Bank of America, M&T Bank and Wells Fargo received
directive from the US government to close the accounts of the Nigerian embassy
in Washington and its consulate in New York on suspicion of money laundering
after traffic on the various accounts raised a red flag.
Ambassador to USA: Professor Adebowale Adefuye |
$3.6 million dollars was said to have entered and left
the accounts in under a month, the latest transaction being the withdrawal of
$50,000 in hard cash by a top embassy staff.
The decision to freeze the accounts is sequel to
intelligence report generated by a panel comprising representatives of the US
Department of Justice, the Federal Bureau of Investigations (FBI) and the
Department of Treasury, unknown to Nigerian embassy officials, to monitor wires
and traffic in all the accounts operated by the embassy.
As part of efforts to resolve the issue, the
auditor-general of the federation and a team of auditors left for the US to
begin auditing the accounts of the embassy. Efforts by embassy officials to open
new bank accounts with other American banks have so far been politely turned
down.
The US have also ignored all requests by the federal
government to unfreeze Nigerian embassy’s bank accounts in Washington, DC, and
New York. The move, according to sources, is setting the stage for a potential
showdown between the two countries with Nigeria also threatening to reciprocate
by freezing the US embassy’s accounts in the country.
- Leadership
Taking corruption beyond the shores of this country? This is embarrasing,but the people involved won't be.kai! Naija
ReplyDelete