ECHOING
the need for accountability, the All Nigeria Peoples Party (ANPP) has
charged the Federal Government to update the citizenry on the
whereabouts of the $26.5 million Halliburton plea bargain.
The ANPP, in a statement by its National Publicity Secretary, Mr.
Emma Eneukwu, noted with concern that since October last year, when
President Goodluck Jonathan directed the Attorney General of the
Federation (AGF), Mr. Mohammed Bello Adoke, to fish out the missing
$26.5 million plea bargain returned to the government by Julius Berger
with regard to the Halliburton bribery scandal, the AGF was yet to
embark on any visible action to this effect, neither have Nigerians seen
the money.
The party said the action further buttressed the fact that the
government was simply paying lip service to its claim that it was keen
on stamping out corruption in the polity. It noted: “We believe that
this calls to question the much vaunted fight against corruption by the
present PDP-led Government.
“To start
with, considering that it was the United States (U.S) Government
that spurred our government on to resuscitate the investigative report
of the $180 million Halliburton scam, the whole issue is therefore a
matter of national integrity in the comity of nations.
“When the Halliburton case was re-opened, the Federal Government
requested the U.S. Government to release the balance of the bribery
money held up in a U.S. bank,
but in response, the U.S. Government refused to release the money,
saying that while America prosecuted those who partook in the scam in
the U.S. and jailed them, the Nigerian Government had been paying lip
service to the matter.
“Our great party has, before now, noted that the purpose of plea
bargain under the Criminal Procedure Act and Section 13(2) of the EFCC
Act is mostly asset recovery. But the peculiar political atmosphere in
Nigeria has made mockery of this legal procedure, as serial criminals
enmeshed in manifest raids of the people’s commonwealth use it to
meander out of the net of justice.
“This was no doubt what inspired the former Chief Justice of Nigeria,
Justice Dahiru Musdapher, on November 14, 2011, to describe the
application of plea bargain in the Nigerian context as of ‘dubious
origin’, explaining later that he was referring to ‘the sneaky motive
behind its introduction into our legal system, or its evident fraudulent
application.’”
“The all-time maxim that, “he who comes to equity must come with
clean hands” is applicable here. It effectively demands that, should the
public officers responsible for the disappearance and/or investigation
into the disappearance of the plea bargain money not live up to
expectation, they should be relieved of their duties.
“We therefore ask Nigerians to demand that the money paid into the
nation’s purse by Julius Berger be made public. As a party, we believe
that the culture of impunity is a cancer in the fabric of our national
life because it emboldens criminals and corrupt individuals, and can
only be removed by a transparent, sincere and decisive national
leadership.”
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