Magu...always
chasing the ants.
Acting chairman of the Economic and
Financial Crimes Commission, Mr. Ibrahim Magu, has said that corruption is
virtually the sole reason for the country’s current economic stump.
In an
interview with Arise TV yesterday, Magu said it was because of the central
place of corruption in the present economic woes that the federal government
was paying a lot of attention to the recovery of stolen funds.
“I maintain that the economic recession
is caused by corruption. About 90 per cent of the cause of recession is
corruption, because there was fund and people stole the funds and kept them
where they cannot be reached,” the EFCC chairman stated during the interview
programme anchored by ace broadcaster Jeff Koinange.
Magu added that if a sizable part of
the funds looted from the public treasury in Nigeria were recovered, the
country would be out of recession within a short period. “If we can lay hands
on this hidden wealth, we won’t stay for more than three months in this
recession. It is sufficient for us to get out of economic recession,” he
stated.
Appealing to all those still holding or
hiding looted money to voluntarily return them, Magu said, “I think they should
just come out and approach the government and say, ‘this is what I have.’ Our
emphasis now is on the recovery of the looted fund. People should come out and
give us full disclosure, we would go after it.”
On the suggestions in some quarters
about possible amnesty for those who heed the call for the return of fleeced
public assets, Magu said, “I’m not sure of that. But we encourage recovery if
you can voluntarily bring out this thing, disclose this thing. It is the
government that would decide. We encourage people to come out and disclose the
looted funds.”
He said, “They should cooperate with
the government. They should come forward and declare what they have looted and
the government will take its decision.
“Everybody must join in the fight
against corruption. It’s very necessary for the future of this country, for a
better tomorrow.”
In a related development, EFCC said
yesterday that the former Group Managing Director of the Nigerian National
Petroleum Corporation, Mr. Andrew Yakubu, will remain in the commission’s custody
until investigation into the corruption allegations against him were concluded.
Yakubu was arrested over an alleged discovery of about $9.8 million cash in one of his houses in Kaduna State by EFCC operatives. Another £74,000 was also allegedly found in his house.
The monies, discovered at Sabon Tasha,
a slummy suburb located in the outskirts of Kaduna town, were suspected to be
illicit funds and proceeds of money laundering. The house where the money was
found was under the custody of one Mr. Bitrus Yakubu, a brother to the former
NNPC GMD.


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