Lagos lawyer, Femi Falana, has said that it was time President
Muhammadu Buhari took steps to recover Nigeria’s stolen funds stashed
away in foreign banks, instead of continuing to appeal to the conscience
of the leaders of the western countries.
Mr. Falana told PREMIUM TIMES, Thursday, that “the federal government
should set up a team of local and foreign lawyers to initiate legal
proceedings in the appropriate jurisdictions for the recovery and
repatriation of the nation’s looted wealth.”
He said western governments won’t readily support repatriation of
stolen funds, since their economies were benefiting from such funds.
“In spite of several promises the British government did not return
any fund under former Prime Minister David Cameron. In the same vein,
the outgoing Barrack Obama administration (in the U.S) will not
repatriate a dime to Nigeria.”
Nigeria, Africa’s largest country, has been plundered for several
decades by corrupt government officials who prefer hiding stolen funds –
billions of dollars – in foreign banks.
President Buhari has made the repatriation of such funds a top priority of his administration.
Mr. Buhari, during the ongoing 71st United Nations General Assembly
in New York, United States, met on the sidelines with President Johann
Schneider-Ammann of Switzerland, where he (Buhari) asked for the urgent release of Nigeria’s stolen funds hidden in the European nation.
The Swiss government had earlier set conditions to release the money
which largely involved official assurance that the money would be
judiciously utilised for public good.
The United States Secretary of States, John Kerry, in March, had pledged his country’s commitment to help Nigeria get back its funds hidden in the U.S. banks.
When the then British Prime Minister, David Cameron, was caught on
tape, in May, describing Nigeria as a “fantastically corrupt” country,
Mr. Buhari famously remarked that he would rather want a return of his country’s stolen assets, instead of an apology from Mr. Cameron.

