Buhari President orders to sanction of everyone involved in N13bn Ikoyi loot
The president condemned the recovery of the loot in the Ikoyi apartment as an 'unfortunate incident'.President Muhammadu Buhari has promised to sanction everyone found culpable in the looted $43.5 million, £27,800 and N23.2 million recovered from a Lagos apartment earlier this year.
The president made this promise while he was receiving the report of the Presidential Review Panel on National Intelligence Agency (NIA) at the Presidential Villa on Tuesday, December 19, 2017.
According to a statement signed by the president's Special Adviser on Media and Publicity, Femi Adesina, Buhari condemned the discovery as an "unfortunate incident which rightly aroused public interest and outcry."
He said, "All
the circumstances surrounding the obtaining, keeping custody and
disbursement of the funds have been examined by the Vice President’s
Committee and all those found to be culpable will be made to account and
appropriately sanctioned.
"However,
it must be understood that this cannot be done in a manner that
jeopardises national security or exposes the operations of any
intelligence agency, which must, by nature be conducted in secrecy.
"Suffice it for me to assure all that justice will be done consistently with our anti-corruption policies."
The president fired the NIA's former Director General, Ayodele Oke, in October based on the recommendation of the Presidential Investigation Panel headed by Vice President, Yemi Osinbajo.
This was after Oke had laid claim to the recovered loot, saying it was earmarked by the agency for covert operations.
Since he was sacked, the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) has invited Oke, his wife, Folashade, and some other officials of the NIA for questioning in the relation to the recovery.
While
speaking on Tuesday, the president also praised the Presidential Review
Panel led by a former Minister of Foreign Affairs, Ambassador Babagana Kingibe, for completing the assignment.
The panel had been tasked with reviewing the operational, technical and administrative structure of the NIA.
The president said, "Your
panel's recommendation, informed as they are by your collective
experience and expertise in this field, should in particular help to
reposition the NIA to better perform its vital functions with greater
professionalism.
"The Osborne
Tower incident and its aftermath have also brought to the fore the need
to review the entire national security architecture, which has now been
in operation as established 31 years ago.
"Once again, I thank you very much for undertaking this national assignment."
The other members of the panel; Chief Albert Horsfall, Ambassador Zakari Ibrahim and Ambassador Ezekiel Oladeji were also present at the presentation of the report.
History of Ikoyi loot
The
loot was recovered by officials of the EFCC in Flat 7B, No. 16, Osborne
Towers, Ikoyi, Lagos during a raid on Wednesday, April 12, 2017.
A
lot of controversy trailed the discovery of the loot, with public
outcry, especially on social media, demanding that the culprits be
brought to book.
The loot was initially claimed to belong to the NIA when Oke said
that the amount in the apartment was marked for covert operations.
After President Buhari suspended Oke and set up a three-man panel headed
by Osinbajo, to properly investigate the matter, he was sacked on
October 30.
The issue became even more controversial when Senator George Sekibo,
a lawmaker who represented Rivers East senatorial district at the time,
appeared at plenary with a whistle, claiming that the loot belongs to
the Rivers state government.
Rivers State Governor, Nyesom Wike, further claimed ownership of the funds which he alleged were misappropriated from the state by his predecessor, Rotimi Amaechi.
Former aviation minister, Fani Kayode, and spokesperson of Ekiti State governor, Ayodele Fayose, Lere Olayinka also
insisted that the apartment where the loot was found belonged to
Amaechi. The current Minister of Transportation strongly denied the
claims.
The loot has also been linked to former chairman of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), Adamu Mu'azu; senator representing Lagos west, Solomon Adeola; and an ex-managing director of Petroleum Products Pricing and Marketing Company (PPMC), Esther Nnamdi-Obue.
On June 6, Justice Sule Hassan of a Federal High Court division in Lagos ordered the final forfeiture of the monies recovered to the Federal Government.
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