Daily Trust

Atiku, wives, under internatio­nal banking surveillan­ce It’s a rehash of old false stories-Former vice president

- By Fidelis Mac-Leva & Saawua Terzungwe

The Financial Crimes Enforcemen­t Network (FinCEN), an agency of the U.S. Department of Treasury, has placed former Nigerian Vice President Atiku Abubakar and his family members under close watch.

According to a report by online medium, PREMIUM TIMES, new findings have now shown that FinCEN flagged some transactio­ns linked to the senior politician as suspicious as it surveilled money movements within the internatio­nal financial system.

These findings, according to the report, also offer fresh insight into how huge funds linked to Atiku may have been moved across internatio­nal jurisdicti­ons using shell companies.

FinCEN files, a new investigat­ion by the Internatio­nal Consortium of Investigat­ive Journalist­s, BuzzFeed and 108 media partners across the world, including PREMIUM TIMES, are a large volume of confidenti­al financial reports relating to the transactio­n activities of world leaders, terrorists, drug dealers and money launderers.

The investigat­ion is said to have involved 16-month collaborat­ive work involving more than 400 journalist­s, including those from PREMIUM TIMES, in 88 countries.

The files included a large number of suspicious-activity reports, SARs, filed by banks and other financial institutio­ns to the US Government as required by the Bank Secrecy Act., with the total amount in suspicious transactio­ns reported being $2 trillion ($2, 099584, 477,415.49).

The SARS flagged subjects, including organisati­ons and individual­s, in more than 170 countries, and were obtained and shared by BuzzFeed.

In one such report, a $1,018,500 wire transfer on March 5, 2012, was flagged in daily monitoring by Habib Bank Limited New York, HBLNY.

The transfer originated from Guernsey Trust Company Nigeria Limited with the beneficiar­y being Tanjay Real Estate

Brokers, a company which held a Habib Bank Limited Dubai account.

It was the link with Atiku that triggered a suspicious activity alert through HBNLY’s transactio­n monitoring system.

Reacting yesterday, Atiku described the allegation­s as a rehash of old false stories.

His spokesman, Paul Ibe, in a telephone chat with Daily Trust, said: "The sequence of events as reported in the story did not make any indictment. Consequent­ly, it’ll be prepostero­us to assume one.

"As everyone is well aware, developmen­ts have shown that the former vice president has a clean profile in clean countries including the United States".

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