Nigeria's former oil minister Alison-Madueke arrested in London: sources

Reuters
Nigeria's Petroleum Minister and OPEC's alternate president Alison-Madueke speaks at the annual IHS CERAWeek conference in Houston
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Nigeria's Petroleum Minister and OPEC's alternate president Diezani Alison-Madueke speaks at …
By Julia Payne and Felix Onuah
LAGOS/ABUJA (Reuters) - Nigeria's former oil minister Diezani Alison-Madueke was arrested in London on Friday, a source from Nigeria's presidency circle and another with links to her family said.
Alison-Madueke was minister from 2010 until May 2015 under former president Goodluck Jonathan, who was defeated by Muhammadu Buhari at the election in March.
Buhari took office in May promising to root out corruption in Africa's most populous nation where few benefit from the country's enormous energy resources.
A police spokesman in London said he had no record of such an arrest. The National Crime Agency did not immediately respond to a request for comment. In a short statement on its website, the NCA said its International Corruption Unit had arrested five people across London on suspicion of bribery and corruption offences on Friday, without naming the suspects.
Reuters was unable to reach Alison-Madueke's personal assistant or a lawyer representing her. She has previously denied to Reuters any wrongdoing when questioned about missing funds and graft allegations.
In a sign that the arrest had been coordinated with Nigerian authorities, the financial crimes unit sealed one of Alison-Madueke's houses in the upmarket Asokoro district in the capital Abuja, two security officials said.
During her time in office, former central bank governor Lamido Sanusi was sacked after he raised concern that tens of billions of dollars in oil revenues had not been remitted to state coffers by the government-run oil company NNPC between January 2012 and July 2013.
On Sunday, Buhari said the prosecution of those suspected of misappropriating the NNPC's revenue under past administrations would begin soon.
Getting tough on corruption would deflect criticism of Buhari for failing to appoint a cabinet or an economic team four months after taking office as Nigeria's economy is going through a severe crisis due to the plunge in global oil prices.
(Reporting by Felix Onuah and Julia Payne; Additional reporting by UK newsroom; Writing by Julia Payne and Ulf Laessing; Editing by Janet Lawrence)

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