>Alamieyeseigha Lied Against Yar’Adua – Rotimi Jacobs, EFCC Counsel
Former
governor of Bayelsa State, Chief Diepreye Alamieyeseigha, said
yesterday that the state pardon granted to him by President Goodluck
Jonathan was actually the completion of a process that started during
the administration of late President Umaru Musa Yar’Adua.
In a chat with journalists in Lagos,
the former Bayelsa State governor said those who are condemning the
president were doing so out of ignorance and that the president’s action
was in order. He said the pardon is a “brokered deal”, and that he has
fulfilled his own part of the deal.
“The deal started during late
President Yar’Adua’s administration. It was a pardon that was
negotiated. People who don’t know what happened are the ones talking.
But if I open my mouth, those who are talking will keep quiet. President
Goodluck Jonathan was part of the negotiating team. There is no one in
this country that knows issues surrounding Alamieyeseigha better than
the president. He was my deputy governor and all that transpired were
known to him. I am already writing my memoir. At the appropriate time,
you will know. Without Yar’Adua, I would have died,” he said.
>Mean while Counsel to the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission, Mr.
Rotimi Jacobs (SAN), has described comments attributed to a former
governor of Bayelsa State, Diepreye Alamieyeseigha, as lies against the
dead.
Alamieyeseigha had told London-based NewsAfrica magazine in April
that the state pardon recently granted him by President Goodluck
Jonathan was part of the plea bargain between him and the Federal
Government under the late President Umaru Yar’Adua.
He was quoted
as saying, “My own part of the plea bargain was to convince the
militants to accept the FG’s amnesty and I have not stopped ever since.
The country owes the peace in the Niger Delta partly to my efforts. Till
today, every day, I get one report or the other and I intervene because
they all see me as their father, leader and governor-general.
“This pardon did not start from President Goodluck Jonathan. It was part of the agreement with the Yar’Adua government because he knew the story from the beginning. He was just carrying out part of an existing agreement.”
But in an interview, Jacobs said Alamieyeseigha could claim that the late President had earlier slated him for a state pardon because he knew that the dead have no right of reply.
“It is easy to lie on the dead. Someone who is dead has no right of reply. What I know is that there was no such provision for Alamieyeseigha in our records.
“He applied for plea bargaining, which meant that he accepted that he was guilty as charged and he agreed to serve a lesser punishment from what he actually deserved. It is a way of escape as practised all over the world.
“But that is how much a plea bargain affords under the law. Nobody envisaged pardon for corruption charges. It is not moral.”
Jacobs said that in all the meetings held over the case of corruption levelled against Alamieyeseigha, there was no mention that at any point in the future he could enjoy a state pardon, except if he was referring to a private arrangement with the late President.
On whether this action could set a precedence for other public figures convicted for corruption, he said it would not be in other jurisdictions as it could not be appealed against, to ensure that the person feels a sense of remorse.
He said, “The United States is still holding on to some of his assets which he forfeited based on the judgment against him in Nigeria. They confiscated his assets based on that judgment; so, they must be wondering now that things have gone this way.
“But that is where law and politics clash. However, it is not good for our law.
“This pardon did not start from President Goodluck Jonathan. It was part of the agreement with the Yar’Adua government because he knew the story from the beginning. He was just carrying out part of an existing agreement.”
But in an interview, Jacobs said Alamieyeseigha could claim that the late President had earlier slated him for a state pardon because he knew that the dead have no right of reply.
“It is easy to lie on the dead. Someone who is dead has no right of reply. What I know is that there was no such provision for Alamieyeseigha in our records.
“He applied for plea bargaining, which meant that he accepted that he was guilty as charged and he agreed to serve a lesser punishment from what he actually deserved. It is a way of escape as practised all over the world.
“But that is how much a plea bargain affords under the law. Nobody envisaged pardon for corruption charges. It is not moral.”
Jacobs said that in all the meetings held over the case of corruption levelled against Alamieyeseigha, there was no mention that at any point in the future he could enjoy a state pardon, except if he was referring to a private arrangement with the late President.
On whether this action could set a precedence for other public figures convicted for corruption, he said it would not be in other jurisdictions as it could not be appealed against, to ensure that the person feels a sense of remorse.
He said, “The United States is still holding on to some of his assets which he forfeited based on the judgment against him in Nigeria. They confiscated his assets based on that judgment; so, they must be wondering now that things have gone this way.
“But that is where law and politics clash. However, it is not good for our law.
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