Around $15 billion equal to
about half the country’s foreign currency reserves was stolen from Nigeria’s
public purse under the previous government through fraudulent arms procurement
deals, the vice president said on Monday.
The total sum lost to
corruption related to the provision of security equipment to the military and
amounted to around 15 billion US dollars, Vice President Yemi Osinbajo said.
Africa’s top oil exporter
is going through its worst economic crisis in decades due to the drop in global
crude prices and ministers say these problems have been exacerbated by the
impact of fraud under previous administrations.
President Muhammadu Buhari,
who last year won election fought on his vow to crackdown on corruption, has
said the theft of “mind boggling” sums of oil money meant state coffers were
virtually empty in Africa’s biggest economy when he took office last May.
Corruption charges have
been levelled against former military chiefs and companies accused of
involvement in an alleged arms procurement fraud during the tenure of Buhari’s
predecessor Goodluck Jonathan. They have pleaded not guilty..
The total sum lost to
corruption related to the provision of security equipment to the military and
amounted to around 15 billion US dollars, Vice President Yemi Osinbajo said.
Endemic corruption over
decades has enriched a small elite but left many Nigerians mired in poverty
despite the country’s oil wealth. Osinbajo’s claims are the latest in a string
of allegations by members of Buhari’s administration.
In January, the information
minister said 55 people who were government ministers, state governors, public
officials, bankers and businessmen stole 1.34 trillion naira ($6.8 billion)
over a seven-year period.
The fall in crude prices
has eroded Nigeria’s foreign reserves, since oil sales make up around 70
percent of national income, with the central bank adopting fixed exchange rate
to protect further depletion of its reserves which stood at $27 billion in
April.
Osinbajo, who was speaking
at a university in the southwestern city of Ibadan, said the $15 billion figure
which he alleged had been stolen “is more than half of the current foreign reserves
of the country”.
“It is important to send a
message that no public officer can steal the resources of this country and
expect to escape,” he said.
Buhari’s presidency ended a
period from the end of military rule in 1999 until 2015 when the People’s Democratic
Party (PDP) was in power. The PDP, now in opposition, has accused the president
of mounting a witch-hunt against its members.

Those thieves in the name of politics really destroyed Nigeria
ReplyDeleteNigeria need to appease the Gods
ReplyDelete