As a top army officer holding command position, he abused public trust
and was caught with his hand in the cookie jar. Realising that he had
been boxed into a tight corner, with clear evidence of guilt laid bare
before him, the officer sang like a canary as he confessed his thievery
of public fund.
Sullen and distraught, he begged authorities,
offering to forfeit more than two-thirds of his loot hidden in a secret
bank account offshore, those familiar with the matter told PREMIUM
TIMES.
He did not want to be prosecuted or publicly humiliated
over the matter. His traducers empathised with him, accepted his offer,
secretly reprimanded him and allowed him the freedom to enjoy the
remainder of his loot in peace.
But that man — Bashir Magashi,
a retired army major general — who got away with a slap on the wrist
after stealing and shipping abroad not less than $550,000 while in
service, has now bounced back, emerging one of the country’s most
powerful ministers.
Last Wednesday, President Muhammadu Buhari
appointed him to take charge of the nation’s defence ministry, a
government department with the third-highest budgetary spending for 2019
–N159.13 billion.Mr Magashi, 74, was a former military
governor of Sokoto State (1990–1992) and was appointed the commander of
the strategic Brigade of Guards in September 1993 ahead of Sani Abacha’s
coup in November of that year.
The officer soon became a
prominent and trusted member of Mr Abacha’s inner caucus. Members of
that administration’s kitchen cabinet were from time to time arbitrarily
allowed access to the nation’s coffers. At times, they were illegally
allocated crude oil which they sold for hefty amounts of money. Mr
Magashi benefitted generously from that arrangement.
After Mr
Abacha died in 1998, the officer was appointed commandant of the
Nigerian Defence Academy, a position he held till 1999 when the new
Olusegun Obasanjo administration compulsorily retired all military
officers who had served for six or more months in government. Mr Magashi
was among those affected by the policy.
Uncovering Mr Magashi’s loot
Shortly
after coming to power, the Obasanjo administration rolled out an
ambitious anti-corruption programme. Apart from setting up
anti-corruption agencies, that government also hired Swiss
lawyer, Enrico Monfrini, to help it track and repatriate funds stolen
and stashed abroad by Mr Abacha and his collaborators.
PREMIUM
TIMES investigation shows that one of the accounts uncovered by Mr
Monfrini was a nominee (secret) one held for Mr Magashi at the Jessey,
UK, branch of Bank PNP Paribus. The account had $550,000 (about
N200million -at N362 to a dollar).Those familiar with the
matter said immediately Mr Obasanjo was briefed by the Swiss lawyer, he
directed the then National Security Adviser, Abdullahi Mukhtar, to
contact Mr Magashi and other past and serving officials who abused their
offices and stashed public funds in foreign banks. They must be
compelled to surrender their loots, the then president ordered.
On
October 26, 2006, the NSA, via memo NSA/A/225/I/C, updated Mr Obasanjo
on the cases of Mr Magashi and four others. “The account (held for Mr
Magashi) has a total deposit of $550,000 and it remained intact until it
was frozen in 2001,” Mr Mukhtar wrote in his memo.
The then NSA
said when confronted, Mr Magashi admitted wrongdoing, saying the money
was a proceed of illegal crude oil allocation Mr Abacha made to members
of the Provisional Ruling Council (PRC) under his government. The
officer was not a registered oil trader at the time. And being a public
servant, it was illegal for him to directly engage in private
businesses.
President Obasanjo then directed that the entire sum be recovered from the retired general, the then NSA said.
However,
“General Magashi pleaded for a concession and Mr President left for him
$150,000 from the said sum and to remit $400,000 to FGN which he has
complied with as evidenced at Annex A, hereby attached,” Mr Mukhtar
said.
Mr Magashi was granted that concession, and no charges were
brought against him. It remains unclear why that approach was adopted
in handling the matter. Both Messrs Mukhtar and Obasanjo could not be
reached to comment for this story. Their known mobile telephone lines
were reported switched off for most of Tuesday and Wednesday morning.The
minister declined to comment for this report. He did not respond to
multiple calls, text messages, WhatsApp messages and emails requesting
his comment.
Is Buhari aware?
It remains unclear Wednesday
morning if President Muhammadu Buhari was aware of Mr Magashi’s
involvement in the looting of Nigeria during the Abacha regime.
Spokesperson Garba Shehu did not answer or return multiple calls from
one of our reporters.
But a presidency official, who asked not to
be named because he has no permission to grant media interviews, said,
“I can tell you that there is no way the president would have ignored
that kind of matter to appoint him if he were made aware.”
If
true that the president had no knowledge that Mr Magashi once forfeited
looted funds, it means the State Security Service, charged with vetting
appointees to top government positions, again failed to do its job well.
The SSS
had also failed in 2015 to detect that the NYSC certificate presented
by former Minister of Finance, Kemi Adeosun, was fake.
It also
means that the Nigerian Senate, which holds confirmation hearings for
ministerial nominees, did a shoddy job, failing to detect Mr Magashi’s
corrupt past.
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