Crendytech blog
Uncategorized

EFCC to go after Nigerian ‘treasury looters’ hiding in Ghana

The acting Chairman of the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC), Ibrahim Magu, said on Friday many Nigerian treasury looters were hiding in Ghana.

Magu, who disclosed this when a delegation of the Chartered Institute of Public Resources Management and Politics (CIPRMP) visited the EFCC headquarters in Abuja, said the commission was putting resources together to go after the treasury looters and recover the country’s wealth stashed in the neighbouring West African nation.

He added that the EFCC was partnering with its Ghanaian counterpart on the impending asset recovery operation.

The EFCC chief said: “Corruption is a borderless crime. We are putting our resources together to allow us to go to Ghana without restrictions and recovery our stolen property back home.

“I am appealing to Nigerians to trust the commission with relevant information about corrupt practices in the country.

“There are several looters hiding in Ghana. We are already talking, we will bring them back. We will go bring the assets back to the country.”

READ ALSO: EFCC seals properties traced to ex-Abia governor, Theodore Orji

Magu also urged Nigerians to disregard reports about him and the commission, saying the EFCC activities are transparent.

He added: “We follow the international best practice when it comes to areas of investigations, tracing of looted assets and recovering of looted assets. We all have our records.

“We are aware that we have ruffled many feathers. We have touched the untouchables and we have dared lions in their dens.

“We are doing all these, not because we love dangers and death, we are doing them because we value the comfort and development which anti-corruption brings.

“We value good lives for our fellow men and women and we value a better future for all our children. The costs of fighting corruption may be grave, but the costs of not fighting it are more deadly.

“This is why we continue to call on every Nigerian to enlist in the anti-graft war. A good war is a war that is waged by the majority for the good of the majority.”

Opinions

Related posts

10 top stories from Nigerian newspapers, Sunday morning, June 14, 2020

olusegun
5 years ago

APC constitutes reconciliation committees for Edo, Ondo

olusegun
4 years ago

62.3% of electricity consumers still on estimated billing —NERC

olusegun
5 years ago