close
Thursday, March 25, 2021

Deltans believe Buhari will return Ibori’s stolen £4.2 million: Gov. Okowa

“We are likely to come on the same page. We have written a formal letter of protest to Mr President.”

• March 25, 2021

Delta government has requested President Muhammadu Buhari return the recovered £4.2 million stolen by former Governor James Ibori to the state.

The UK government had arrested, prosecuted and jailed the former governor for money laundering. The loot recovered from Mr Ibori would be repatriated to Nigeria by the United Kingdom.

Speaking on Channels Television, Governor Ifeanyi Okowa said, “I have spoken with the attorney general of the federation. My attorney general went to have a meeting with him. I think that we are working, and we are likely to come on the same page. We have written a formal letter of protest to Mr President.”

The governor added that he would expect President Muhammadu Buhari’s regime to establish the same relationship it did with the UK in returning the recovered loot to Delta.

“In the same manner of the relationship created between the UK and Nigeria, we also expect that the Nigerian government will do the same thing by being magnanimous to return the money to the source, which is Delta state,” argued Mr Okowa.

To ensure the state benefits from the looted funds, he recommended to Mr Buhari, “We have made two suggestions: return the money directly to us or apply it directly to projects that we feel are of importance and are in Delta state so that Deltans can directly benefit from the repatriated funds and I don’t think anybody can fault that line (of thinking).”

Mr Okowa expressed optimism that Mr Buhari would grant the appeal and dismissed claims that the recovered loot would “develop wings” if returned to Delta.

“I don’t see how the money will develop wings anyway,” he asserted. “That is why we have directly put down projects – three projects where this money can be applied directly to such a manner that it is something you can investigate.”

Mr Buhari’s regime and the UK on March 9 resolved to return the £4.2 million recovered from families and friends of Mr Ibori.

The Attorney General of the Federation and Minister of Justice, Abubakar Malami, who signed for Nigeria, revealed that Mr Buhari directed should use the recovered loot to complete the second Niger Bridge, the Lagos-Ibadan expressway, and the Abuja-Kano expressway projects.

Mr Buhari’s directive was faulted by critics who argued that the funds be returned to the state where it was stolen. The House of Representatives had also kicked against the federal government’s decision.

Similarly, human rights activist Femi Falana said the fund belonged to Delta and not Mr Buhari’s regime.

More from Peoples Gazette

States

Herdsmen flee as Civil Defence arrests nine cows in Ekiti

“Men of the Agro Rangers disclosed that during the operation the herders took to their heels and left their cows behind,” the statement said.

Rt. Hon. Aminu Waziri Tambuwal

Health

Strange illness hits Sokoto school, 30 students hospitalised

A state official insisted that no death was reported during the hospitalisation.

Erling Haaland

Sport

Haaland “unfinished product”, will struggle in other leagues: Sammer

The 1996 Ballon D’or winner compared Haaland to Ousman Dembele, saying Dembele was not a “finished product” before leaving Dortmund.

Google Hq

World

Google signs deal to pay Italian publishers

The new deal will let Italian partnering publishers limit the access of users to paywalled stories.

New Zealand Parliament

World

New Zealand passes law to pay maternal leave, bereavement allowances

The law gives employees three days leave when a pregnancy ends with a stillbirth without them having to take sick leave.

gavel

Hot news Home top

Court jails don for falsifying election results for Akpabio

The professor of soil science was convicted for falsifying senatorial election results to favour former governor Godswill Akpabio.