The Civil Society Legislative Advocacy Centre (CISLAC) has called for a full disclosure of the infrastructural project reportedly funded by repatriated loots recovered from late Head of State, Gen. Sani Abacha.
The centre in a statement issued in Abuja on Tuesday, also lauded the federal government for its efforts to repatriate Nigeria’s stolen asset.
CISLAC Executive Director, Auwal Musa-Rafsanjani in the statement, demanded full disclosure of the contractual agreements to be funded by the recoveries.
He said that the call is paramount owning to a just announced landmark agreement between the federal government, the Island of Jersey and United States government for the repatriation of assets looted by the late Abacha.
Musa-Rafsanjani said that the disclosure of the contractual agreements and arrangement of the deals and projects to Nigerians is necessary to prevent re-looting and misuse of the recovered assets.
“We are awaiting full disclosure of the details of the deals such as the infrastructure projects for Lagos-Ibadan Expressway, Abuja-Kano Road and the 2nd Niger Bridge reported to be funded by these repatriated assets.
“We urge the government to comply with the 10 Global Forum for Asset Recovery (GFAR) principles as signed by the government of Nigeria in 2017 in Washington.
“Particularly, the transparency and accountability principle, the Nigerian public through independent and competent civil society be given unrestricted access to the contractual arrangement agreement.
“The public has the right to know how these infrastructure projects were selected, which party will oversee the procurement, how the quality of the work will be verified and all other relevant details,’’ he said.
READ ALSO: Hong Kong sees first virus death as more countries confirm local transmission
Musa-Rafsanjani said that the demand for full disclosure of the project was also in line with the GFAR principle five on beneficiaries. According to him, the recovery of stolen assets should benefit the strictly the victims of the corrupt practice.
He also said that the principle of preclusion of benefits to offenders must prevent corrupt individuals from benefiting from the repatriation of the assets.
He advised that Nigerians, the media, competent civil society organisations and non-governmental organizations should be formally invited to independently observe and supervise the utilisation of the assets.
Musa-Rafsanjani, however, urged the government to continue to push for reforms that would lead to the establishment of accountable and transparent monitoring framework for recovered loots.
He said this was the only way domestic and international recoveries could be channelled towards the implementation of Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) and other initiatives targeting the most vulnerable in the society.
Leave a Comment
You must be logged in to post a comment.