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O E Watch Mobile Edition Nigeria Recovering 300 Million Dollars from Corrupt General’s Foreign Account
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  • +OE Watch Mobile Edition
  • OE Watch, Vol 08, Issue 06, Jun 2018 (Mobile Edition)
  • -OE Watch, Vol 08, Issue 05, May 2018 (Mobile Edition)
    • A French General Discusses Challenges in Mali
    • A New Striking Power for the Turkish Armed Forces
    • Additional Compensation for Remote Assignments
    • Archbishop of Bogotá Confesses Left
    • Armenia Gears Up for ‘Future Wars’
    • Black Gold Helps Fund Al-Shabaab in Kenya
    • Bolivarians Gain Influence over Colombian Resources
    • Brazilians Send Former President to Jail
    • Brazil’s Federal Government Open Border Policy Challenges Frontier States
    • Chechen Special Troops Retake Nuclear-Powered Icebreaker in Exercise
    • China Gaining Momentum in Quantum Technologies That Can be Used in Military Applications
    • China Holds Naval Review in the South China Sea
    • China in Greenland: Mines, Science, and Nods to Independence
    • China is Beefing Up Its Intelligence Curriculum for Military Personnel
    • China Lauds Its Model of Development Cooperation in Africa
    • China’s Carrier Aviation Unit Improves Training
    • Cleaning Up the Professional Ranks
    • Climate Change as a Conflict Driver in Somalia
    • Colombia and Brazil Look for Solutions to Deal with Massive Venezuelan Migration
    • Colombian-Venezuelan Border Ills
    • Considering No-Fly Zones in Russian Military Science
    • Criminal Organizations and the Use of Encrypted Communication Devices in Latin America
    • Cuban Media Praises Putin’s Victory
    • Disputes over Natural Gas Exploration in the Eastern Mediterranean
    • Dr. Lester Grau: Russia On The Rise
    • Former Governor: ISIS May Reemerge in Kirkuk
    • Gerasimov on Future War and Modernization Priorities
    • India’s Red Line for China
    • Indonesia Brings Terrorists and Victims Together
    • Iran and Russia Compete for Influence in Syria
    • Is Catalonia an Irregular Warfare Battleground?
    • Keeping Russian Troops Informed and Inspired
    • Kenya: “You Don’t Look Like a Terrorist”
    • Multiple Sources of Trafficked Weapons
    • New Fuel Bladders for Improved Mobility
    • Nigeria Recovering 300 Million Dollars from Corrupt General’s Foreign Account
    • “Turkey-Russia Rapprochement” Continues
  • +OE Watch, Vol 08, Issue 04, Apr 2018 (Mobile Edition)
  • +OE Watch, Vol 08, Issue 03, Mar 2018 (Mobile Edition)
  • +Monographs, Papers and Special Essays (PDF To Text Conversion)

Nigeria Recovering 300 Million Dollars from Corrupt General’s Foreign Account

OE Watch Commentary: Even for a country that has gained a notorious reputation for corruption, the amount Sani Abacha, the Nigerian general who also served as de facto president for five years in the 1990’s, looted from the national coffers is considered immense, estimated at five billion dollars and perhaps higher. Now, as the accompanying excerpted article from the Nigerian newspaper Vanguard explains, $322,510,000 of that money has been returned to the country by Switzerland. Additional funds stashed away in foreign bank accounts by Abacha, who died in 1998, have already been returned, are in the process of being returned, or are still being searched for by international investigators.

As a breaking news story the article only says the funds have been recovered; it does not describe how Abacha came to acquire such a large amount of money. For that, it is necessary to review other publications, which reveal more of the story, including that Abacha was once dubbed one of the most corrupt leaders in history by Transparency International. While poverty is widespread in the country, there is enormous wealth from the oil industry that has been prone to be siphoned off by some of the country’s elites, including Abacha. Besides living a lavish lifestyle in numerous sprawling homes, he is believed to have stashed over two billion dollars in European banks. Some of the money was also laundered through the purchase of US government backed bonds. Later the FBI would help recover over 400 million dollars from bank accounts in several countries.

Apparently corruption was a family affair as his son, Abba, was charged by a Swiss court with money laundering, fraud, and forgery in 2005. He would spend 561 days in custody for his crimes. Because some members of the family have been accused of stealing and hiding vast sums of money, interestingly, Abacha and the names of several of his relatives have often been falsely used in the infamous advance fee scam known as a 419, so-called after the Nigerian Criminal Code section that deals with fraud. Unwary individuals have sent untold sums of money to con artists in an attempt to claim some of the hidden loot.

There is perhaps a certain irony in the story of Sani Abacha. While notoriously corrupt, and rising to power through a series of successful coups, Abacha greatly improved the Nigerian economy, including taming inflation, reducing the foreign debt, and increasing foreign reserves. There are those in Nigeria who still honor him for his economic accomplishments. However, the accompanying article serves as a reminder that while helping the country, he also helped himself. End OE Watch Commentary (Feldman)

“The federal government says it has received 322.51 million dollars from the Swiss Government as part of looted funds recovered from former head of state, late General Sani Abacha.”
Source: Dicta Asiimwe and Julius Barigaba, “Troop contributing countries disagree with UN, donors on Amisom withdrawal,” The East African, 3 March 2018. http://www.theeastafrican.co.ke/news/Amisom-withdrawal-region-differs-with-UN-and-donors-/2558-4327446-3fn59t/index.html

Tough choices as troop contributing countries seek to increase boots on the ground, but funders push for a reduction…The change of heart by the Somali authorities on the withdrawal of Amisom gained momentum last week after the Ugandan army shot dead three SNA soldiers in a friendly fire incident, prompting a flurry of accusations and counteraccusations between Ugandan and the SNA over who started the shooting…Uganda’s Foreign Affairs Minister Sam Kutesa added the mission was also in need of force enablers and multipliers, which are crucial in carrying out effective operations.

“Going forward, it is essential therefore that the international community look at the bigger picture in Somalia, so that the gains made in recent years through enormous efforts and great sacrifice of Amisom and the SNA are not in vain,” Mr Kutesa said.

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