Amaechi releases statement detailing his role in the letter Sanusi sent to Jonathan about mising $49.8bn NNPC fund
Minister
of Transport, Rotimi Amaechi, has released a statement explaining his role in
the letter former governor of the Central Bank of Nigeria now Emir of Kano
Muhammad Sanusi II, sent to former President Goodluck Jonathan alleging that
$49.8 billion was missing from NNPC account.
In a recent interview with Forbes TV which was aired on Wednesday May 4th (read here), the Emir said the letter caused friction between him and Jonathan after someone leaked it to former President Olusegun Obasanjo.
Sanusi in the interview mentioned Amaechi as the person who leaked the letter to the public. Read Amaechi's statement explaining his role in the letter below
In a recent interview with Forbes TV which was aired on Wednesday May 4th (read here), the Emir said the letter caused friction between him and Jonathan after someone leaked it to former President Olusegun Obasanjo.
Sanusi in the interview mentioned Amaechi as the person who leaked the letter to the public. Read Amaechi's statement explaining his role in the letter below
“To put the records
straight, we want to categorically state that a concerned and patriotic
Nigerian who felt sufficiently troubled with what was happening then, gave a
copy of the Sanusi letter to Amaechi, in Amaechi’s capacity, at the time, as
Chairman of Nigerian Governors’ Forum, NGF. Like Amaechi, we should appreciate
that concerned Nigerian’s patriotism. When Amaechi got the letter, he spoke
with Sanusi, who was still the CBN governor, to confirm the authenticity of the
letter. Sanusi confirmed to Amaechi that he wrote the letter. During their
conversation, Amaechi made it abundantly clear to the then CBN governor that
the bleeding of the nation had to be stopped, all non-remitted funds remitted
and that he (Amaechi) was going to use the letter to do whatever was in the
best interest of the nation and Nigerians, which was the stoppage of the
non-remittance and the recovery of all the non-remitted funds from oil sale.
The CBN governor didn’t agree with Amaechi on the way forward. Considering that
the letter was given to Amaechi as Chairman of the Governors’ Forum, he shared
the letter with his colleague governors first, and with Senator Bukola Saraki
(now Senate President), who before and around that period, was doing some work
or/and investigation around the oil sector in the Senate. Around that period, a
delegation from the United States of America government, from the offices of
the Secretaries of State and Defense, visited Amaechi in Port Harcourt to
discuss the issue of oil theft in Nigeria. From their records, they gave
Amaechi figures of about $7 billion, annually, that was being lost to oil theft
in Nigeria. They were discussing the issue and figures of oil theft, and that
was how the CBN governor’s letter to President Jonathan came up. In the presence
of journalists covering the visit, Amaechi brought out the Sanusi letter to the
visiting American delegation to buttress the point that Nigeria was losing far
more money to non-remittance of proceeds from oil sale into the Federation
Account, which everyone seemed to concur, was in itself, another form and
another dimension to the issue of oil theft. To suggest, infer or even
extrapolate that Amaechi surreptitiously, clandestinely or underhandedly
‘leaked’ the CBN governor’s (Sanusi’s) letter is indeed most unfair,
disrespectful and uncharitable to his person. Amaechi did what he did because
he believed that the theft and corruption was just too much. He was propelled
by his patriotic zeal to put Nigeria first, do what was in the best interest of
the nation, and stop the bleeding of our collective resources by a few. The
mind boggling corruption revelations in the recent past, that is still ongoing,
clearly justifies and vindicates Amaechi’s stance on the issue and the actions
he took. Faced with the same situation, under similar circumstances, Amaechi
will not act differently. The good of Nigeria, putting the nation and Nigerians
first, will always be his guiding principle."the statement read
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