President Muhammadu Buhari
on Thursday urged the United Nations Office for Drugs and Crime (UNODC)
to facilitate the faster recovery of Nigeria’s stolen wealth stashed
abroad.
A statement issued by the president’s Senior Special Assistant on Media and Publicity, Mallam Garba Shehu, said the president made the call when he received the Executive Secretary of UNODC, Yury Fedotov, in the Presidential Villa, Abuja.
President Buhari said that the process
of recovering the stolen assets had “become tedious” to the
consternation of many Nigerians.
“We are looking for more cooperation
from the EU, United States, other countries and international
institutions to recover the nation’s stolen assets, particularly
proceeds from the stolen crude oil. It is taking very long and Nigerians
are becoming impatient,” he said.
According to president Buhari, his
government has worked very hard in the past 11 months to reverse the
very negative global perception of Nigeria on corruption.
“Our genuine efforts to deal with
corruption and drugs have earned us international respect and this has
encouraged us to do more. We know that by fighting the scourge of drugs
and corruption and rebuilding trustworthiness, integrity, good business
practices, and imposing discipline on youths to avoid drugs, we are not
doing a favour to the international community, we are doing a favour to
ourselves,” he added.
The president also promised that his
administration would work with the UN agency to rehabilitate young
Nigerians who had been misled into consumption of illicit drugs and drug
trafficking.
In his remarks, Fedotov said that UNODC
had chosen Nigerian as a pilot country for support and strategic
cooperation in the fight against drugs and corruption.
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