Prof. Itse Sagay
While speaking during an interview with PUNCH Newspaper on Monday,
the Chairman, Presidential Advisory Committee Against Corruption, Prof.
Itse Sagay, said the Federal Government does not want the whistle-blower
who informed the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission of the N13bn
in an Ikoyi apartment to run mad.The senior advocate of Nigeria who said the government believed he
needed to be adequately counselled and this was the reason his
commission was delayed, added that if the commission, which the
whistle-blower claims is N860m, was given to him immediately; he
probably would have squandered it within a month or two.
Sagay said, “What I gathered from my inquiry is that the man is
not sufficiently stable to receive such a huge sum of money. He is like
someone who will almost run mental when he gets the money and will use
it in an irresponsible manner, attracting not only undesirable people
but even danger to himself.
“I think what they wanted to do for him was to provide
counsellors. Not just counsellors for character and mental situation but
counsellors who would be like consultants that would help him to really
invest the money and plan in such a way that he doesn’t throw it away
in five minutes.
“They are trying to help him. Nobody is denying him anything.
They are trying to help him but he just misunderstands the intention and
like everyone that has been deprived for a long time, he is so
desperate to have it but from what I can see, if they just give him
everything, it won’t last more than a month or two because so many
people will start finding ways to get to him and taking their portions
from him. So, they were just trying to help him but he became
hysterical.”
Sagay hailed the Federal Government’s decision to pay the
whistle-blower in tranches, adding that such a method of payment would
deter him from spending it all at once, adding that it was also the
responsibility of the government to ensure that the whistleblower did
not become a nuisance.
He added, “It is better to pay him in tranches. I agree with
the government because if not, he will throw it away. This is valuable
money that government could have used for millions of unemployed and
wretchedly poor people.
“One man is getting it and he just wants it so that he can blow
it all in five minutes? No, the government has a responsibility to see
that his excitement does not end in seeing the money being thrown away
irresponsibly. So, I agree with the government.”
The lawyer of the whistle-blower, Yakubu Galadima, however, said
the government’s intentions were suspicious and wondered why the
government did not question his client’s mental capacity when he was
giving the EFCC information on the money.
The lawyer said even if his client was mental, he still deserved to be given his due. He said, “As
far as I am concerned, if the money is not paid by the end of this
month, I am ready to tell the whole world but if they act favourably,
their image will be redeemed.
“Does Prof. Sagay have contact with my client? Doesn’t my
client have relatives that can take care of him? Even a mad man is
entitled to his estate so what are they talking about? That is not an
excuse as far as I am concerned.”

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