ABUJA, Nigeria
Nigeria’s President Bola Tinubu on Monday suspended his poverty minister following allegations that she diverted public funds into a private bank account.
The measure against
humanitarian affairs and poverty alleviation minister Betta Edu (pictured right) came days after
another senior official was suspended over corruption charges.
Tinubu came to power last year
promising to crack down on graft in Nigeria.
The opposition Peoples
Democratic Party, PDP, had called for Edu to be sacked and prosecuted
"over the alleged looting of almost $50 million" from a social
investment fund "meant for the wellbeing of the poor."
The opposition party claimed
this included approximately $661,000 "audaciously diverted by her (Edu) to
a private account."
Tinubu has ordered a probe
after documents allegedly related to the transfer of funds were published in
local media. AFP could not independently verify those claims.
Last week Tinubu suspended the
head of the social investment fund agency Halima Shehu over alleged corruption.
She was arrested and released on bail, according to local media.
The PDP accused Tinubu of
presiding over "unprecedented treasury looting."
But Tinubu's spokesman said
the president had suspended Edu in line with his "commitment to uphold the
highest standards of integrity, transparency, and accountability."
Tinubu ordered Nigeria’s
anti-corruption body to investigate the ministry and vowed to make changes to
"win back lost public confidence" in schemes for poor households,
spokesman Ajuri Ngelale said.
Tinubu came to power last year
promising reforms and swiftly suspended several officials, including former
central bank chief Godwin Emefiele and ex-head of the Economic and Financial
Crimes Commission,EFCC, Abdulrasheed Bawa.
But Edu is the first minister
the president has suspended.
Nigeria remains one of the
lowest ranked on Transparency International's widely watched corruption
perceptions index.
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