Thursday, 8 September 2011
Patience Jonathan Is Not Corrupt - EFCC
Chairman of the Economic and
Financial Crimes Commission,
EFCC, Mrs. Farida Waziri, yesterday
debunked claims that the First
Lady, Dame Patience Jonathan is
under any form of investigation
by the anti-graft agency. She said
such a report was mischievous.
Waziri made this clarification
while receiving representatives
of the Women Empowering and
Enriching Lives (WEEL), an Abuja
based non-governmental
organization, who paid her a
courtesy visit at the EFCC’s
corporate headquarters in
Abuja .
The clarification is coming on the
heels of renewed media reports
that the anti-graft agency had on
September 11, 2006, seized
$13.5 million dollars ( USD ) from
Mrs. Patience Jonathan, when she
was then wife of the Governor of
Bayelsa State, Mr. Goodluck
Jonathan. According to Waziri,
the visit of the NGO provided her
an opportunity to respond to
several enquiries she had been
getting on an alleged pending
case against Mrs. Jonathan.
“Let me state clearly that the
commission will not allow itself
to be used to drag innocent
people’s names into crimes,
cases or allegations they know
nothing about. In this particular
case, I have read my predecessor
say in media interviews in
September 2010 that Mrs.
Jonathan was not in any way
involved in any case of money
laundering investigated by the
EFCC under him. I have thereafter
checked our records and cannot
find any case of money
laundering against Mrs. Jonathan
or the President himself. So, each
time I get an enquiry or read
about this, I often wonder where
this is coming from.”
Waziri maintained that if the
person said to have investigated
Patience Jonathan for money
laundering had as far back as
September 2010 disclaimed this,
she wondered why people were
still referring to it. She said the
commission did not have any
account or records where $13.5
million was recovered from Mrs.
Jonathan in 2006. “We should
learn to separate the truth from
blackmail. Our society can only
thrive on justice and fair play if
we uphold the right values and
shun the politics of pulling
innocent people down,” she
added.
She maintained that she would
not allow the commission to be
used in dragging innocent
people’s names into allegations
they know nothing about. “I
think that is criminal and a big
sin. A good name is better than
silver and gold. People work hard
to build their names and image
and then to come overnight and
cast this damage or scandalise to
hunt someone, I think, is a great
sin and I don’t allow it.
Each time we receive petitions,
when it is not anonymous, we
look for the writer to come and
adopt it. But if it is anonymous,
we don’t put it in the waste bin,
we carry out covert enquiries to
see whether there is any
substance in it. If there is
substance, then yes, we are
looking for whistle blowers so
we do something about it, but
we do not for the sake of politics
or the sake of sensationalism
drag peoples names in the mud. I
know I have been a victim of
such and I know what it means
and what it takes,” she stressed.
She also said when she took up
the job, the late president Yar’
Adua called her and asked if she
knew what it entailed to handle
the job. “He had told me that my
name will be rubbished, I will be
scandalized, people will write all
sorts of rubbish against me,
tissues of lies will be concurred
against me. He asked if I realized
that and I said yes, I have been
through it before and now,”
Waziri explained.
She said there was no record
anywhere in the commission that
Mrs. Jonathan was under any
investigation, adding that when
the former governor of Delta
State, James Ibori allegedly
offered $15 million bribe to the
former boss of EFCC, the money
was kept and remained intact at
the Central Bank of Nigeria, CBN.
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