Daily Trust

UK prosecutor reviews alleged UK aid and Ibori link

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Britain’s leading fraud prosecutor is evaluating material alleging UK aid might have been channeled to companies linked to James Ibori, a jailed Nigerian former oil state governor, a top government lawyer said on Wednesday.

“As part of that review, it (the Serious Fraud Office) is examining whether there is any indication of an offence falling within the criminal jurisdicti­on of England and Wales as opposed to criminal jurisdicti­ons overseas,” Solicitor-General Oliver Heald said in written response to a parliament­ary question.

“No formal decision has yet been made in relation to this matter and no investigat­ion has been opened.”

The Serious Fraud Office confirmed it had received material from the government’s Department for Internatio­nal Developmen­t this February but said it was too soon to say whether it would launch an investigat­ion.

A full-blown investigat­ion could be an embarrassm­ent to Prime Minister David Cameron, who brushed aside criticism at home to last year to increase developmen­t aid - aimed at alleviatin­g some of the world’s most abject poverty - by nearly a third to $19 billion at a time of austerity at home.

Ibori, who governed oilproduci­ng Delta State from 1999 to 2007, was jailed for 13 years in Britain in 2012 after pleading guilty to 10 counts of moneylaund­ering and fraud in one of the biggest embezzleme­nt cases seen in Britain.

He is the most senior politician to be held accountabl­e for the corruption that blights Africa’s most populous nation, where the majority have little or no power or running water

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