Patience Jonathan: Nigeria ex-first lady decries 'witch-hunt'
Nigeria's ex-First Lady Patience
Jonathan has accused the government 's anti-corruption agency of
conducting an "unjustified witch-hunt" against her.
The Economic
and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) was following a "sinister script
to embarrass and browbeat" her, she said in a statement.
Last year, the EFCC froze $15m (£11.4m), which the ex-first lady said was to settle medical bills abroad.
Her husband, Goodluck Jonathan, stepped down in 2015 after losing elections.
He was widely praised for being the first incumbent to give up power voluntarily in Nigeria since its independence in 1961.
His successor, Muhammadu Buhari, vowed to tackle corruption in the government.
Mrs
Jonathan said that unlike other former first ladies with pet projects
seeking to help the less privileged, her NGOs were "being subjected to
indefinite probe and microscopic scrutiny by the Buhari administration".
EFCC head Ibrahim Magu had linked her to all sort of "fake possession and properties around the country", it added.
The EFCC has not yet commented on her statement.
Systematically persecuted
Mrs
Jonathan's vehicles had been attacked on the road four times since 2015
and the couple's house in Abuja "was vandalised allegedly by security
agents sent by government to secure it, and the items stolen are yet to
be recovered", said a statement issued by her media aide and published
in full by Nigeria's privately owned Vanguard newspaper.
The statement urged President Buhari to order that the harassment should stop.
"We
believe that she is being systematically persecuted and punished
because of her unflinching support for her husband during the 2015
elections," it said.
In September, the Committee on Public
Petitions in the lower parliamentary chamber, the House of
Representatives, asked six banks to unfreeze her accounts, saying it had
been done without a court order, local media reported at the time.
The EFCC had ordered that the accounts be frozen as it investigated corruption allegations against her.
Mrs Jonathan denies any wrongdoing.
BBC
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