ABACHA'S LOOT: World Bank gives Details on how Abacha’s loot was spent…
Socio-Economic Rights and
Accountability Project (SERAP) has “received several documents from the World
Bank totalling over 700 pages on information on the spending of recovered
assets stolen by the late General Abacha, with some o
f the documents suggesting
that Abacha loot was spent on roads, electricity, education, health and water.”
This information was disclosed by
SERAP executive director Adetokunbo Mumuni in a statement dated 29 November
2015.
The organisation said, “SERAP can
confirm that last week we received several documents from Ann May of the Access
to Information Team of the World Bank following our Access to Information
Request to the Bank. We also received a letter dated 24 November 2015 from Mr
Rachid Benmessaoud, Director of the World Bank in Africa.”
“In total, SERAP has received over
700 pages of documents, which we are now closely studying and scrutinising with
a view to discovering whether the documents contain details that Nigerians
would like to see and whether the information correspond to the facts on the
ground. After this analysis, we will respond to the Bank and consider our
options, including filing an appeal before the Bank’s Access to Information
Appeals Board and taking other appropriate legal actions nationally and
internationally to discover what exactly happened to Abacha recovered loot,”
the organisation said.
The organisation said that “In the
meantime our preliminary review of some of the documents and the letter from Mr
Rachid Benmessaoud have revealed certain facts which raise more questions about
what exactly happened to Abacha loot: First, that Mrs Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala as
Minister of Finance in a letter dated 9 January 2005 explained to the Bank that
around $500m (N65bn) of Abacha loot received from Switzerland was programmed
into and spent in the 2004 and 2005 budgets on roads, electricity, education,
water and health across all 6 geo-political zones of Nigeria.”
“Second, Mrs Iweala explained to the
Bank that N18.60bn was spent on roads; N10.83bn spent on health; N7bn spent on
education; N6.20bn spent on water; and N21.70bn spent on electricity. She also
said that part of the funds were spent on new and ongoing investment projects.
Mrs Iweala said that relevant federal ministries have the full details on the
spending of repatriated Abacha loot. The Bank noted that there was no funds
monitoring and tracking mechanism in place to trace the spending of Abacha
loot,” the organisation also disclosed.
“Third, Mr Rachid Benmessaoud
confirmed that the World Bank played a monitoring role in a return of assets by
Switzerland but that the Bank is not currently involved in the monitoring of
spending of Abacha loot that have been returned to Nigeria in recent years. He
said that the Bank would be prepared to set up a mechanism to monitor the use
of Abacha loot if the Nigerian government request the Bank’s assistance in this
respect.”
“Given Mrs Okonjo-Iweala’s
involvement in the spending of Abacha loot, SERAP calls on President Muhammadu
Buhari to urgently probe the role of the Ministry of Finance and relevant
federal ministries at the time in the spending of Abacha loot particularly
given the strong allegations of mismanagement that characterised the use of the
funds,” the organisation said.
“Although Mrs Okonjo-Iweala said
that Abacha loot was spent in the 2004 and 2005 budgets on roads, electricity,
education, water and health across all 6 geo-political zones of Nigeria, there
is no evidence of such projects as millions of Nigerians continue to travel on
dead roads, while they continue to lack access to adequate electricity supply,
water, health and quality education.Therefore, President Buhari can no longer
continue to remain silent on this issue of public interest if Nigerians are to
continue to trust him in his fight against corruption,” the organisation also
said.
It would be recalled that in a
letter dated 15 October 2015 and signed by Ann May of the Access to Information
Team, the Bank said that “In response to your request under AI3982, we would
like to inform you that we are still considering your request and need
additional time to provide you with a more comprehensive response.”
The letter reads in part “In most
cases, we will be able to respond within twenty (20) working days from receipt
of a request for information. However, we may need additional time in special
circumstances, for example, if the request is complex or voluminous or if it
requires further review by or consultation with internal World Bank units,
external parties, the Access to Information Committee, or the World Bank’s
Board of Executive Directors.”
Earlier, SERAP had on 21 September
2015 sent an access to information request to Jim Yong Kim, President, World
Bank Group urging him to “exercise the Bank’s prerogative to release documents
relating to spending of recovered assets stolen by Late General Sani Abacha”.
The group also asked Mr Yong Kim to
“disclose information about the Bank’s role in the implementation of any
projects funded by the recovered assets and any other on-going repatriation
initiatives on Nigeria with which the Bank is engaged.”
The request was “pursuant to the
World Bank’s Access to Information Policy (The Policy), approved by the Board
on June 30 205. SERAP notes that one of the Policy’s guiding principles is to
maximize access to information. There is also clear public interest in
Nigerians knowing about the Bank’s supervisory role and specifically its
involvement in the implementation of projects on which repatriated funds were
spent.”
Vanguard
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