According to the
U.S. Justice Department, the money must be used for the agreed public projects
highlighted in the agreement signed with it before the fund was returned to
Nigeria.
The United States
Government has told Nigeria to be ready to “replace” the $300m General Sani
Abacha loot it returned to the country if the fund was misused.
According to the
U.S. Justice Department, the money must be used for the agreed public projects
highlighted in the agreement signed with it before the fund was returned to
Nigeria.
The United States
and the British dependency of Jersey agreed with the Nigerian Government in
February to return the $300m Abacha loot, according to Reuters.
The U.S. Justice
Department outlined the so-called "claw back" provision in a response
to a query from a powerful American senator questioning the prudence of
returning the cash.
"Should any of
the parties — including the United States —conclude that any of the returned
funds had been used for an ineligible expenditure, a "claw-back"
provision would then obligate the FRN (Nigeria) to replace fully any such
improperly diverted monies," the letter said.
It did not specify
how and to whom the money would be "replaced".
The provision is
notable as Nigeria continues efforts to repatriate money allegedly stolen
during Abacha's brutal regime from 1993 until his death in 1998.
Transparency
International estimates that he stole as much as $5bn of public funds during
that time.
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