Less
than a week after President Goodluck Jonathan honoured the late Head of
State, Gen. Sani Abacha, with an award for “his contributions to the
nation,” the United States has ordered a freeze on $458m in assets
stolen by the former dictator and his accomplices.
AFP quoted the Justice Department
as saying on Wednesday that the corruption proceeds – stashed away in
bank accounts in Britain, France and Jersey – were frozen at
Washington’s request with the help of local authorities.
Abacha died in office in 1998, but his
surviving relatives still include some of the richest and most
influential figures in Nigeria.
According to a civil forfeiture
complaint unsealed in the US District Court in Washington, the
department wants to recover more than $550m in connection with the
action.
“This is the largest civil forfeiture
action to recover the proceeds of foreign official corruption ever
brought by the department,” said Mythili Raman, acting assistant
attorney general.
“General Abacha was one of the most
notorious kleptocrats in memory, who embezzled billions from the people
of Nigeria, while millions lived in poverty,” she said.
The Justice Department said the frozen
assets, along with additional assets named in the complaint, represented
the “proceeds of corruption” during and after the military regime of
Abacha, who became Head of State through a military coup on November 17,
1993 and held that office until his death on June 8, 1998.
The complaint alleges that Abacha; his
son, Mohammed Sani Abacha; their associate, Abubakar Atiku Bagudu, and
others “embezzled, misappropriated and extorted billions from the
government of Nigeria and others, then laundered their criminal proceeds
through the purchase of bonds backed by the United States using US
financial institutions.”
Raman said that the action sent a “clear
message” that the United States was “determined and equipped to
confiscate the ill-gotten riches of corrupt leaders who drain the
resources of their countries.”
The US government’s Kleptocracy Asset
Recovery Initiative, where appropriate, provides for the return of
stolen proceeds “to benefit the people harmed by these acts of
corruption and abuse of office.”
It did not specify what action would be taken with regard to the Abacha case.
The funds frozen include approximately
$313m in two bank accounts in the Bailiwick of Jersey and $145m in two
bank accounts in France, the department said.
Four investment portfolios and three
bank accounts in Britain were frozen, with an estimated value of at
least $100m, but the exact amounts in the accounts have not yet been
determined, it said.
The Justice Department said that on
February 25 and 26, authorities in Jersey, France and Britain complied
with the US action to freeze the assets.
The complaint also seeks to freeze five corporate entities registered in the British Virgin Islands.
According to the complaint, Abacha and
others systematically embezzled billions of dollars in public funds from
Nigeria’s central bank on the false pretence that the funds were
necessary for national security.
They withdrew the funds in cash and then moved the money overseas through US financial institutions.
Abacha and his Finance minister, Anthony
Ani, also allegedly caused the government to buy Nigerian government
bonds at vastly inflated prices from a company controlled by Bagudu and
Mohammed Abacha. That operation created an illegal windfall of more than
$282m.
In addition, Abacha and his
co-conspirators allegedly extorted more than $11m from a French civil
engineering company, Dumez, and its Nigerian affiliate in connection
with payments on government contracts.
Funds involved in each of these schemes were laundered through the US in nine financial institutions, the complaint alleged.
The financial institutions involved
include Citibank, Chase Manhattan Bank and Morgan Guaranty Trust
Company, now JPMorgan Chase, and New York-based units of Britain’s
Barclays Bank and Germany’s Commerzbank.
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