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Wednesday 10 May 2000
NET CLOSES ON STOLEN $BILLIONS
The freezing this week by Luxembourg authorities of more than
600 million dollars in accounts linked to General Sani Abacha
puts on ice more than 1.25 billion dollars stolen by Nigeria's
late dictator, making it one of the world's largest corruption
case. Luxembourg deputy state prosecutor Georges Heisbourg said
yesterday that Luxembourg officials had frozen eight accounts
worth 671 million eurosmillion dollars) in the Luxembourg
subsidiary of a German bank. The accounts, details of which
were withheld, were in the name of different off-shore oil
companies linked to two of the sons of the late general who
ruled Nigeria from November 1993 until his sudden death in June
1998, Heisbourg said. "The funds confiscated correspond to
money diverted into the pocket of the Abacha family," he said.
"Searches have been carried out and the case is soon to be sent
to the Nigerian government," he added. In October, Swiss
authorities said they had frozen 654 million dollars in about
140 accounts in 11 banks in Geneva and Zurich. The funds were
deposited in two of Switzerland's largest commercial banks,
Credit Suisse and UBS, and several private banks.
The combined actions amount to the largest known freezing of
monies linked to a former dictator -- dwarfing the 550 million
dollars that former Philippines president Ferdinand Marcos left
in Swiss accounts. And although Abacha's alleged looting of the
national treasury does not compare with others such as former
Zaire's Sese Seko Mobutu, the chase for his money appears now
to be the world's largest corruption case. Abacha, a former
defence minister and chief of defence staff, took power in
Nigeria in November 1993 and, according to Nigerian government
officials, quickly set about systematically raiding the
country's central bank reserves, built up on oil sales. With
his family and a close network of associates and advisers, he
set up dozens of off-shore front companies, spread around the
world, and illegally transferred the money abroad.
Estimates as to how much much money in total was transferred
abroad illegally or stolen and kept in Nigeria run to eight
billion dollars but little so far is proven. But since Abacha
died aged 54 on June 8, 1998, reportedly cavorting with
prostitutes in a guest house in the grounds of the presidential
villa, his family's fortunes have dwindled and the corruption
scandal has unravelled. In September 1998, Abacha's successor
General Abdulsalami Abubakar persuaded Abacha's widow Maryam
and eldest surviving son Mohammed to return cash worth around
750 million dollars said to have been stolen from public funds.
No prosecution followed but in October, the son was arrested on
different charges of organising the 1996 murder of the wife of
prominent politician Chief Moshood Abiola. President Olusegun
Obasanjo said in November last year that his government had
succeeded in recovering 124 million dollars in stolen funds on
top of the funds already frozen. The amounts recovered or
frozen to date are believed to be minor compared with money
moved abroad, under Abacha and his predecessor General Ibrahim
Babangida. Those funds are still under investigation in an
inquiry headed by Nigerian National Security Adviser Aliyu
Mohammed Gusau, centred on funds in London and other capitals.
From: Bob Minton <bob@minton.org>
Date: Wed, 10 May 2000 11:34:48 -0400
Organization: The Lisa McPherson Trust, 33 N. Fort Harrison Ave., Clearwater, Florida 33755 Telephone (727) 467-9335, Fax (727) 467-9345
Message-ID: <n40jhs4hg9cunhnmm6f90u7hdqu2ngg32q@4ax.com>