From
all indications, former Delta State Governor, James Ibori's freedom
from British Prison, may be cut short as new report reveal that the
federal government of Nigeria is set to extradite him to face another
trial.
Delta State Speaker of the House of Assembly, Monday Igbuya with James Ibori soon after his release in London
The President Muhammadu Buhari-led Federal Government has commenced
the process of extraditing a former governor of Delta State, Chief
James Ibori, from the United Kingdom, The Punch authoritatively reports.
The Southwark Crown Court had, on April 17, 2012, sentenced Ibori
to 13 years in prison after the ex-governor pleaded guilty to 10 counts
of money laundering and stealing $250m from the Delta State treasury.
He was, however, released on Wednesday where he had spent four
years and eight months following a court order that declined the UK
government’s request for an extension of his sentence.
A London court ruled that the Home Office had no more powers to
hold the ex-governor, who had served six-and-a-half-years of his 13-year
jail term.
He had earlier spent 645 days in detention facilities in Dubai and the UK which were deducted from his total jail term.
The UK Home Office had opposed Ibori’s release on the grounds that
the process of the permanent forfeiture of his assets had yet to be
completed.
According to the BBC, the UK Home Secretary, Amber Rudd, did not
intend to deport Ibori to Nigeria until he handed over £18m of the “proceeds of crime” he alleged the ex-governor held.
The convicted former governor, was, however, allowed to go home on
the condition that he would not travel out of the UK. He is currently
residing at his residence on Abbey Road, London, where he is under
strict surveillance from where he will report to the UK Police weekly.
Impeccable sources within the Economic and Financial Crimes
Commission disclosed on Wednesday that the Attorney General of the
Federation and Minister of Justice, Abubakar Malami (SAN), had directed
the EFCC to forward the file containing the 170 charges earlier brought
against Ibori in Nigeria.
The EFCC operative told one of our correspondents that the Federal
Government would liaise with the British government to ensure that Ibori
was extradited to Nigeria.
A source in the EFCC said, “We have started the process of
extradition in conjunction with the Office of the AGF. We had started
extradition process years ago but stopped it since he was in prison.
“We have now reactivated the process. It is the AGF that will
communicate with the British Government, which will then extradite Ibori
to Nigeria. The court process will be sent to the UK Government for
extradition.”
When asked why all Ibori’s London properties had not yet been
forfeited to the Federal Government despite the ample time, the EFCC
source explained that the British system was such that asset recovery
was done post-conviction.
He added, “So, they are just starting the process and that is
why he has been asked not to leave the UK but should be reporting every
week.
“The British Government wanted him to remain in custody but the
court said he could keep coming from home; so, he will remain in the UK
for now. If he does not show up in the police station, then it will be
assumed that he has absconded.”
Speaking with a correspondent on Thursday, the spokesman for the
British High Commission in Nigeria, Joe Abuku, said the UK government
would continue to assist Nigeria with the recovery of properties, adding
that he could not comment on the legal proceedings against Ibori.
In a terse text message to one of our correspondents, the spokesman for the EFCC, Wilson Uwujaren, said, “His (Ibori’s) fate will be determined by the provisions of the law.”
Recall that the Federal High Court sitting in Asaba, Delta State,
had, on December 17, 2009, discharged and acquitted Ibori of all 170
charges of corruption brought against him by the EFCC. In 2010, his case
was reopened by the government of former President Goodluck Jonathan.
However, all attempts to arrest the ex-governor proved abortive as
the 40 policemen guarding him at his country home in Oghara, Delta
State, refused to allow the EFCC to arrest him.
Hundreds of youths in Delta State also confronted the EFCC
operatives and prevented them from arresting the ex-governor by blocking
the roads leading to his home with logs of wood.
Ibori fled Oghara in controversial circumstances and subsequently
fled the country to Dubai, compelling the anti-graft agency to declare
the fleeing ex-governor wanted.
The Federal Government could not apply for Ibori’s extradition as
there was no extradition treaty between the United Arab Emirates and
Nigeria at the time.
However, the British Government sought Ibori’s extradition and he
was deported to the UK, where he was convicted and jailed for money
laundering and fraud.
However, the EFCC took the matter to the Benin Division of the
Appeal Court, where a three-man panel of justices on May 15, 2014, ruled
that the ex-governor, who was serving a 13-year jail term in a London
prison at the time, had a case to answer.
The EFCC subsequently said in a statement in 2014 that the
ex-governor would be re-arrested upon the completion of his prison
sentence in the UK.
The EFCC statement read, “With this judgment, the coast is clear for Ibori to face trial in Nigeria upon the completion of his jail term in London.”
Some of the properties traced to the ex-governor include a house in
Hampstead, North London, worth £2.2m; a property in Shaftesbury,
Dorset, worth £311,000; a £3.2m mansion in Sandton, near Johannesburg,
South Africa; a fleet of armoured Range Rovers valued at £600,000; a
£120,000 Bentley Continental GT; and a Mercedes-Benz Maybach 62 bought
for €407,000 cash.
Ibori is expected to face a fresh trial in the UK meant to forfeit his assets in the country to the British government.