Contrary to a media report, the Federal Ministry of Justice says whistle-blowers are paid after successful recovery of illegitimate funds and not for mere tracing or exposure of the suspected stolen funds.
The clarification came against the backdrop of a story published by the Punch newspaper on a pretext of a letter allegedly by one Aliyu Lemu, Esq. purportedly written on June 22nd, 2020 on issues revolving around payment of a whistle-blower’s fees.
“The Office of the Attorney-General of the Federation and Minister of Justice wants to make it categorically clear that one does not get payment on account of exposing looted assets, but on successful recovery and lodgment of same into the designated assets recovery account at the Central Bank of Nigeria,” the Minister, Mr Abubakar Malami (SAN) said in a statement.
The statement was signed by Dr Umar Jibrilu Gwandu, the Special Assistant on Media and Public Relations, Office of the Attorney-General of the Federation and Minister of Justice which was made available to PerSecondnews.
Malami said: “The procedure for engagement of a whistle blower or recovery agent as it relates to the Office of the Attorney-General of the Federation is as follows:
* A proposal is submitted to the Office of the Attorney-General of the Federation.
* A letter of engagement is issued to a whistle-blower of recovery agent where the disclosure is asked to have some prospects of success.
* The recovery agent or whistle-blower is expected to notify in writing the acceptance of the engagement.
* The recovery agent or whistle blower is expected, upon acceptance, to not only trace the assets but recover same and have it deposited in a designated asset recovery account maintained by the Federal Government of Nigeria in the Central Bank which is usually provided to the recovery agent in writing.
*Where these funds are eventually claimed to have been lodged by a whistle-blower or recovery agent, the Central Bank issue an acknowledgement of receipt of the fund to the Office of Attorney-General on demand.
The minister explained that after satisfying the conditions the whistle-blower or a recovery agent can lay claim to success fee and the payment is usually effected by the Federal Ministry of Finance and not the Office of the Attorney-General of the Federation.
“The role of the Office of the Attorney-General in essence is simply that of processing the above listed documents to the Ministry of Finance which is the Ministry saddled with the responsibility of effecting payment.”
Malami explained that recovery is not about exposing the existence of certain assets in an account purported to have belonged to an agency of the government.
“It is about establishing that the funds in the account are looted assets or illegitimately warehoused and following that up with actual recovery and lodgment of the funds in the designated asset recovery account through judicial and extra-judicial means.
Entitlement to recovery fees is for all intent and purposes contingent on lodgment of the purported/exposed assets constituting the subject of recovery into the Federal Government Recovery designated Account maintained at the instance of the President at the Central Bank of Nigeria and the details of the account are contained in the engagement letter.
A clause in the letter reads: “The agreed remuneration shall become due and payable to the whistle-blower within thirty (30) days of the receipt of the recovered/looted funds by the Federal Government of Nigeria and payment shall be made the designated nominated account provided in writing by the whistle-blower”.
Malami said if the whistle blower in the circumstances of this case feels strongly that there is any claim of wrong doing associated with the alleged claim relating to recovery process, the whistle-blower should consider lodging a complaint with the relevant institutions of his choice for the matter to be properly investigated and or consider a judicial redress in the alternative.
The claim by the whistle-blower, as published by the paper, that the Office of the Attorney-General of the Federal cajoled them into signing of an agreement forfeiting sixty percent of the whistle-blower fees amounts to criminal allegation which the whistle-blower is encouraged to lodge complaint before the appropriate law enforcement agencies for full-scale investigation, the Minister stressed.
Malami, however, threatened to charge publishers of libelous stories about him to court.
“The Attorney General shall, however, in line with established tradition of subjecting matters attacking his reputation submit the whistle-blowers mischievous allegation to judicial determination as done previously with The Cable (online newspaper) when its maliciously publish a story casting aspersion against the Attorney-General on matters relating to the Abacha loot.”
Leave a comment