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Federal Government Vows To Release More Names Of Alleged Looters

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FG vows to release more names of alleged looters

FG vows to release more names of alleged looters

FG To Release More Names Of Those Who Wasted Public Money

The Federal Government has vowed not stop revealing the names of those who allegedly looted the nation’s resources, using public funds for private purposes.

Minister of Information and Culture, Alh Lai Mohammed who made  this known yesterday in a statement by his special assistant, Segun Adeyemi also said that “1,000 negative write-ups or editorials will not deter us from releasing the third and subsequent lists.

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According to him, the pressure being mounted on the government over its decision to expose alleged looters was expected.

“We know where the pressure is coming from. However, the die is cast. We will not stop until we have released the names of all those who have looted our commonwealth. Those who have not looted our treasury have nothing to be afraid of,” the minister said.

He further assured Nigerians that no amount of pressure, including the antics of hack writers and threats of litigation, would prevent the government from releasing more names of the alleged looters of the public treasury.

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Mohammed alleged that since the release of the first two lists of alleged looters, there have been overt and covert attempts to intimidate and blackmail the Federal Government into discontinuing the release of more names.

He said: “Hack writers have inundated the social and traditional media with articles casting aspersion on the lists, while some newspapers have even resorted to writing editorials against the Federal Government over the release of the lists.”

“Most of the write-ups have accused the government of politicising the anti-graft war by releasing the lists. We strongly disagree with them.”

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The minister pointed out that the government does not have the power to try or convict anyone accused of corruption, saying it was the exclusive preserve of the courts.

He, however, maintained that the government has the power to let Nigerians know those who turned the public treasury into “their personal piggy banks on the basis of very concrete evidence, and that is what we are doing”.

Mohammed acknowledged that the government has always known that corruption would fight back.

He decried that the worry about politicising the anti-corruption fight was aimed at preventing the government from releasing more alleged looters’ names.

“But 1,000 negative write-ups or editorials will not deter us from releasing the third and subsequent lists. For those who have chosen to give succor to looters, we wish them the best of luck with their new pastime,” the minister said.

He further challenged anyone who feels that he or she has been wrongly accused to seek redress in court.

Mr Mohammed reiterated that it was the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) that challenge the Federal Government into releasing the list of alleged looters.

To this end, he insisted that the argument that the list only contained the names of PDP members fell short without proper contextualization.

While the government does not underestimate the worry of alleged looters, the minister assured Nigerians who are justifiably outraged at the plundering of the nation’s wealth of the government’s determination not to back down in the anti-graft war.

He maintained that Nigerians deserve to know those who have wrecked the country and mortgaged the future of their children.