The Chairman,
Presidential Advisory Committee on Corruption, Prof. Itse Sagay (SAN), has
advised former President Goodluck Jonathan to meet with President Muhammadu
Buhari and confess all he knows about the $2bn arms scandal.
Sagay told our
correspondent during an interview that if Jonathan could provide adequate
information, he would be accorded the adequate respect by virtue of being a
former Head of State.
A former National
Security Adviser, Sambo Dasuki; a former Chairman of Daar Communications, Chief
Raymond Dokpesi; and several others have been charged for their roles in the
arms scandal.
Dasuki had also claimed
to be acting on “instructions from above.”
When asked if Jonathan
could be arrested despite his soaring popularity in the international community
for conceding defeat in the March 28 presidential election and congratulating
Buhari, Sagay said the issue was a ‘sensitive’ one.
He, however, argued
that conceding defeat to Buhari did not make Jonathan a hero. The senior
advocate said one good action could not correct several evil actions.
He said, “To start
with, the great reputation he (Jonathan) seems to have is the fact that he
admitted defeat. There are thousands of actions that are negative actions so I
don’t think that we should overplay it.
“But on the issue of
the former President going to prison, I agree that it is a bit touchy
politically but the case of Jonathan is particularly bad if you see the manner
with which the country’s resources and government coffers have been turned into
a bazaar parlour where everyone goes to collect his own share. Just like Warri
boys would ask, ‘You don obtain your own?’
“Everyone was going to
‘obtain’ under Jonathan. It was just bizarre but I understand that dealing with
a former Head of State is always a sensitive issue but I would say he should
have a private chat with President Muhammadu Buhari and say all that he knows
and if there is anything he has to release, then he should release it and be
allowed to go quietly into retirement.”
Also reacting to the
N120m collected by some members of the Newspapers Proprietors Association of
Nigeria from Dasuki which is believed to be part of the diverted $2bn, Sagay
said investigations would determine if the newspapers were culpable or not.
He said the Chairman of
NPAN, Mr. Nduka Obaigbena, who confessed to collecting over N500m from Dasuki,
might not be charged if the process through which he collected the money was
transparent.
Sagay said, “I think
the issue of knowledge and motive are very important. In other words, if Nduka
Obaigbena was informed that the Federal Government had decided to compensate
him for the losses suffered by his company and this was conveyed in writing and
the cheque was given to him from the NSA, it would not be out of place because
the NSA, after all, is a security adviser and what happened to Obaigbena’s
company was a security adversity so I can understand that but if it was an
underground thing, without any formality, explanation or record, that is when
it will arouse suspicion and make one to assume that it was an underhand deal
done to obtain Federal Government money without any entitlement.”
The senior advocate
said plea bargaining which was bastardised under the last administration would
be more stringent under the Buhari government.
Under former President
Olusegun Obasanjo, the Inspector General of Police, Tafa Balogun, was convicted
of financial impropriety and sentenced to six months in jail while the Managing
Director of the defunct Oceanic Bank, Cecilia Ibru, who was convicted of
financial impropriety, was jailed for six months and made to forfeit assets
worth N191bn.
However, both Balogun
and Ibru spent their jail terms in hospital and never went to prison.
In his reaction, Sagay
told our correspondent that under Buhari, people would be made to spend more
time in jail rather than be given light sentences.
The senior advocate
said there was no provision in the constitution for convicted people to spend
their entire jail term in hospital.
He said the
Administration of Criminal Justice Act coupled with the anti-corruption stance
of the President would ensure that no one escaped justice.
He said, “It is
something that we have to look into but I have a feeling that with the new
government and the arrival of the Administration of Criminal Justice Act which
has plea bargaining positions that are tougher than the normal ones, I think we
are going to see people spending longer periods in prison even with plea
bargaining and it will be longer than six months.”
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