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UK’s Jersey To Return $9.5m Abacha Loot To Nigeria

Nigeria is set to receive a fresh $9.5 million (about £7 million), in recovered funds from the UK Crown Dependency of Jersey, marking another milestone in ongoing efforts to repatriate assets linked to past corruption.

Background of the Funds

The money was held in a bank account in Jersey and has been identified by the Royal Court of Jersey as proceeds of corruption tied to the regime of the late former military Head of State, General Sani Abacha, who ruled Nigeria from 1993 to 1998.

The court determined that the funds were “more likely than not” derived from a corrupt scheme involving the diversion of public resources by third-party contractors for the benefit of senior officials and their associates.

Although the funds were initially seized during the administration of former President Goodluck Jonathan, legal wrangling delayed the return for several years. A breakthrough came after a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU), was signed in December 2025 between the Government of Nigeria and Jersey’s Attorney General, Mark Temple KC, to facilitate the repatriation.

Purpose and Use

According to official statements, the $9.5 million will be channelled into critical infrastructure development, particularly the Abuja–Kano Road project—one of Nigeria’s key transport corridors linking the capital city to the country’s second-largest city.

International Cooperation Against Corruption

Nigeria’s Attorney General and Minister of Justice, Lateef Fagbemi, welcomed the development, describing the return of the funds as evidence of effective collaboration with international partners in tackling corruption and illicit financial flows. He pledged that the repatriated funds will be used strictly in accordance with the terms of the MoU.

Officials from Jersey also highlighted that the repatriation reflects the strength of their civil forfeiture legal frameworkin combating financial crime and ensuring that “tainted” assets do not find safe haven overseas.

Part of a Larger Asset Recovery Effort

This latest repatriation builds on previous asset recovery agreements between Nigeria and Jersey, under which more than $300 million in looted funds has already been returned and deployed towards major projects, including the Lagos–Ibadan Expressway and the Second Niger Bridge.

As Nigeria continues to strengthen its legal and institutional frameworks to trace and reclaim illicit assets abroad, this fresh return of funds is seen by many as a positive step toward accountability, transparency, and development.

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