Former governor of Nigeria's oil-rich Delta
state is sentenced by London court after pleading guilty to fraud and money
laundering
James Ibori, a petty thief who eventually
became one of Nigeria's richest men, has received a 13-year jail sentence after
admitting fraud of nearly £50m, described by the judge as probably "ludicrously
low".
The former governor of Delta state in Nigeria
pleaded guilty in February to
10 offences relating to conspiracy to launder
funds from the state, substantive counts of money laundering and one count of
obtaining money transfer by deception and fraud.
"In the light of other matters, perhaps
that is a ludicrously low figure and the figure may be in excess of £200m, it
is difficult to tell," Judge Anthony Pitts told Southwark crown court in
London on Tuesday. "The confiscation proceedings may shed some further
light on the enormity of the sums involved."
The Metropolitan police estimates that Ibori
embezzled $250m (£157m) of Nigerian public funds.
Andrew Mitchell, the UK international
development secretary, said: "James Ibori's sentence sends a strong and
important message to those who seek to use Britain as a refuge for their
crimes.
"Corruption is a cancer in developing
countries and the [UK] coalition government has a zero-tolerance approach to
it. We are committed to rooting out corruption wherever it is undermining
development, and will help bring its perpetrators like Ibori to justice and
return stolen funds to help the world's poorest."
The Department for International Development
(DfID), which funds the Proceeds of Corruption Unit, began investigating Ibori
in 2005, alongside Nigeria's anti-corruption unit, the Economic and Financial
Crimes Commission.
As Ibori was sentenced, NGOs called for
further investigation into how he managed to move his money through his British
and US bank accounts. Global Witness called for a thorough investigation into
British banks for their roles in the laundering of millions of pounds by Ibori.
Robert Palmer, a campaigner with Global
Witness, said: "By doing business with Ibori and his associates, these
banks facilitated his corrupt behaviour and allowed him to spend diverted state
assets on a luxury lifestyle, including a private jet and expensive London
houses, while many Nigerians continue to live in poverty."
According to the prosecutor, Sasha Wass, Ibori
and his associates used multiple accounts at the banks to launder funds.
Millions of pounds passed through these accounts, some of which were used to
buy expensive London property.
At Ibori's sentencing hearing, Wass told the
court how Ibori – once a "petty thief with his hand in the till" at
the DIY store Wickes – amassed a portfolio of six properties outside Nigeria
worth £6.9m at a time he was being paid £4,000 a year as state governor of the
Delta region.
The properties in London included a flat in St
John's Wood, a house in Hampstead, and one in Regent's Park. He also had a £3m
mansion in South Africa, and properties in Texas and in Dorset, near to where
his children attended private school.
Ibori also bought a fleet of luxury cars, and
in three years ran up £920,000 on his American Express Centurion card – a card
only available to the super-rich, Wass told the court. In 2005, Ibori
instructed a London solicitor to buy a private jet costing $20m.
Global Witness said the case raised serious
questions about the due diligence that the banks carried out on Ibori and his
associates.
"It's welcome that the FSA [Financial
Services Authority] has said it will do more to target banks that fail to
tackle financial crime. But unless they issue penalties that really hurt,
nothing will change," said Palmer. "And we now need an investigation
into how Ibori was able to move so much money through these British banks for
so long and whether or not sufficient checks were carried out."
The FSA has said it will take a tougher line
in future after an industry-wide review in 2011 of compliance with money-laundering
rules. Last month, Coutts, the Queen's banker, was fined £8.75m for breaches of
money-laundering rules after three years of "serious" and
"systemic" problems in handling the affairs of customers vulnerable
to corruption because of their political links.
Ibori, 49, changed his original plea as his
trial was about to begin and admitted stealing money from Delta state and
laundering it in London through a number of offshore companies. Ibori admitted
to fraud totalling more than $79m, said to be part of total embezzlement that
could exceed $250m.
As governor of Delta state, he racked up
credit card bills of $200,000 a month and owned a fleet of armoured Range
Rovers, said the prosecution. He was trying to buy a plane at the time he was
arrested. Once seen as one of Nigeria's wealthiest and most influential
politicians, Ibori was seized in 2010 in Dubai at the request of the
Metropolitan police and extradited to London last year.
His wife, Theresa Ibori; sister, Christine
Ibori-Idie; mistress, Udoamaka Okoronkwo, and London-based solicitor Bhadresh
Gohil have all already been convicted of money laundering.
DfID said Ibori systematically stole public
funds, depositing them in bank accounts across the world. A major breakthrough
came when officers from Scotland Yard found two computer hard drives that
revealed the extent of his crimes.
But the case has also embarrassed DfID. CDC
Group, the private enterprise arm of DfID, according to the BBC, put $47.5m
into a private equity fund, Emerging Capital Partners (ECP), which invested in
Nigerian companies allegedly linked to Ibori.
In January, Andrew Mitchell issued an
unreserved apology to an Anglo-Nigerian whistleblower after the BBC's Newsnight
revealed DfID had betrayed his identity to the people he was accusing. Dotun
Oloko had warned DfID about potential problems with CDC investments. The
department passed a document containing Oloko's name to ECP, which he had
accused of investing in potential corruption.
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