Former President Goodluck
Jonathan on Wednesday pushed back against “absurd” attempts by the President
Muhammadu Buhari administration to link him to the unfolding scandal of how a
fugitive returned to the country and took a senior position in public service.
Mr. Jonathan said the fact
that efforts are being made to link him to the return and reinstatement of
Abdulrasheed Maina underscored how “uncoordinated and rudderless” the Buhari
administration has become.
“Are they saying it is
President Jonathan that flew him back into Nigeria and promoted him in two
levels ahead of where he was as at 2013 when he fled the from civil service?”
Mr. Jonathan’s spokesperson, Ikechukwu Eze, told PREMIUM TIMES Wednesday night.
“They should stop insulting
Nigerians or seeing them as fools,” Mr. Eze said.
Mr. Buhari has come under
intense public backlash since last week Friday when PREMIUM TIMES uncovered Mr.
Maina’s surreptitious return to civil service.
Mr. Maina was declared
wanted by the EFCC on allegations of courting billions in public funds for his
own use when he headed the pension reform task force.
The pension funds scandal
broke out during Mr. Jonathan’s administration (2010-2015), and the government
took disciplinary steps against Mr. Maina by dismissing him from service.
Mr. Maina was an assistant
director at the time of his dismissal.
The presidency, in a
statement by Garba Shehu Wednesday night, said top officials of the Jonathan
administration benefitted from the funds Mr. Maina allegedly stole from pension
funds.
“Top officials in the PDP
government, from sectoral heads, to those charged with responsibility for law
and order received some of these billions of naira from Maina,” the
presidential spokesperson said. “We have all the transaction records and these
are matters that the EFCC has been pursuing to ensure that they all have their
day in court.”
Mr. Shehu also suggested
that some influential officials loyal to the previous government may have been
the invisible hand in the latest scandal that saw the return of Mr. Maina to
the public service, despite being on the EFCC’s wanted list.
He, however, assured
Nigerians that President Buhari was determined to get to the bottom of the
matter of the impunity that led to Maina’s reinstatement.
“Everything will be
uncovered in due course,” he said. “This
just goes to show us the scale of corruption that this government is fighting.
And, as we can all see, corruption keeps fighting back viciously.”
Firing back within minutes
later when PREMIUM TIMES reached him for comments, Mr. Jonathan’s spokesperson
said the Buhari administration officials should waste little time in bringing
out any evidence of connivance between Mr. Jonathan and Mr. Maina if they have
it.
“There’s no need to warn
that they will bring evidence out or that everything will be revealed on a
later date,” Mr. Eze said. “They should present the evidence to Nigerians now.”
Mr. Eze said Mr. Maina’s
family had already disclosed how the embattled former civil servant returned to
the country and secured a new position in civil service even while he was being
sought by the EFCC.
“The Maina family spoke
about how he returned to the country and they made it very clear that Buhari
officials were the ones that orchestrated his return,” Mr. Eze said.
Emerging details since
Monday have pointed to the involvement of Attorney-General Abubakar Malami, the
Federal Civil Service and the Ministry of Interior as playing critical roles in
the reinstatement of Mr. Maina into the civil service.
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