Presidency: why recovered cash can’t be made public yet
The
cash recovered from former public officers under probe by anti-graft agencies
will not be made public yet because it will be used as evidence against them in
court, the Presidency said yesterday.
Presidential
spokesman Mallam Garba Shehu said much as President Muhammadu Buhari would have
liked to let Nigerians know how much has been recovered, it will be impossible
for now.
He
said the money recovered is in the vaults of the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN),
adding that “the issue of how much has been returned has been there. The money
retrieved has to be used as evidence in court. The President said two things;
we will recover and we will prosecute. So, as it is now, you don’t go and bring
all these billions returned out.
“I
am aware that there is an account with the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) where
some of these funds are being kept and are evidence for a judge to see. It is
not for public display. I think that is the challenge we have at the moment.”
Shehu
said Vice President Yemi Osinbajo will soon hit the road travelling around the
country to address town hall meetings, explaining government policies and
actions. The town hall meetings, he said, will hold in the first instance at
zonal levels before going down to state capitals.
Shehu
said: “ Government realises that there is a need to take information to the
people and there are steps that are being taken in order to ensure that this is
done.”
Explaining
the delay in the reconstituting government agencies, Shehu said President
Buhari wanted to be fair to every chief executive of government agencies. “If
he wanted to fire people on assumption of office, he would have done it and
would not have violated any rule. But he decided to give everyone a chance to
see whether they would imbibe the change mantra, and be prepared to come along.”
He
said with offices in the 774 local governments and state offices, the National
Orientation Agency (NOA) needed to do more to enlighten Nigerians on the
government’s policies.
“I
will say with all sincerity that I know that the NOA has worried us in
government. The people and the leadership never believed in what we are doing;
they never believed in change and so, they just folded their arms and watched
us in the last eight to nine months. When they are there, I believe the new
leadership will begin to formulate things for agencies like that.”
While
admitting that the government needs to do more in public enlightenment, Shehu
said “to be fair to Minister of Information Lai Mohammed, I have never seen
somebody as hardworking as that gentleman even as minister. You find out that he doesn’t miss the talk
shows on radio, from one radio station to another and then he will move to a
television station, to a newspaper and all of that.
“I
believe that more needs to be done. I agree with you. We have an agency like
NOA with 774 offices nationwide; each has not less than five to seven officials
and well-equipped. But you know also, sometimes democracy has its own dark
side.”
On
the fight against insurgency, Shehu congratulated Nigerians on the achievements
so far recorded by the Buhari administration, adding that at the moment, no
city in the country is under curfew, while military road blocks have been
dismantled.
He
said the biggest challenge facing the government in the fight against
insurgency is rebuilding damaged facilities, adding that now that the budget
has been passed into law, the much- expected implementation of the government’s
campaign promises will begin to unfold.
The
Nation
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