Buhari's Govt Lists Massive Properties of Exposed Ex-officials To Be Valued, Sold
The federal government has started to value the properties of some former public servants in a bid to ascertain their financial worth and sell them to potential buyers.
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Among persons whose assets have been listed for this process is Diezani Alison-Madueke, the embattled former minister of petroleum resources, Punch reports.
Another ex-government official on the list is the late Chief of Defence Staff, Air Chief Marshal Alex Badeh.
Below is the list of the assets slated for sale:
Diezani's items
- Highbrow Banana Island Foreshore Estate (Ikoyi, Lagos)
- 18 flats
- 6 penthouses (Banana Island)
- 125 pieces of wedding gowns
- 13 pieces of small gowns
- 41 pieces of waist trainers
- 73 pieces of hard flower
- 11 pieces of suit
- 11 pieces of invisible bra
- 73 pieces of veils
- 30 pieces of braziers
- 2 pieces of standing fan
- 17 pieces of magic skits
- 6 packets of blankets
- 1 table blanket
- 64 pairs of shoes
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Badeh's items
Those belonging to Badeh are houses at Wuse 2 and Maitama high-end neighbourhoods of Abuja
They include No. 14 Adzope Crescent, off Kumasi Crescent, 19 Kumasi Crescent, Wuse 2, and 6 Umme Street, Wuse 2.
EFCC discloses how it recovered jewellery worth N14.4bn from Diezani
Meanwhile, the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) had disclosed that jewellery worth N14.4 billion was forfeited by Alison-Madueke.
The chairman of the commission, Abdulrasheed Bawa, made the disclosure on Friday, May 28, when he appeared before a committee of the House of Representatives probing the status of recovered loot.
Bawa told the lawmakers that the estimated value of the houses seized and forfeited from Diezani was $80 million.
The EFCC boss stated that the commission is yet to auction assets and property recovered from the former minister due to administrative exigencies.
NIMASA boss to EFCC: Probe N1.5trillion allegation against me
In another development, the director-general of the Nigerian Maritime Administration and Safety Agency (NIMASA), Bashir Jamoh, had asked the EFCC to investigate an allegation of N1.5 trillion fraud levelled against him by one Jackson Ude.
Ude, a Nigerian journalist based in the US, had on Saturday, May 22 tweeted that N1.5 trillion was traced to Jamoh in a new generation bank.
Source: Legit.ng