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Ahmad Lawan: Drug Barons Funding Terrorists, Bandits - Politics (2) - Nairaland

Nairaland Forum / Nairaland / General / Politics / Ahmad Lawan: Drug Barons Funding Terrorists, Bandits (36152 Views)

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Re: Ahmad Lawan: Drug Barons Funding Terrorists, Bandits by allen113: 7:43pm On Mar 04, 2021
the drug barons no get name
Re: Ahmad Lawan: Drug Barons Funding Terrorists, Bandits by Lomprico2: 7:43pm On Mar 04, 2021
Kriss216:
Tinubu is a drug baron, is he among the ones funding Terrorists and bandits?


Maybe that's why he's mute all these while. Time shall tell.

he might be a drug baron but never a terrorist sponsor.
Re: Ahmad Lawan: Drug Barons Funding Terrorists, Bandits by Reex12(m): 7:44pm On Mar 04, 2021
k
Re: Ahmad Lawan: Drug Barons Funding Terrorists, Bandits by Zenithpeak(m): 7:45pm On Mar 04, 2021
Kriss216:

Tinubu and co.

Tinubu we know; who is "and co"
Re: Ahmad Lawan: Drug Barons Funding Terrorists, Bandits by djbussy(m): 7:47pm On Mar 04, 2021
Drug barons have two jobs .
Re: Ahmad Lawan: Drug Barons Funding Terrorists, Bandits by AFONJACOW(m): 7:47pm On Mar 04, 2021
Do we have any other drug Barron if not Bola Amed Tinubu oh so nah him dey fund Boko Haram...

Odikwa Egwu shocked shocked shocked shocked
Re: Ahmad Lawan: Drug Barons Funding Terrorists, Bandits by Whytelyon(m): 7:47pm On Mar 04, 2021
Imagine the stupid talk.
Which one be Drug barons?

Get out of my face, Idiot.
Re: Ahmad Lawan: Drug Barons Funding Terrorists, Bandits by id911(m): 7:47pm On Mar 04, 2021
Kriss216:
Tinubu is a drug baron, is he among the ones funding Terrorists and bandits?


Maybe that's why he's mute all these while. Time shall tell.

I don't think Tinubu can fund terrorists, he might be a drug baron tho
Re: Ahmad Lawan: Drug Barons Funding Terrorists, Bandits by hibeebeeking: 7:48pm On Mar 04, 2021
Who is faking who?.because marwa visit you
Name the drug barons now. Stupid sets of deceivers.
Re: Ahmad Lawan: Drug Barons Funding Terrorists, Bandits by Epistasis(m): 7:50pm On Mar 04, 2021
You are very correct Mr senate figure head, sorry president. Drug baron are the people mining gold in Zamfara, gold is also a drug business remember. I am not surprised at the useless statement from a man like him, he has been the worst senate president in history. Yeyenatu!
Re: Ahmad Lawan: Drug Barons Funding Terrorists, Bandits by Xscape1993(m): 7:51pm On Mar 04, 2021
Why do majority of our rulers talk like little children in nursery School? What a great country rule by unfortunate people!
Re: Ahmad Lawan: Drug Barons Funding Terrorists, Bandits by Juanmike(m): 7:51pm On Mar 04, 2021
Am not among those funding...why calling us?
Re: Ahmad Lawan: Drug Barons Funding Terrorists, Bandits by bigfish3k: 7:52pm On Mar 04, 2021
B
Re: Ahmad Lawan: Drug Barons Funding Terrorists, Bandits by BlackPantherxXx: 7:54pm On Mar 04, 2021
RuudVanNisteroy:
Is this a sub at Tinubu and is this why EFCC is loooking into his case.


You and your worship of Tinubu.

Ask your mum, he might be your biological father.

This obsession isn't normal at all.

The man is already a billionaire and he would ALWAYS be more accomplished than your entire lineage PLUS your kinsmen COMBINED.

It's not an insult but raw, undiluted bitter truth.

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Re: Ahmad Lawan: Drug Barons Funding Terrorists, Bandits by aryzgreat: 7:54pm On Mar 04, 2021
Thiefnubuu the brown teeth drug baron is sponsoring banditry to destabilize the North so people will hate North and vote for him.

Never shall we allow a drug baron and bullion van thief rule us

1 Like

Re: Ahmad Lawan: Drug Barons Funding Terrorists, Bandits by Asiwaju009(m): 7:54pm On Mar 04, 2021
Lawan is throwing stone 'a mumu man,
Re: Ahmad Lawan: Drug Barons Funding Terrorists, Bandits by Felabarmudia: 7:55pm On Mar 04, 2021
RuudVanNisteroy:


https://www.google.com/amp/s/punchng.com/insecurity-drug-barons-funding-terrorists-bandits-lawan/%3famp=1
Stop there lawalu or lawani!
I will not read further until you accept that boko haram and bandits are one and the same

Re: Ahmad Lawan: Drug Barons Funding Terrorists, Bandits by GamalNasser: 7:55pm On Mar 04, 2021
The whole northern elites are behind the bandits

1 Like

Re: Ahmad Lawan: Drug Barons Funding Terrorists, Bandits by blackboy(m): 7:56pm On Mar 04, 2021
This Senate president is a clown. Puppet. Big puppet. He wants us to believe this crap.
As long as Boko Haram and the Fulani Bandits in the north keep running wild and terrorizing nigerians without being crushed by the mighty Nigerian army and police simply says there is internal.powers that are involved cashing from all this.
Re: Ahmad Lawan: Drug Barons Funding Terrorists, Bandits by blackboy(m): 7:58pm On Mar 04, 2021
Fake news and hate speech.
Wetin respect the man.
aryzgreat:
Thiefnubuu the brown teeth drug baron is sponsoring banditry to destabilize the North so people will hate North and vote for him.

Never shall we allow a drug baron and bullion van thief rule us
Re: Ahmad Lawan: Drug Barons Funding Terrorists, Bandits by Warripikine: 7:58pm On Mar 04, 2021
Federal government has run out of lies
Re: Ahmad Lawan: Drug Barons Funding Terrorists, Bandits by Karemarealty288(m): 7:58pm On Mar 04, 2021
This picture best describe this present senate.

Re: Ahmad Lawan: Drug Barons Funding Terrorists, Bandits by The6thAustralia: 8:01pm On Mar 04, 2021
But the same kidnappers says it the government that gave them. Guns
Re: Ahmad Lawan: Drug Barons Funding Terrorists, Bandits by jrusky(m): 8:01pm On Mar 04, 2021
When will these Mallam ever talk selnse So the terrorist in Somalia, Pakistan, Iraq, Yemen etc are sponsored by drug barons

For God sake is it a must these people must talk? Why are these people naturally can't reason rightly?

Same way Buhari blame Libyans in far away North Africa for the herdsmen madness in Nigeria then later said they are from Gambia, Burkina Faso etc and now somebody twisted it all to drug baron.

What a nonsense statement. This Lawan of a man is he alright at all I guess No.

1 Like

Re: Ahmad Lawan: Drug Barons Funding Terrorists, Bandits by Neoteny(m): 8:03pm On Mar 04, 2021
Nigerian Intelligence Agency
Defense Intelligence Agency
Department of Security Services

None of these assholes can unearth the money trail of bandits and BH.

What a shame

They should all be disbanded and sent home

1 Like

Re: Ahmad Lawan: Drug Barons Funding Terrorists, Bandits by tonididdy(m): 8:03pm On Mar 04, 2021
Na this one the other governor the other day say e go shock us if e reveal names? undecided




This is it?.... Una think say na children una dey deal with ni undecided
Re: Ahmad Lawan: Drug Barons Funding Terrorists, Bandits by stupidmod3: 8:04pm On Mar 04, 2021
phrancys001:
Mumu talk
very big one, with all the noise was thinking he will b mentioning names
Re: Ahmad Lawan: Drug Barons Funding Terrorists, Bandits by Anambra1stSon(m): 8:05pm On Mar 04, 2021
RuudVanNisteroy:
Is this a sub at Tinubu and is this why EFCC is loooking into his case.

Take your time to read about Tinubu's Friend Chagoury


US bans Nigeria-Lebanese billionaire, Gilbert Chagoury, owner Eko Hotels & Suites

Nigerian-Lebanese billionaire Gilbert Chagoury, owner of the giant Eko Hotel & Suites in Lagos and the groundbreaking Eko Atlantic City, is no longer allowed to enter the United States.

According to a report by Los Angeles Times, Chagoury had his visitor's visa denied last summer under terrorism grounds.

Chagoury, who is also a big donor to the Clinton Foundation and has a home in Beverly Hills, California, was denied the visa on grounds that he gave financial support to a Lebanese politician, Michael Aoun.

According to the report, Aoun's party is in political coalition with Hezbollah, tagged a terrorist organisation by the US.

See the full Los Angles Times report below:
Nigerian billionaire Gilbert Chagoury, one of Africa's richest men, has built a reputation as a giant of global philanthropy.

His name is on a gallery at the Louvre and a medical school in Lebanon, and he has received awards for his generosity to the Catholic Church and St. Jude's Children's Hospital. He owns a seven-bedroom hilltop mansion in Beverly Hills, and he has a high-level network of friends from Washington to Lebanon to the Vatican, where he serves as an ambassador for the tiny island nation of St. Lucia. His website shows him shaking hands and laughing with Pope Francis.

“I never imagined what the future would hold for me,” Chagoury once said of his boyhood in Nigeria. “But I knew there was a vision for my life that was greater than I could imagine.… I consider it a duty to give back.”

Since the 1990s, Chagoury has also cultivated a friendship with the Clinton family — in part by writing large checks, including a contribution of at least $1 million to the Clinton Foundation.

By the time Hillary Clinton became secretary of State, the relationship was strong enough for Bill Clinton's closest aide to push for Chagoury to get access to top diplomats, and the agency began exploring a deal, still under consideration, to build a consulate on Chagoury family land in Lagos, Nigeria.

But even as those talks were underway, bureaucrats in other arms of the State Department were examining accusations that Chagoury had unsavory affiliations, stemming from his activities and friendships in Lebanon. After a review, Chagoury was refused a visa to enter the U.S. last year.

Chagoury is a prominent example of the nexus between Hillary Clinton's State Department and the family's Clinton Foundation, which has come under renewed scrutiny during her presidential run. The organization, founded as a way for the Clintons to tap their vast network for charitable works, has tackled some of the steepest challenges in the developing world, including rebuilding Haiti and fighting AIDS in Africa. It has also come under fire for its willingness to accept money from foreign governments with interest in swaying U.S. policy during Clinton's time as secretary of State, and the controversial histories of some donors.

Part of a dictator's inner circle
Chagoury was born in 1946 in Lagos to Lebanese parents, and as a child attended school in Lebanon. He sold shoes and cars in Nigeria, according to a biography on his website, before marrying the daughter of a prominent Nigerian businessman.

During the rule of Gen. Sani Abacha, who seized power in Nigeria in 1993, Chagoury prospered, receiving development deals and oil franchises.

In the 1990s, Chagoury portrayed himself as an Abacha insider as he tried to influence American policy to be more friendly to the regime. Soon after President Clinton named Donald E. McHenry a special envoy to Nigeria in 1995, Gilbert and brother Ronald Chagoury visited McHenry in his office at Georgetown University in Washington. The U.S. was pushing for the return of democratic rule in Nigeria; Abacha, meanwhile, was eager to have his country taken off a U.S. list of nations that enabled drug trafficking, McHenry said.

“Their effort was to try and influence anyone who they thought could influence the U.S. government,” McHenry said, adding that the approach was heavy-handed. “They tried every key on the piano.”

Abacha turned out to be “one of the most notorious kleptocrats in memory,” stealing billions in public funds, acting Assistant Atty. Gen. Mythili Raman later said .

After Abacha's death in 1998, the Nigerian government hired lawyers to track down the money. The trail led to bank accounts all over the world — some under Gilbert Chagoury’s control. Chagoury, who denied knowing the funds were stolen, paid a fine of 1 million Swiss francs, then about $600,000, and gave back $65 million to Nigeria; a Swiss conviction was expunged, a spokesman for Chagoury said.

Ties to the Clintons
In the years afterward, Chagoury's wealth grew. His family conglomerate now controls a host of businesses, including construction companies, flour mills, manufacturing plants and real estate.

He has used some of that money to build political connections. As a noncitizen, he is barred from giving to U.S. political campaigns, but in 1996, he gave $460,000 to a voter registration group steered by Bill Clinton's allies and was rewarded with an invitation to a White House dinner. Over the years, Chagoury attended Clinton’s 60th birthday fundraiser and helped arrange a visit to St. Lucia, where the former president was paid $100,000 for a speech. Clinton's aide, Doug Band, even invited Chagoury to his wedding.

Chagoury also contributed $1 million to $5 million to the Clinton Foundation, according to its list of donors. At a 2009 Clinton Global Initiative conference, where business and charity leaders pledge to complete projects, the Chagoury Group's Eko Atlantic development — nine square kilometers of Lagos coastal land reclaimed by a seawall — was singled out for praise. During a 2013 dedication ceremony in Lagos, just after Hillary Clinton left her post as secretary of State, Bill Clinton lauded the $1-billion Eko Atlantic as an example to the world of how to fight climate change.

“I especially thank my friends Gilbert and Ron Chagoury for making it happen,” he said.



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By last summer, U.S. diplomats had selected a 9.9-acre property at Eko Atlantic as the preferred site for a new Lagos consulate, State Department documents obtained by the Los Angeles Times show. Two months ago, James Entwistle, then the U.S. ambassador to Nigeria, wrote to Washington, asking permission to sign a 99-year lease.

No deal has been signed, State Department spokeswoman Elizabeth Trudeau said. She did not answer questions about whether the Clintons recommended Eko Atlantic. She said at a recent briefing that she was unaware of whether Hillary Clinton knew the site was under consideration; it was on a list of possibilities submitted by a real estate firm in 2012, Trudeau said in response to questions from The Times. A spokesman for Clinton's campaign noted that the State Department has said the process has been managed by “career real estate professionals.”

Chagoury declined requests for an interview. A friend and spokesman, Mark Corallo, said Chagoury was a generous and “peace-loving” man unfairly scrutinized because of his association with the Clintons. He said Chagoury last saw Hillary Clinton at a 2006 dinner. The Clinton Foundation and a spokesman for Bill Clinton did not respond to requests for comment.

Chagoury also has given to Republicans: He and his brother, along with Eko Atlantic, are listed as sponsors for a 2014 art exhibit at the George W. Bush Presidential Center.

Suspicions emerge in the U.S.
In spite of his network of powerful friends, Chagoury has aroused the suspicions of U.S. security officials. In 2010, he was pulled off a private jet in Teterboro, N.J., and questioned for four hours because he was on the Department of Homeland Security's no-fly list. He was subsequently removed from the list and categorized as a “selectee,” meaning he can fly but receives extra scrutiny, Homeland Security documents show. The agency later wrote to Chagoury to apologize “for any inconvenience or unpleasantness.”

That letter did not explain why Chagoury was on the no-fly list, but another Homeland Security document shows agents citing unspecified suspicions of links to terrorism, which can include financing extremist organizations; Chagoury later told reporters that agents asked him what bank he used in Nigeria.

Chagoury believes it was unfair for government officials to disclose the episode and to “suggest that he was a potential threat,” Corallo said. He said that Chagoury's lawyers resolved the issue and that he never asked anyone else for help.

Gilbert Chagoury’s response to the Los Angeles Times

Chagoury told ABC News and the Center for Public Integrity at the time that he was miffed because his travel problems made him miss seeing the Lakers in the playoffs. “I just love the Lakers,” he said.




His visa troubles stem at least in part from his involvement in the tangled politics of Lebanon. Chagoury has contributed to charitable projects there, advocated on behalf of the country's Christians and formed political alliances, including with Michel Aoun, a Lebanese Christian politician who served as army commander and prime minister during the country's civil war.

For a decade, Aoun's party has been part of a political coalition with Hezbollah, the Shiite Muslim group backed by Iran that has seats in Lebanon's parliament. Hezbollah is classified as a terrorist organization by the U.S., which holds the group responsible for the 1983 bombing of the U.S. embassy in Beirut and a Marine barracks blast that year that killed 241 American servicemen. Drug Enforcement Administration investigations have also found that Hezbollah is in league with Latin American cartels to launder hundreds of millions of dollars in drug profits.

Chagoury was “known to have funded” Aoun, a Lebanese government minister told then-Ambassador Jeffrey D. Feltman in 2007, according to a cable published by WikiLeaks that didn't go in detail about Chagoury's relationship with Aoun. The minister suggested that the U.S. “deliver to Chagoury a strong message about the possibility of financial sanctions and travel bans against those who undermine Lebanon's legitimate institutions.”



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Chagoury never got a scolding, though. Instead, Band, Bill Clinton's aide, pushed for new access for Chagoury after Hillary Clinton took over at the State Department. In 2009, Band wrote his friends in the department. “We need Gilbert Chagoury to speak to the substance guy re Lebanon. As you know he’s key guy there and to us and is loved in Lebanon. Very imp.” Huma Abedin, a longtime aide and confidante to Clinton and now vice chairwoman of her presidential campaign, suggested Feltman.

When Band's email was made public this month, Donald Trump pounced, calling the Chagoury episode “illegal” and a “pay-to-play” scheme.

But no meeting ever happened, according to both Feltman and Chagoury's spokesman. Chagoury wanted only to pass along insights on Lebanese politics, Corallo said, adding that “nothing ever came of it” and that Chagoury never talked to anyone at the State Department. Band declined to comment for this story.

A Clinton campaign spokesman said Judicial Watch, the conservative organization that sued to make the emails public, “has been attacking the Clintons since the 1990s.”

“No matter how this group tries to mischaracterize these documents, the fact remains that Hillary Clinton never took action as secretary of State because of donations to the Clinton Foundation,” spokesman Josh Schwerin said.

This month, the foundation announced that it would stop accepting donations from foreigners and corporations should Clinton win the presidency.

Denied a visa
After Clinton left the State Department, Chagoury again found himself under suspicion by U.S. security officials. A 2013 FBI intelligence report, citing unverified raw information from a source, claimed Chagoury had sent funds to Aoun, who transferred money to Hezbollah. The source said Aoun was “facilitating fundraising for Hezbollah.” The U.S. put Chagoury in its database used to screen travelers for possible links to terrorism, interagency memos show.

The ties between Chagoury and Aoun ended years ago in a dispute over oil franchises, said Michel de Chadarev, an official with Aoun's party. Chagoury now backs an Aoun rival for the presidency. De Chadarev said Aoun “categorically denied” any arrangement where he shared money with Hezbollah or passed funds from Chagoury: “No, no, no. Of course not. It is not in his principles to act as transporter to anyone.”

Last summer, when Chagoury planned a trip to Los Angeles, he applied at the U.S. embassy in Paris for a visitor's visa and was refused, according to interviews and government documents. Based on the FBI report and other allegations from intelligence and law enforcement sources, the State Department denied the application. It cited terrorism-related grounds, a broad category that can apply to anyone believed to have assisted a terrorist group in any way, including providing money.

Chagoury has denied ties to Hezbollah. Two years ago, he helped pay for a conference in Washington on the persecution of Christians in the Middle East; some attendees supported Hezbollah, but the director of the group that organized the conference said that didn’t mean Chagoury or other conference organizers were among them. “Hezbollah is part of the political reality of the country,” Andrew Doran told the National Review.

Corallo did not answer questions about the visa denial, but said Chagoury “has been a friend and supporter of America all his life” and that “any allegation that Mr. Chagoury is involved in any way with providing material support to any terrorist organization, of any stripe, is false, outrageous and defamatory.” He said Chagoury has no business interests in Lebanon.

The visa decision process is opaque and provides little recourse for those who are denied entry. Typically, the person is told of the grounds for refusal, but not the details. The secretary of State can grant a waiver, but that is often difficult when the evidence used to block entry is terrorism-related.

For the last three decades, Corallo said, Chagoury spent at least a few months each year in Beverly Hills, where he owns an 18,000-square-foot estate, once the home of actor Danny Thomas, with commanding views of West Los Angeles and the ocean.

A year ago, after his visa application was denied, Chagoury's mansion was put on the market, with an asking price of $135 million. It's still for sale.

1 Like

Re: Ahmad Lawan: Drug Barons Funding Terrorists, Bandits by tonididdy(m): 8:05pm On Mar 04, 2021
BigBrowser:
Who are the drug barons?
Do you need a soothsayer to spell it out.
These mallams are out for tinibu.
Humiliation loading...

1 Like

Re: Ahmad Lawan: Drug Barons Funding Terrorists, Bandits by feedthenation(m): 8:08pm On Mar 04, 2021
---Drug barons---aka---some Members of the National Assembly---

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