Nigeria lost an estimated $157.5 billion to illicit financial flows between 2003 and 2012.
President Muhammadu Buhari said this while quoting from the 2014 Global Financial Integrity Report in his address to the High-Level National Side-Event organised by the African Union Development Agency and New Partnership for Africa’s Development (AUDA-NEPAD) and the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) on Wednesday in New York, on the margins of the 74th United Nations General Assembly UNGA.
The theme of the event “Promotion of International Cooperation to Combat Illicit Financial Flows and Strengthen Good Practices on Assets Recovery and Return to Foster Sustainable Development”. Was well attended by diplomats and government officials from Nigeria.
The President Buhari noted that such massive loss of assets, resulted in dearth of resources “to fund public services or to alleviate poverty,” in the country.
According to him, “This is why, as Africans, we have no choice but to break the back of corruption.”
Acknowledging lack of sufficient capital and corruption as impediments to socio-economic development of the continent, Buhari restated his administration’s anti-corruption campaign.
“That is why our government has made it a war we intend to win.
“We will give all it takes to ensure there is no hiding place for doers of corrupt practices who are truly enemies of the people,”.
He also stressed the need to strengthen good practices on asset recovery and return.
“In the last five years, our government has made significant progress to curb corruption. We have recovered millions of dollars stolen from our country,”.
President Buhari however said, that “there are still a lot of other funds that are stuck in foreign bank accounts due to international laws, different jurisdictions and justice systems that make it difficult for repatriation.”
Describing Illicit Financial Flows as “illegal movement of funds from one country to another,” Buhari lamented that, “These flows deplete Africa’s internally generated revenues, foreign exchange earnings, reduce tax revenues, drain natural resources, facilitate corruption and stunt private sector development.”
Citing tax avoidance as another form of illicit financial flow, he quoted the Tax Justice Network and the International Monetary Fund (IMF) to have estimated over US$200 billion per year as “being lost by developing countries when multinational enterprises do not pay taxes in the countries where they made the profit.”
“This amount is significantly higher than the annual development aid received by these countries which are estimated to be about US$143 billion,” he added.
He commended the organisers of the meeting designed to find “pragmatic ways to promote international cooperation to combat illicit financial flows and strengthen good practices on asset recovery and return, as an arm of sustainable development policies in Africa.”
Buhari also lauded their “shared commitment to root out corruption from our continent.”
“I am motivated by the belief that, if we join hands, we can bequeath to our children an Africa that is not defined by corruption,” the President said.
Emphasising the imperative of international cooperation towards stemming the incidence of illegal financial flows, Buhari said, “Any lasting solution to the above challenges will require international cooperation and coordination,” of African countries and their international counterparts.
“This is one reason why the Nigerian Government supports this initiative of AUDA/NEPAD and remains committed until we ensure that there are no safe-havens for stolen assets from Africa,”
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