,
former President Olusegun Obasanjo has revealed that he left over N287
billion in the national treasury, made up of $2 billion, £100 million
and N10 billion in cash and property, being the loot recovered from the
late dictator, General Sani Abacha.
According to Obasanjo, the funds were
paid into the treasury through the Central Bank of Nigeria before he
handed over power to the late Umar Musa Yar’Auda on May 29, 2007.
Obasanjo’s disclosure was contained in the Vol. II of his memoir, My Watch and reviewed by Punch.
On the memoir, Obasanjo disclosed, “In
total, by the time I left government in May 2007, over $2 billion and
£100 million had been recovered from the Abacha family abroad, and well
over N10 billion in cash and properties locally. All were paid to the
public treasury through the Central Bank.
“Enrico (Monfrini, a Swiss lawyer) told
me by the time I left government that if he continued to get support for
his work, there was still about $1bn he believed he could still recover
from the Abacha family and cronies.”
The former President claimed that there
was a time he got a report that £3 million cash was seized from an agent
of the late military dictator by customs officials at an airport in UK
and that the British authorities asked the Nigerian government to prove
ownership of the money.
“I went to London to have a meeting on
another important issue with (former British Prime Minister) Tony Blair
and I took the opportunity to raise the issue of the £3 million, using
the Yoruba anecdote of the thief who stole palm oil from the ceiling
cupboard by getting somebody to help him so as not to spill the red palm
oil on himself or the floor. The man who assisted became an accomplice.
Tony got the message and the £3 million was released to Nigeria the
following day,” Obasanjo explained.
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