Nigeria is set to receive around $308 million seized from
former military dictator, late Gen. Sani Abacha, under a deal backed by the United States
and the island of Jersey, US prosecutors said Monday.
The sum is the latest to be recovered from the accounts of
Abacha, an army officer who ruled Nigeria from 1993 until his death in 1998
aged 54, which sparked an ongoing search for hundreds of millions of dollars he
stole and hid abroad.
The repatriation of the money from Jersey, in the English
Channel off the coast of northern France, follows a 2014 US court ruling
authorizing the seizure of $500 million of cash laundered by Abacha in accounts
worldwide, the US Department of Justice said in a statement.
The $308 million recovered represents "corrupt monies
laundered during and after the military regime of General Abacha" together
with his son and a number of associates via US financial institutions and the
purchase of bonds, the Justice Department said.
After several court challenges to the 2014 ruling, the
government of Jersey seized the $308 million located on the island.
"General Abacha and his cronies robbed Nigerians of
vast public resources and abused the US and international financial systems to
launder their criminal proceeds," Brian Benczkowski, an assistant attorney
general in the Department of Justice's criminal division, said in a statement.
"Today's landmark agreement returns to the people of
Nigeria hundreds of millions of the embezzled monies through a lawful process
that ensures transparency and accountability."
The agreement includes provisions to ensure
"transparency and accountability," the Justice Department said, and
after the US and Jersey transfer the money to Nigeria it is set to be spent on
three major road projects across the country which has long struggled with
waste and fraud in infrastructure projects.
In April 2018, Nigeria announced that it had received more
than $300 million from Switzerland as part of money seized from the family of
Abacha.
Those funds went to pay part of the bill of a government
welfare scheme targeted at the country's poor.
The Justice Department is also seeking to recover other sums
linked to Abacha, including $30 million in Britain, $144 million in France and
$177 million located in trusts that name Abacha's associates and relatives as
beneficiaries, according to the statement.
CULLED FROM AFP
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