Former Minister of Finance Ngozi Okonjo Iweala yesterday said she had
paid former National Security Adviser to the President, Col Sambo Dasuki
(rtd) $322m (about N63billion) from recovered Abacha funds to finance
military operations
She was reacting to online media reports that accused her of
illegally diverting the Abacha funds to the office of the former NSA.
The money was returned to Nigeria in January 2015.
The statement signed by her Media Adviser, Paul C Nwabuikwu, said the
attempt to link the former minister to any misuse of the funds for any
purpose other than security was baseless.
She explained that based on a request by Dasuki, former president
Goodluck Jonathan set up a committee comprising of the former Minister
of Justice, the former NSA and herself to determine how best to use both
the returned and expected funds for development.
Okonjo-Iweala said when the committee met, the NSA made a case for
using the returned funds for urgent security operations arguing that
there could not be any development without peace and security.
“Based on this, a decision was taken to deploy about $322m for the
military operations, while the expected $700m would be applied for
development programmes as originally conceived.
“Following the discussions and based on the urgency of the NSA’s
memo, Dr Okonjo-Iweala requested the president to approve the transfer
of the requested amount to the NSA’s office for the specified purposes,”
the minister said.
However, Okonjo-Iweala said as captured in the memo, she insisted on
three conditions: A. only a part, not the entire Abacha funds, would be
spent on the arms; the rest would be invested in development projects as
originally conceived B. the money was to be treated as borrowed funds
which would be paid back as soon as possible C. the NSA’s office was to
account for the spending to the president who was the Commander in
Chief, given the fact that the Minister of Finance is not part of the
security architecture and does not participate in the security council.
Mrs Okonjo-Iweala’s memo to the president, seen by PREMIUM TIMES,
showed that 50 per cent of the recently recovered Abacha loot was
allotted for “urgent security need” such as the procurement of arms and
ammunition while the other half was set aside to be used for development
purposes.
The letter, dated January 20, 2015, which was addressed to Mr
Jonathan, revealed that the money was transferred following a January
12, 2015 request by the office of the NSA under Mr Dasuki for funds for
the procurement of arms and ammunition as well as intelligence
equipment.
“Please find a request by the National Security Adviser (NSA) for the
transfer of $300 million and £5.5 million of the recovered Abacha funds
to an ONSA [Office of the National Security Adviser] operations
account,” the letter read.
“The NSA has explained that this is to enable the purchase of
ammunition, security, and other intelligence equipment for the security
agencies in order to enable them fully confront the ongoing Boko Haram
threat.
“His request is sequel to the meeting you chaired with the committee
on the use of recovered funds where the decision was made that recovered
Abacha funds would be split 50-50 between urgent security needs to
confront Boko Haram and development need (including a portion for the
Future Generations window of the Sovereign Wealth Fund),” Mrs
Okojo-Iweala wrote.
The former NSA, Dasuki is currently on trial in connection with
$2.1 billion arms scam. He is being accused of spending a total of N643
billion in extra-budgetary expenditure.
Also arrested for the alleged fraud are former Sokoto state governor
Attahiru Bafarawa and Chairman Africa Independent Television (AIT)
Raymond Dokpesi.
Both Bafarawa and Dokopesi are said have been paid N4.6 billion and N2.1 billion respectively for unstated purposes.
Premium Times /Sahara Reporters
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