Joshua Dariye, former governor of Plateau state, says N100
million from the misappropriated N1.126 billion went into the campaign for the
re-election of former President Olusegun Obasanjo.
Obasanjo was re-elected in 2003.
The Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC), in
2007, had charged Dariye, who was governor from 1999 to 2007, over allegations
of diverting N1.126 billion from the Plateau government’s ecological fund.
In 2018, a federal capital territory (FCT) high court,
sentenced Dariye to 14 years imprisonment.
But a court of appeal in Abuja reduced the sentence to 10
years.
The supreme court also affirmed the conviction and the jail
term of the appeal court in March 2021.
Speaking in an interview on Channels Television’s Newsnight
on Monday, Dariye gave a breakdown of how the money was spent.
According to him, a larger part of the money went into the
state government account, and only N80 million went to the ecological fund.
“N800 million went to the Plateau state account, 100 million
went to PDP south-west and another 100 million went to the Obasanjo campaign
organisation, N80 million went to the ecological fund and then N66 million went
to PDP Plateau state,” he said.
“What was missing was about N4 million which is the
commission of turnover.”
The former governor had also said his imprisonment was
politically motivated.
Speaking on the conditions of the correctional centres,
Dariye said the facilities are not habitable and worsened the mindset of the
convicted instead of reforming them.
“The correctional centre is one republic that is a
government on its own. They don’t have the best of facilities, I must say. It’s
not habitable for human beings, and I think the federal government must have a
look at it,” he said.
“When they talk about prison reforms, there is the need to
look at the conditions, the sanitary places, the environment and the
congestion. If you take people to a correctional centre, you are supposed to
come out reformed, not hardened. Most of the young men there come out worse
than when they went in and I don’t think that’s the essence of taking people to
prison.
“Some people wanted Nyame and myself to stay longer but it
didn’t matter. We were able to persevere. We paid bills for young people. Some
people were there for just N10,000 or N100,000 and they were kept for years. It
was an interesting experience, meeting people from different backgrounds, especially
youngsters.”
In April, President Muhammadu Buhari had pardoned Dariye and
Jolly Nyame, former Taraba governor, on the grounds of age and ill health.
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