Former Minister of Petroleum Resources, Diezani Alison-Madueke, has suggested that her efforts to tackle corruption in Nigeria’s oil industry and the powerful interests affected by those reforms contributed to the legal and political battles that followed her tenure in office.
Speaking in an interview with the BBC days after a London
court acquitted her of all bribery charges, Alison-Madueke said the UK’s
National Crime Agency, NCA, failed to properly understand the realities of
Nigeria’s oil sector before pursuing a case against her.
She said investigators treated her as “low-hanging fruit”,
while ignoring the anti-corruption efforts she undertook as petroleum minister
and the enemies she made in the process.
“I think that being such a low-hanging fruit in terms of
opposition and the accusations they were throwing at me throughout that period,
I wish they had taken a step back and looked with a little more depth at the
actual truth of the situation on ground,” she said.
“Also, the things that I tried to do to put in place in
terms of pushing back and fighting corruption in oil sector, which had not gone
down well with many of the cabals in the sector at home.”
“I was the first female to enter this sort of position as
petroleum minister and as head of OPEC in a very misogynistic society,”
Alison-Madueke added.
According to her, the NCA should have “taken a step back and
looked with a little more depth at the truth of the situation on the ground.”
The former minister, who served under former President
Goodluck Jonathan between 2010 and 2015, was last week acquitted by a jury at
Southwark Crown Court of five counts of accepting bribes and one count of
conspiracy to commit bribery after a trial that began in January.
Alison-Madueke also questioned the handling of evidence
linked to the case, claiming documents that could have aided her defence
disappeared after being taken from her Abuja residence in 2015.
“Those items were taken away by our intelligence forces,”
she said, referring to boxes of receipts which she said showed that payments
made on her behalf had been reimbursed.
Asked who should bear responsibility for the collapse of the
prosecution’s case, Alison-Madueke replied: “There’s a bit of blame
everywhere.”
“The Nigerian authorities need to look into the processes
and practices that they deploy in these cases,” she said, before adding that
“the long arm of the law when you go into other countries, particularly in
politically motivated cases, needs to have a lot more sensitivity.”
Her acquittal, alongside those of her brother, Doye Agama,
and oil executive Olatimbo Ayinde, brought to an end one of the most closely
watched corruption trials involving a former Nigerian public official in the
United Kingdom.
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