The trial of former public officers who looted the national
treasury and stashed the funds in foreign banks will commence in few weeks.
President Muhammadu Buhari disclosed this, yesterday, when he met
members of the National Peace Committee led by former Head of State, General
Abdulsalami Abubakar at the Presidential Villa, Abuja. General Abubakar,
however, advised President Buhari to follow due process in the prosecution of corrupt
officials, reminding him that Nigeria was no longer in a military regime.
President Buhari, who
vowed to break the vicious cycle of corruption, unemployment and insecurity in
Nigeria, stated that his administration would not only ensure that stolen
monies stashed in foreign bank accounts were returned but that the looters must
be tried. He disclosed that he was gathering documents which would serve as
evidence against suspected culprits in the anti-corruption war.
Vanguard report continues:
The meeting between
President Buhari and the committee, it was gathered, followed an earlier
meeting with the Peoples Democratic Party, PDP, during which committee members
were told of the persecution that members of the PDP were facing in the hands
of the new governing party.
“Nigeria has to break
this vicious cycle before we can make progress,” the President said.
The President, who
regretted the sorry state of the country’s finances also told the committee
that as part of his actions to address the national problems he inherited, he
has ordered the reorganization of Nigeria’s revenue generating
institutions.
No more business as usual
He explained that a
single treasury account had been established for all federal revenue to ensure
greater probity, transparency and accountability in the collection,
disbursement and utilization of national funds.
His words: “We have
really degenerated as a country. Our national institutions, including the
military, which did wonderfully on foreign missions in the past, have been
compromised. But we are doing something about it. The military is now
retraining and morale has been resuscitated.
“As Petroleum Minister
under Gen. Olusegun Obasanjo in the 1970s, I could not travel abroad until I
had taken a memo to the Federal Executive Council asking for estacode. Now,
everybody does what he wants. That is why security-wise, and economically,
we’re in trouble. Those who have stolen the national wealth will be in court in
a matter of weeks and Nigerians will know those who have short-changed them.”
The National Peace
Committee, then asked him to follow due process in the anti-graft war.
They also reminded the
President that Nigeria is not under a military regime, stressing that everyone
suspected to have committed any crime was assumed innocent until proven guilty
by a court of competent jurisdiction.
Rising from the meeting
held behind closed-doors in the Presidential Villa, the committee remarked that
though corruption was not to be condoned, the process of prosecuting suspects
has to be constitutional.
Speaking to State House
Correspondents on behalf of the committee, the Catholic Bishop of Sokoto
Diocese, Dr. Matthew Hassan Kukah, who confirmed the meeting with former
President Goodluck Jonathan, however, said the former president never begged
for their intervention.
According to him, the
meeting was a hearing-out process.
“We gave a bit of update
about the relevance of the Peace Committee itself and how we can help to
nurture what God has given to us. Anybody is free to come to our committee but
President Jonathan never by telephone or another means talked to the committee.
We went to see him, but that was after we had already seen members of the
political party, members of the civil society; we plan to see the Speaker
because we couldn’t see him yesterday.
“This is a very planned
series of interventions essentially just to hear out everybody and I think the
good news is that Nigerians are committed to a new nation. They are committed
to ensuring that the gains and blessings God has given us come to fruition.
Due process must be
followed —Peace
committee
“This is not an
intervention, it is a hearing out process. When we had election, it was like a
wedding, now the reality of government is the marriage and people need to be
encouraged. We need to reaffirm that this is our country and the only thing we
can collectively be opposed to is injustice, inequity, corruption and in that
regard we all had one single conversation.
“The President has also
reaffirmed the need for this committee to continue and the international
committee has very much welcomed the contributions of the committee.
Essentially we are not policing, but when the need arises, we will help to
build confidence in the process.
“It is not heating up the
polity. In our conversation with former President Jonathan and members of the
parties, I don’t think any Nigerian is in favour of corruption or is against
the President’s commitment to ensuring that we turn a new leaf. I think what we
are concerned about is the process. It is no longer a military regime and under
our existing laws, everybody is innocent until proven guilty.
“Again, our own
commitment is not to intimidate or fight anybody. The former President’s
commitment and what he did still remains spectacular and I think that President
Buhari himself appreciates that. So our effort really is to make sure that the
right thing is done,” Kukah said.
Members of the National
Peace Committee who accompanied Gen Abubakar on the visit were Bishop Matthew
Hassan Kukah, His Eminence, Alhaji Sa’ad Abubakar, the Sultan of Sokoto; John
Cardinal Onaiyekan, Pastor Ayo Oritsejafor, President of the Christian
Association of Nigeria (CAN); Archbishop Nicholas Okoh, Primate of the
Anglican Church of Nigeria; Justice Rose Ukeje (rtd), Prof Ameze Guobadia, Mr.
Sam Amuka, Publisher, Vanguard Newspapers; Dame Priscilla Kuye, Senator Ben
Obi, Dr. Yunusa Tanko, and Dr Arthur-Martin Aginam.
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