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Ibori: I am Not a Thief

Ibori: I am Not a Thief
  • PublishedFebruary 13, 2017

Former Delta State Governor James Ibori, who was released from jail in England last December for money laundering has denied that he stole the money.

He said he was wrongly accused and maligned by those who typecast him as a thief.

“I am not a thief; I cannot be a thief,” he said in a church on Sunday at his home town, Oghara, where his kinsmen held a thanksgiving service for him, following his release from a United Kingdom (UK) prison.

In his younger days, Ibori was convicted for credit card fraud in the U.K. before returning to Nigeria to take part in politics.

But in a startling revisionism inside God’s temple, he said his accusers all lied against him.

Ibori said the biggest pain he felt over his travails was the suffering his people went through because of his absence.

At the special thanksgiving service at the First Baptist Church, Ibori also said his joy was that he was alive and back with his people.

The former governor, who hailed the crowd of politicians, clergy, traditional rulers and other enthusiasts, said he was aware those behind his travails wanted to separate him from his people.

He said: “They want me to go to the corner where I won’t be seen.”

The former governor said he was sure he would return home because he put his affairs in God’s hands.

“Today, I have decided to speak for myself. I am not a thief; I cannot be a thief. Today is the day they say I should give testimony to God. For those who know me, you know that my life is a testimony itself. I have said it over and again that my life is fashioned by God, directed by God, sealed, acknowledged and blessed by God. I believe that since the day I was born.

“Like the Archbishop said, when this whole commotion started, what was most painful to me was the pain and suffering that my people were going through.

“It has nothing to do with me as a person because, for some reasons, like I said to you, I drew my strength from God. So, somehow, I knew that God would stand by me. I knew that one day, this day would come. I am indeed very pleased that I can now stand before you and look at your faces, the faces that I have missed, and those of you who have indeed suffered the pains of my absence. It has nothing to do with me.

“So, when I reflect, it gives me joy that all your prayers, God has answered them, with your support and solidarity with me all through this period. It is indeed not what I can begin to say.

“Like what our former Chief of Staff, Francis , said it is ‘ungbikuable’. If I am to give testimony of my journey, you will not leave here. The only testimony that I have is the fact that I am back and alive in your midst. And again, I say that I never had any doubt in my mind that I would get back home.

“When I looked at how things were going, I discovered that they wanted to separate me from you, my people. They wanted me to go to the corner where I wouldn’t be seen. That’s how I see it. At a point, I called my older brother (former Governor Emmanuel Uduaghan): ‘How to get home is what I am about to do now’. It was a pragmatic decision.

“I am happy to be home with my people. There is nobody who can battle with the Lord. An Urhobo adage says there is time for everything (okiemute). A day will come when I will tell my story and everyone of you will hear me. Today is to thank God.”

The Nation

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