The seizure of Alamieyeseigha’s U.S. corrupt property gives further disgrace to Jonathan’s pardon...
It is a noteworthy fact that he had, last year, forfeited a $401,931
Massachusetts brokerage fund in the US. The latest legal sanction
against Alamieyeseigha abroad is most welcome and heart-warming as it
sends a correct signal that corrupt public office holders will not be
allowed to enjoy their ill-gotten wealth, no matter where such loot may
be located.
Symbolically, this development has further stamped a huge question mark on the moral standpoint of the Jonathan administration, especially in the anti-corruption context. Also, by implication, this property seizure linked with corrupt acts has further exposed the rottenness of Alamieyeseigha’s contrived pardon. Indeed, Jonathan faced an intense storm of public criticism when in March he hid under constitutional provisions to, among others, officially and unconditionally pardon Alamieyeseigha who in 2007 was locally convicted of high-profile financial corruption and sentenced to a two-year jail term; in addition, he forfeited massive money and property.
Considering the gravity of the charges against Alamieyeseigha, and the sheer scale of his guilt, there was widespread condemnation of Jonathan’s forgiving move, which was viewed as not only opportunistic, but also unconscionable and unscrupulous. At the time, this newspaper took the popular position that Alamieyeseigha was undeserving of pardon, and should not enjoy such redemption. Alamieyeseigha’s absolution not only left a sour taste in the mouth; it was also decidedly stomach-churning.
This is a man who was charged with buying properties worth over $8 million with bribes he received from contractors while serving as governor, and who pleaded guilty to money laundering on behalf of two companies he controlled – Solomon & Peters Ltd; and Alamieyeseigha and Santolina Investment Corp. Even more dramatic was the discovery of a cool one million British pounds stashed in his London home during a search by the city’s Metropolitan Police; and another hefty sum of almost two million British pounds was found in his bank account in the UK.
His movie-like and mysterious 2005 escape from London where he was facing money laundering charges has become the stuff of legend, and such was the story that it has spawned what many see as fantasy that he fled the city disguised as a woman while on bail. Alamieyeseigha has denied this, though. Back home, he lost his position following his impeachment by an outraged Bayelsa State House of Assembly, and was subsequently prosecuted by the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC).
Alamieyeseigha’s scandalous behaviour in office scandalised all right-thinking people of conscience, except Jonathan and his camp, who made self-serving arguments to justify a clear immorality. In the light of the recent US penalty against Alamieyeseigha, however, the Federal Government has again not only been rightly exposed to perhaps unfamiliar lessons in public morality; it has also been deservedly embarrassed by the evident limitations of the state pardon granted him.
Interestingly, it is a mockery of the concept that Alamieyeseigha, nevertheless, remains in chains. Reports say he is still under investigation in some Western countries and risks arrest should he step out of Nigeria. To go by the unfolding ramifications of this naked abuse of presidential discretion, for that is exactly what it was, the administration cannot escape more and more shame over the Alamieyeseigha pardon.
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