Ex-Nigerian governor James Ibori and his associates allegedly laundered 160 million in Euros in the years he was in office. They used the stolen money to purchase luxurious cars, a jet plane, and property in the U.K. and Nigeria. The U.K. announced it would return $5.8 million that the ex-Nigerian Governor stole; this comes as part of the deal between the two countries. This is the first time such action was taken under a 2016 Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) that both countries signed to combat the corruption that is plaguing the region.[1] Ibori’s case is just one of many in Nigeria. Laundered and stolen assets exasperate poverty and corruption in any given country. The asset recovery process is long-drawn-out and often leaves the impacted country with less than a fraction of the stolen assets. This is especially true when stolen assets are recovered in the U.K., where it is increasingly difficult to return the assets to the affected country.
[1] Emmanuel Akinwotu, UK to return £4.2m of Nigerian funds stolen by governor who was jailed, The Guardian, March 9. 2021