THISDAY

Jonathan’s Aide Tells EFCC to Prosecute APC Leaders for Alleged Economic Crimes...

Says false accusation against former president criminal offence

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Former aide to former president, Dr. Goodluck Jonathan, Mr. Reno Omokri, has called on the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) and Independen­t Corrupt Practices Commission (ICPC) to investigat­e and prosecute leaders of the ruling All Progressiv­es Congress (APC) for falsely accusing the former president of economic crimes.

Omokri rested his call on the confession­al statement by a former spokesman of the APC, Chief Timi Frank, that the ruling party fabricated outright lies against Jonathan that the former president engaged in economic and financial crimes.

He said this had not only vindicated the former leader, but had exposed the APC to be a propagandi­st organisati­on that used and uses fraud and economic sabotage to destroy Nigeria.

Frank had revealed that damaging allegation­s made against Jonathan were deliberate falsehoods, fabricated by leaders of the APC without any thought spared for the economic impact on the nation.

The party leaders had alleged that under the watch of the Jonathan administra­tion $49 billion was missing and unaccounte­d for from the Federation Account and the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporatio­n (NNPC), and that the ex-president had emptied out the Excess Crude Account.

These false allegation­s, he said, were made in a desperate power grab, but added that they led to a massive loss of confidence in the Nigerian economy, leading to capital flight. These acts of economic sabotage were deliberate and are criminal.

He said the EFCC was establishe­d by the Peoples Democratic Party’s administra­tion of former president, Chief Olusegun Obasanjo, and Alhaji Atiku Abubakar, to identify, prevent and punish financial crimes against the Nigerian state.

According to him, it is a financial crime to knowingly make false allegation­s against the Nigerian government's Economic Management Policy for the purpose of underminin­g it and weakening it so that an individual or organisati­on can profit from such underminin­g.

Based on the confession and testimony of Frank, it is clear and establishe­d that the APC leaders committed a crime against Nigeria, in that they knowingly subverted the Nigerian economy and turned the then third fastest growing economy in the world to the present world headquarte­rs for extreme poverty.

"As such, both the EFCC and the ICPC are called upon to prove their independen­ce by commencing the investigat­ion, arrest and arraignmen­t of APC leaders, who made deliberate, false and misleading statements that not only plunged Nigeria into a recession, but also led to the loss of over 11 million jobs and introduced multidimen­sional poverty into the polity," he said.

According to Reno, "Failure to do so on the part of both the EFCC and the ICPC, despite a confession by one of the dramatis personae, should be taken by the Nigerian public as proof that these law enforcemen­t bodies have since lost the independen­ce they enjoyed under the PDP, and are now mere appendages of the ruling party."

He added: "We ask Nigerians to remember the Good Old Days when fuel was N87 per litre, the dollar was N199 to $1, a 50kg rice was N8,000, a Lagos-Abuja return air ticket was N18,000, the N18,000 Minimum Wage was worth $120, a bottle of Coke was N60, a packet of Indomie noodles was N25, with a tin of Peak milk going for N80, while Nissan automobile was making cars in Nigeria for export."

He regretted that the Buhari administra­tion remained unrepentan­t in its claims to unproven economic success, including its recent statement that it had lifted five million Nigerians out of poverty.

A statement, he pointed out, was outrightly contradict­ed by the World Bank, which revealed that poverty in Nigeria has now assumed 'multi-dimensiona­l' status.

"We urge Nigerians to note that these economic gains were eroded, not by the vagaries of the world economy, but by deliberate sabotage of unpatrioti­c elements," he said.

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