President Buhari and VP Osinbajo decorating Chief of Army Staff, Tukur Buratai
New details of foreign assets owned by Nigeria’s Chief of Army Staff, Tukur Buratai, have raised questions about whether their acquisition and disclosure were as transparent as the army had earlier claimed.
The details, published Thursday, suggest that disclosures made to the Code of Conduct Bureau about the properties may have been misleading.
The army had admitted a report by news website, Sahara Reporters, that Mr. Buratai owned at least two multimillion naira properties in Dubai, the United Arab Emirate.
The army however said that the assets were jointly owned by Buratai and his two wives - Aishatu and Kalsum - and that they were bought with personal savings.
“It is a fact that the Buratai family have (sic) two properties in Dubai that were paid for installmentally through personal savings three years ago,” the army’s statement, signed by spokesperson Sani Usman, said.
But a letter from the Code of Conduct Bureau published by The Nation Newspaper on Thursday said Buratai declared the Dubai properties under his wife’s name.
The letter, which was originally obtained through Freedom of Information request by Messrs. St. Francis Xavier Solicitors & Advocates, was dated July 11, 2016, and signed by Ijeanuli Ofor, a Deputy Director of Reforms at the CCB.
Ofor, was however silent on which of Buratai’s wife the properties were listed as belonging to.
Reached for comments on how his principal was able to afford Dubai properties with his salaries, Usman told Premium Times Buratai could afford to buy properties “anywhere in the world”because of his extra farming businesses.
Usman, a colonel, pushed back against claims that Mr. Buratai had suddenly become wealthy by courting public funds for himself, saying the claims emanated from those who hardly knew him.
“Possibly you have never met him before, but at the rank of lieutenant-colonel, he was not staying in the barracks, he was staying in his personal house,” Usman said in a telephone interview in June.
“He is involved in agriculture. The federal government policy is that all public persons are expected to be involved in agriculture.”
Usman declined to give specific details of the size and scope of Buratai’s farming business.
Source: Premium Times
President Buhari and VP Osinbajo decorating Chief of Army Staff, Tukur Buratai
New details of foreign assets owned by Nigeria’s Chief of Army Staff, Tukur Buratai, have raised questions about whether their acquisition and disclosure were as transparent as the army had earlier claimed.
The details, published Thursday, suggest that disclosures made to the Code of Conduct Bureau about the properties may have been misleading.
The army had admitted a report by news website, Sahara Reporters, that Mr. Buratai owned at least two multimillion naira properties in Dubai, the United Arab Emirate.
The army however said that the assets were jointly owned by Buratai and his two wives - Aishatu and Kalsum - and that they were bought with personal savings.
“It is a fact that the Buratai family have (sic) two properties in Dubai that were paid for installmentally through personal savings three years ago,” the army’s statement, signed by spokesperson Sani Usman, said.
But a letter from the Code of Conduct Bureau published by The Nation Newspaper on Thursday said Buratai declared the Dubai properties under his wife’s name.
The letter, which was originally obtained through Freedom of Information request by Messrs. St. Francis Xavier Solicitors & Advocates, was dated July 11, 2016, and signed by Ijeanuli Ofor, a Deputy Director of Reforms at the CCB.
Ofor, was however silent on which of Buratai’s wife the properties were listed as belonging to.
Reached for comments on how his principal was able to afford Dubai properties with his salaries, Usman told Premium Times Buratai could afford to buy properties “anywhere in the world”because of his extra farming businesses.
Usman, a colonel, pushed back against claims that Mr. Buratai had suddenly become wealthy by courting public funds for himself, saying the claims emanated from those who hardly knew him.
“Possibly you have never met him before, but at the rank of lieutenant-colonel, he was not staying in the barracks, he was staying in his personal house,” Usman said in a telephone interview in June.
“He is involved in agriculture. The federal government policy is that all public persons are expected to be involved in agriculture.”
Usman declined to give specific details of the size and scope of Buratai’s farming business.
Source: Premium Times
No comments:
Post a Comment