Peoples’ Rights, Nigeria has committed to ensuring transparent management of public resources, and unhindered access to public information. These commitments ought to be fully upheld and respected.

“Transparency over transactions by the government is critical to ensuring public confidence in the integrity of the management of public resources.

“The authorities are required to set the highest standards of transparency, accountability and probity in the management of these resources and the programmes that they oversee.”

“We would be grateful if the requested information is provided to us within 7 days of the receipt and/or publication of this letter.

“If we have not heard from you by then, the Registered Trustees of SERAP shall take all appropriate legal actions under the Freedom of Information Act to compel you to comply with our request.”

“Publishing the details of projects on which the N800 billion recovered loot has been spent and a comprehensive list of names of people from whom they have been recovered, as well as investigating allegations of payment of billions of naira into individual accounts, and the projects for which the payments were made, would also serve the best interests of the general public.”

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