Okonjo-Iweala ferried $50 Million jobs to brother
As
Minister of Finance under the government of Olusegun
Obasanjo, Nigeria’s
returnee Minister of Finance and Coordinating Minister for the Economy, Mrs.
Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala, steered public contracts to her brother worth up to $50
million, with the help of the Minister of the Federal Capital
Territory, Mr. Nasir
El-Rufai, yet another WikiLeaks US cable issued in 2004 says.
The
contracts were said to have been awarded to the man, identified only as
“JonJon,” for consulting work for the ministry.
The
detailed cable, which spells out corruption allegations against a variety of
powerful Nigerians, are contained in a cable in which the United States was
considering response to the corruption machine in Nigeria. Entitled “CORRUPTION: NIGERIA
"IMPROVES" TO SIXTH-WORST IN THE WORLD...WHAT CAN WE DO ABOUT IT?” it
followed the release by Transparency International of its 2005 Annual
Corruption Perceptions, and it was written by the Ambassador in Nigeria, Mr.
John Campbell.
It
showed the ambassador considering using the tool of U.S. visa revocations under
Presidential Proclamation 7750 to punish corrupt Nigerian public officials,
after noting that President Obasanjos anti-corruption campaign was widely
perceived to be nothing more than a political witch hunt by President Obasanjo,
a view supported by examining cases targeted at high-level officials.
Mr.
El-Rufai was himself one of those profiled in the cable, where he is identified
as having been known to the Embassy eight years earlier “when he was homeless
and seeking a loan to import a taxi from the UK.”
Since
that time, wrote the ambassador, El-Rufai was said to have recently purchased
seven upscale properties in a posh Abuja
neighborhood. “His demolitions of
commercial and residential buildings in the capital have reportedly provided an
opportunity for himself and several of his friends. After demolishing residential properties in
Kubwa, the land was reallocated to several of his friends and to an investment
company he allegedly owns. The community
of Chika, where about two square miles of development was demolished in
December, has allegedly been allocated to the same group of
people.
The
cable pointed out that despite all of the headlines being grabbed by the
Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) and its chairman, Nuhu Ribadu,
that Commission as well as the Independent Corrupt Practices Commission (ICPC),
had won only a single conviction of a high-level public official:, former
Inspector-General of Police Tafa Balogun, who received a sentence of just six
months, less time served.
Mr.
Campbell pointed out that corruption in Nigeria remained pervasive from the
top down. “For example, in a
widely-circulated August 22 letter to President Obasanjo, Abia State Governor
Orji Uzor Kalu accused Obasanjo of corruption, listing a number of dubious
deals, including:
• Cancellation of the contract for the
construction of the national stadium in Abuja,
only to re-award the contract to a different vendor at a higher price; and
• Use of public funds for capital
improvements at two private schools secretly owned by Obasanjo.
“Obasanjo's
response was to agree to be "investigated” by the EFCC, which reports to
the President. When the EFCC invited
Kalu to provide evidence to support his accusations, Kalu refused, pointing out
that the EFCC was not an independent investigative body and had no authority to
prosecute the President, and the investigation died out.”
The
report also profiled Obasanjo Farms in Otta.
“A Presidential spokesman said in November 2004, in order to explain
Obasanjo's personal wealth, that the farm generated about $250,000 per month in
income, though it was nearly bankrupt in the late 1990s (ref A). Regardless of whether the current income
figure is accurate, at least some Nigerians think it is unlikely that
Obasanjo's military pension and benefits were the sole source of investment for
establishing this huge enterprise, valued by a construction engineer involved
in the construction at more than $250 million.
Still
on Obasanjo, Ambassador Campbell wrote: “The recent auction of oil blocks
included some firms bidding, sometimes with no prior ties to the oil industry,
that were linked to Obasanjo associates, including Edmund Daukoru, Rivers State
governor Peter Odili, Ogun State governor Gbenga Daniel, presidential advisor
Andy Uba, presidential chief of staff Abdullahi Mohammed, Minister of the
Federal Capital Territory Nasir al-Rufai and PDP Board of Trustees Chairman
Tony Anenih.”
The
report also said of Obasanjo that he was believed to be one of the owners of
Suntrust Petroleum. “And questions
remain about the Obasanjo Library project, which collected enormous sums of
money from government contractors, banks, industrialists, and state governors,
ostensibly for the construction of a presidential library, the plans for which
are vague.
It
is widely believed throughout the country that Obasanjo and his son, Gbenga,
are major shareholders in the newly reorganized Zenith Bank and UBA Bank as
well as in airlines and the telecommunications sector.”
The
ambassador wrote that each of the nation’s 36 state governors donated 10 million
naira (about $75,000) to the Obasanjo library project. “Following a public outcry, the library
organizers stated the donations were from the governors' personal funds, but
several governors backpedaled from their commitments, claiming they had made no
such pledges. When a Lagos lawyer filed a code of conduct
complaint alleging conflict of interest in the President's receiving these
donations from recipients of government funds, Obasanjo invoked the immunity
clause of the constitution, and the complaint died out.”
Some
of the other notable people profiled include:
• “Mr. Fix-It” Tony Anenih, who “was indicted
by the National Assembly for the sum of 300 billion Naira (approximately $2.4
billion) missing from Ministry of Works and Housing while he was the
minister. The missing money is widely
believed to have paid off 2003 elections
"expenses," including to Balogun, in addition to lining his
own pockets.
• Chief Olabode George, current PDP National
Chairman (Southwest) is a close friend of President Obasanjo and a leading
proponent of the Third Term Agenda. He
is one of the people accused of financial recklessness in the affairs of the
National Port Authority, where he was chairman when the financial scandals were
allegedly committed. He was retired
from
the Navy in the 1990s by the Babangida Administration after serving as military
governor of Ondo State from 1987 to 1990 in addition to other military
postings.
• Chris Uba, recently appointed to the PDP
Board of Trustees, admitted rigging during the 2003 elections and attempted to
kidnap the governor of Anambra state to try to collect payments for his
efforts. Linked closely to several
vigilante groups in the state, he is widely believed to be
responsible
for the burning of many state government buildings in Awka, crimes that have
yet to be solved.
• Edo
State governor Lucky Igbenedion
purchased a $6 million mansion in London
in 2000 through a series of shell companies, a year after he was elected
governor. He has two Ferraris on the
premises. He also owns reputedly the
most expensive residence in Abuja,
estimated at $25 million.
• Delta
State governor James Ibori owns two London estates. The
properties were purchased for $3 million and $4 million, respectively, after
Ibori was elected governor. Through a
shell company registered to his London-based wife, he offered for public
auction an ongoing supply of 6 million barrels of oil per month. When reporters confronted his wife, the shell
companies abruptly changed their directors so that Ibori's wife was no longer
listed.
• Rivers
State governor Peter Odili has built
an impressive portfolio from his corrupt dealings as governor of one of the
oil-rich states in Nigeria
since his first election in 1999. Beginning his political career as a medical
doctor with a small private clinic in Port
Harcourt, he now hosts
extravagant
events and boasts that it would not have been possible "before he became
governor." Further, he is widely
suspected of being directly responsible for facilitating massive irregularities
in both the 1999 and 2003 elections. His own state officials have claimed that
Odili has employed militia groups, many of which are responsible for the
continuing unrest in the delta region.
The
ambassador said that that the biggest influence the United
States could have on the situation in Nigeria was the “judicious use” of U.S. visa revocation for corrupt practices,
under US
law.
“Though
we are unable to identify every corrupt official, the Mission is compiling a list of some prominent
and egregious corrupt officials from throughout the country,” he wrote. “This list will take into consideration the
individuals, levels of corruption and the impact on Nigerian stability of a [US
Presidential Proclamation] 7750 decision.
He
said that list could “be expanded in many directions,” but the United States
Mission in Nigeria felt that feels that such an effort “would demonstrate the
sincerity and seriousness of the USG's commitment to good governance and, if
these individuals are found ineligible, that finding could contribute greatly
to entrenching the precepts of good governance and accountability in Nigeria.”
Source:
WikiLeaks
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