Return Nigeria’s loot or risk protest, CD warns Britain
The Campaign for Democracy on Friday
called on the British Government to return Nigeria’s looted fund in its
custody as a means of supporting President Muhammadu Buhari’s
administration on corruption.
The group in a statement by its
President, Ifeanyi Odili, and Secretary, Abdulahi Jabi, said it agreed
with the British Prime Minister, David Cameron, who described Nigeria as
a fantastically corrupt nation, but noted that the British government
allegedly encouraged corruption in Nigeria.
According to the CD, Cameron’s statement
was a huge embarrassment and affront to the collective intelligence of
the Nigerian people, especially when the British government over the
years, did nothing to stop Nigeria’s looted funds from entering its
country.
The statement reads, “We put it to the
British Government and other international communities that they are
guilty of aiding and abetting Nigerian and other African leaders to
perpetrate this act of criminality.
“They receive and convert all the
ill-gotten wealth from Nigeria to boost their economic fortunes, by
conspiring to protecting and hiding the identities of the looters.
“By virtue of local and international
laws, receivers of any proceed of corruption or stealing is culpable and
should be prosecuted accordingly.”
The CD therefore called on the British
Government to tender an unreserved apology to the people of the Federal
Republic of Nigeria as a sovereign nation because funds meant to develop
the country were being channelled into the British economy by corrupt
leaders.
The CD recalled the mental torture
suffered by Africans during the era of British slave trade and full
colonisation of the black race.
The group said, “What can be more
corrupt than the inhuman treatment meted out to the African man than
these aforementioned crimes against humanity?
“It is very critical to understand the
policy drive of the new administration in Nigeria under President Buhari
to repatriate all the looted funds in the custody of the international
communities.
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