More than eight year safter leaving office, and taking residence in the highbrow North London, the flamboyant former President of the Organisation of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC), and Nigeria’s oil Minister, Mrs. Diezani Alison-Madueke, has been trapped by the eagle-eyed anti-corruption web of the British Government.
Lady Diezani has been now being charged with bribery offences relating to her time as Nigeria’s oil minister, between year 2010 and 2015, the United Kingdom National Crime Agency (NCA) said Tuesday (22 August).
Alison-Madueke, 63, has been on administrative bail since she was first arrested in London in October 2015. She will appear in court in the British capital on October 2, the NCA said.
She will appear in court in the British capital on October 2, the UK National Crime Agency said.
Soon after her arrest, her family’s lawyer told Agency France Presse (AFP) that she would strongly contest the corruption allegations that have dogged her during and after her time in the former President Goodluck Jonathan’s government.
Alison-Madueke, who occupied the Nigeria’s Petroleum Ministry from 2010 to 2015, was the first woman to be oil minister in Nigeria and the first female president of the global oil cartel OPEC.
The head of the NCA’s international corruption unit, Andy Kelly, said in a statement, “We suspect Diezani Alison-Madueke abused her power in Nigeria and accepted financial rewards for awarding multi-million pound contracts.”
The NCA said Alison-Madueke allegedly benefited from at least £100,000 ($127,000) in cash, chauffeur-driven cars, flights on private jets, luxury holidays for her family, and the use of multiple London properties.
The charges also detail financial rewards including furniture, renovation work and staff for the properties, payment of private school fees, and gifts from top designer shops such as Cartier jewellery and Louis Vuitton goods.
“Bribery is a pervasive form of corruption, which enables serious criminality and can have devastating consequences for developing countries,” Kelly said.
“These charges are a milestone in what has been a thorough and complex international investigation,” he added.
Alison-Madueke has been living in the upmarket St John’s Wood area of north London since she was first arrested in October 2015. He later disclosed through a celebrity journalist that she has undergone chemotherapy for breast cancer, according to her family.
At the time of her arrest, the NCA said vaguely that it had detained five people in London on suspicion of international corruption, without naming those held.
It was the Nigerian government of Jonathan’s successor, President Muhammadu Buhari who later confirmed Alison-Madueke’s arrest and disclosed further that its law enforcement agencies were cooperating with their British counterparts.
Former Army General, Buhari began an anti-corruption drive after taking office in May, 2015.
Mrs. Alison-Madueke had fled the country shortly before the end of her principal’s tenure as President. She was first reported to had hibernated in a Caribbean country, but not quite long, she appeared gaunt and looking sickly in a cover of a celebrity magazine, claiming to be battling cancer.
She was said to have bled the country, through the Petroleum |Ministry to the tune of 10 billion US dollars before bolting away from the country.
The NCA said that assets worth hundreds millions of pounds in relation to the case have been frozen as part of the investigation.
In March, the agency, which targets international and organised crime, provided evidence to the US Department of Justice allowing them to recover assets totalling $53.1 million linked to Alison-Madueke’s alleged corruption.
www.focusmagazineonline.com reports that Mrs. Alison-Madueke had equally lost several highbrow properties to the Federal Government of Nigeria in the exclusive area of Banana Island, Lagos State through some courts’ judgements.
www.focusmagazineonline.com/www.afp.com reports