Buhari’s Presidency has been described as a sanctuary for looters.
News Online reports that the Peoples Democratic Party has described the government of President Muhammadu Buhari as a criminal and fraud-friendly one, following the declaration of the president’s son-in-law wanted over a N31 billion fraud.
ICYMI: CBN Bans Nigerians From Depositing More Than 5k In Banks
[the_ad id=”9328″]
Gimba Yau Kumo, a former managing director of the Federal Mortgage Bank of Nigeria, who in 2016 married Mr Buhari’s second daughter Fatima, Mr Tarry Rufus and Mr Bola Ogunsola, were declared wanted over misappropriation and diversion of $65 million National Housing fund.
BREAKING: President Buhari Son Declared Wanted Over N31 Billion Fraud
Kola Ologbodiyan, PDP’s spokesperson in a statement on Friday said, Mr Kumo’s involvement in fraud “further confirms that the Buhari Presidency is indeed a sanctuary for fraudsters, treasury looters and common criminals.”
[the_ad id=”9328″]
“It speaks volumes that the Buhari Presidency had remained silent in the face of this huge fraud involving Mr President’s son in-law; a beneficiary of the primitive family patronage in the Buhari administration, only for certain members of the cabal to be reportedly mounting pressure on the ICPC to let him off the hook,” the statement read in part.
Breaking: Buhari To Be Flown Abroad As His Dementia Health Deteriorates
Though Mr Buhari campaigned on riding Nigerian public service of corruption, saying Nigeria must kill corruption before it kills Nigerians, his allies have been fingered in different corruption saga.
According to report by Peoples Gazette monitored by News Online, details how late Isa Funta, a prominent member of Mr Buhari’s inner caucus, got nearly a billion naira from Federal Inland Revenue Service and how the current Acting EFCC Chair Abdulrasheed Bawa was involved in theft before he was tapped for the job by Mr Buhari.
[the_ad id=”9328″]
In January, Transparency International in its 2020 Corruption Perceptions Index (CPI) reported that Nigeria’s ratings plunged to 149 on a categorised scale for “highly corrupt” countries — three places down from its 146th position in 2019.