Connect with us

Trending Videos

Kenya to receive millions seized in Jersey to help fight Covid

Published

on

[ad_1]

At present, less than 20% of Kenyans are fully vaccinated.

Mr Drake acknowledged that the sum of money which he is disbursing – $3.5m – will not go “that far” in terms of a country’s response to Covid-19, but he hoped this type of “targeted” help will have an “exponential impact” against the virus.

Campaigners believe that the Fracck is a model for a new way that ill-gotten gains can be returned.

The UK is also a signatory to another agreement – the UN Convention against Corruption – so is obliged to return criminal funds where conditions to do so are met.

But according to Steve Goodrich, head of research and investigations at Transparency International (TI) UK, returns from the UK often do not go directly to development projects.

He pointed to the return of money laundered by former Nigerian Delta state Governor James Ibori in 2012 which was given to the federal government there. And he was concerned that repatriated funds could get lost to corruption.

So Mr Goodrich said this case was “a step in the right direction”.

But, he added, to have “a credible deterrent” against those looking to stash their stolen money in the UK, he said the government “really needs to up its game” on asset recovery.

For example, he said the UK should start by looking at what he believed was “over £5bn-worth of British property bought with suspect funds”.

This episode also focuses attention on Kenya’s fight against corruption at home.

The country is ranked 128th in the world in TI’s perceptions of corruption index, with public officials and business people open to bribery.

There are just months left before President Kenyatta is due to stand down, having pledged to make fighting corruption part of his legacy.

As part of that, politicians and public officials are currently being asked to declare their wealth, with anti-corruption auditing in place.

Kenya’s High Commissioner, Mr Esipisu, who was once the president’s spokesman, told the BBC the Fracck agreement was a “huge contribution” to the president’s agenda as it sent a signal that “corrupt people will not be safe simply because they hide their money abroad”.

He added, passionately, that “these are funds stolen from Kenyans, looted from Kenyans, and with this agreement, these funds are being returned to assist the Kenyan people for whom they were meant in the first instance. So this is a victory for the Kenyan people.”

With the funds now on their way from Jersey to Kenya, the focus turns to the possible extradition from Kenya to Jersey of the two accused men.

At the beginning of February, extradition proceedings finally got under way in Nairobi’s City Magistrates’ Court, after a 10-year legal battle over whether the government’s chief legal officer or the public prosecutor should be leading the case.

Kenya’s department for public prosecution is now in charge of the process and its Deputy Director Victor Mule said the next hearing was expected in May.

He believed it would not take another 10 years to resolve.

Mr Githuru’s lawyer chose not to comment on the ongoing legal process when contacted by the BBC.

Jersey Senator Mr Gorst concedes there were shortcomings which allowed this allegedly stolen money to enter the island in the first place.

He warned any future perpetrators that its regulations had been tightened but that any ill-gotten funds which did get through would be located and “we will return it to the citizens to whom it belongs”.



[ad_2]

Source link

Comments

comments

Facebook

Trending