Jonathan's £15million chateau in United Kingdom uncovered by UK media

The prompt past President Goodluck Jonathan has been affirmed to have procured a house in the United Kingdon that is worth £15million, Kelvin Mackenzie, a columnist with The Sun Uk Newspaper reported yesterday on page 15.

The chateau was said to be situated at St George's Hill domain in Weybridge, Surrey in the United Kingdom.

Jonathan's pastors and basically all that have worked with him aside from few have been under extreme test of the Economic and Financial Crime Commission, EFCC, since President Muhammadu Buhari assumed control. A few billion and a great many Naira and United States dollar have been recuperated.

The UK's The Sun Tabloid creator of the report questioned the wellspring of the cash by which the ex-president of Nigeria limb such a costly building.

 "I HEAR the apropos named Goodluck Jonathan, the previous president of oil-rich Nigeria, has purchased a 12,000 square foot house on the ultra-costly and all around secured St George's Hill bequest in Weybridge, Surrey."
"I'm certain he picked up his riches authentically yet these houses are £10-£15million a pop, so ­perhaps the ex-president could clarify where his cash originated from as he has been at the ­forefront of the battle against his nation's ­corruption."
'Definitely it wouldn't all be able to have been good fortunes." The Newspaper was cited to have said.


 
  The paper put the business sector cost for such houses in the territory as being between £10-£15million (about N4.3bn), a stunning assume that may well surpass the combined profit of the previous president while in office.

Jonathan has been ordinarily blamed for driving a most reprobate organization. Countless authorities who served under his legislature are in a matter of seconds being tested by hostile to join organization, the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC).

Various previous clergymen and associates who presented with the Jonathan organization were said as being among the individuals who returned plundered assets to the Nigerian government between May 29, 2015 when Jonathan left office and May 25, 2016.

No responses have been issued yet by the previous president or his camp, to the story distributed by The Sun.


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