Abbey Road, one of James Ibori's London properties |
AFTER
years of running, the long hands of justice caught up with the former governor
of Delta State, James Onanefe Ibori, on Tuesday.
The Southwark Crown
Court in London United Kingdom sentenced Ibori to 13 years’ imprisonment for
fraud and corruption offences.
Our correspondent
reports that Ibori may only spend about five years in prison because he has
been in custody for two years and will be eligible for parole in about four
years.
He will likely serve
his term in Wandsworth, Prison. Wandsworth is the largest prison in the UK,
currently able to hold 1,665 prisoners. It is also where Ibori was held while
undergoing trial. His jailed lawyer, Bhadresh Gohil, is also serving his term
in Wandsworth Prison.
After the sentencing,
British judicial and security officials said they would soon commence
confiscation proceedings to ensure that his stolen assets reverted to Delta
State.
THE PUNCH learnt that
the Crown Prosecution Service would soon launch a bid to seize Ibori’s stolen
assets and return them to Delta State.
An official of the CPS
told journalists that the service would bid to confiscate the assets Ibori had
stolen and return them to the state.
One of the
investigators, Detective Inspector Paul Whitmore, said it was estimated that
Ibori stole around $250m from Delta State.
“The sum can only be
described as huge. Vast sums of money which were used to fund his lavish
lifestyle. The real harm in this case is the potential loss to people in some
of the poorest regions in the world,” he said.
Whitmore said a
confiscation proceeding would be launched to ensure that as much of the money
as possible was returned to the state government.
Judge Pitts who said
the court wasn’t even certain about the exact amount that Ibori had stolen
expressed hope that new light would be shed on his theft during the
confiscation proceedings.
“During those two
terms (as governor) you turned yourself in very short order indeed into a
multi-millionaire through corruption. The figure may be in excess of 200
million pounds, it is difficult to tell. The confiscation proceedings may shed
some further light on the enormity of the sums involved,” he said.
In all, Judge Anthony
Pitts said Ibori was guilty of 10 charges of money laundering and other
fraudulent activities with total monetary value of $77m, about N12.17bn. The
fraud sum excludes another 720,000 pounds (N183.6m) the ex-governor expended on
exotic automobiles.
Some of the assets
that might be confiscated are 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; and a Mercedes Maybach worth 407,000 Euros.
Described as a “common
thief” by prosecutor in the Crown Court, Sasha Weils, Ibori’s looting of Delta
State was said to be “unquantifiable.”
Eminent Nigerians,
including the Niger Delta leader and First Republic minister, Edwin Clark, on
Tuesday praised the sentencing.
Ibori, who evaded
capture in Nigeria was arrested in Dubai United Arab Emirates, in 2010. He was
extradited from Dubai to the UK in April 2011.
Ibori’s wife, Theresa;
sister, Christine Ibori-Idie; mistress, Udoamaka Okoronkwo; and a London-based
solicitor, Bhadresh Gohil, have all already been convicted for their part in
the money-laundering scam.
Investigators said as
Delta State governor, Ibori had racked up credit card bills of $200,000 per
month on a luxury lifestyle, including running a fleet of armoured Range
Rovers. He was trying to buy a plane for £12m at the time he was arrested, Sky
News reports.
Ibori admitted one
count of conspiracy to launder money, five of money laundering and one of
obtaining a property transfer by deception over the theft of more than £25m
while he was governor of the region.
He also pleaded guilty
to conspiracy to defraud, conspiracy to make false documents, and one count of
money laundering linked to a $37m (£23.3m) share fraud surrounding the sale of
shares in a Nigerian company, V Mobile.
Sasha Weils, QC,
prosecuting, told the court Ibori “deliberately and systematically” defrauded
the people he was elected to represent.
The court heard he
came to the UK in the 1980s and worked as a cashier at a Wickes DIY store in
Ruislip, north-west London.
He was convicted in
1991 of stealing from the store but then returned to Nigeria and contested the
governorship on the platform of the Peoples Democratic Party.
When he ran for
governor he lied about his date of birth to hide his criminal conviction in the
UK – which would have prevented him from standing for office, the British
Broadcasting Corporation reports.
Ibori, whose address
was given as Primrose Hill, north London, claims to be 53 but police in London
say he is 49.
Before the sentencing,
ex-international, John Fashanu, had appeared in court to testify as a witness
in defence of Ibori.
“I found James Ibori a
very humble person, a very giving person. Somebody who has revolutionised
sports in Delta State,” Fashanu told Sky News, adding that the ex-governor is a
good man.
Asked if Ibori should
pay back the money, Fashanu added “anybody who does anything (wrong) should pay
it back. Nobody’s denying that.”
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