The minister said the UK
expressed commitment towards returning Nigeria’s looted funds during a
bilateral meeting between the two nations.
The Attorney-General of the
Federation and Minister of Justice, Abubakar Malami stated over the weekend
that the government of the United Kingdom has agreed to return the funds stolen
from Nigeria.
Malami made this revelation
upon his return from the United Kingdom on Saturday after a two-day
International Anti-Corruption Summit.
He said though there was no
estimate of how much of the Nigeria’s funds stashed in the UK, but “it has been
compiled for certainty.”
Malami said apart from the
meetings which Nigeria had with the UK, there were no other bilateral talks
between Nigeria and other nations.
He said, “There was no
sideline talks as such, but then there has been a bilateral meeting, other than
the conference, in which express commitment has been shown by the leadership of
the UK towards the idea of loot recovery.
“The UK has shown extra
commitment apart from the resolution that was unanimously passed at the
conference. Nigeria was treated as a priority in terms of execution of such
commitment,” he told Punch.
“This is not something that
we are exclusively in control of, but honestly there is a great goodwill and
great commitment working mutually. So, very soon, Nigeria will start reaping
the benefit,” he said.
A 34-paragraph communique
issued at the end of the London conference was captured under three sub-themes
– “Exposing corruption; punishing the corrupt; and supporting those who have
suffered from corruption and driving out corruption.”
Repatriation of proceeds of
corruption to the victim nation is part of the resolution reached at the
conference.
The communiqué read in
part, “The proceeds of corruption should be identified, seized, confiscated and
returned, consistent with the provisions of UNCAC. We will continue to
strengthen our legal frameworks for asset recovery. We will work together to
enforce confiscation orders across borders including, where legal systems
allow, administrative freezes, non-conviction-based confiscation orders or
unexplained wealth orders. We will ensure that we have the authority to take
prompt action, where possible, in response to requests by foreign countries to
identify, freeze, seize and confiscate the proceeds of corruption.
“We will afford one another
the widest measure of cooperation and support, applying the provisions of UNCAC
and other relevant international instruments or mechanisms to which our
countries may be a party to.
“We recognise that
resolving complex asset recovery cases is assisted by partnership and
cooperation between requesting and requested states.
“Recognising the importance
of strong political commitment and interaction, and building on the experience
of existing regional fora, we welcome proposals for a Global Asset Recovery
Forum to be held in 2017, co-hosted by the United States and United Kingdom,
with support from the joint World Bank and UNODC Stolen Asset Recovery
Initiative (StAR), which will focus on assistance to Nigeria, Ukraine, Tunisia
and Sri Lanka. We will also support a broader use of the global and regional
asset recovery inter-agency networks to obtain investigative and legal assistance
in tracing and freezing the proceeds of corruption.”
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