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Wanted: A Kinder, Gentler New EFCC By Bayo Oluwasanmi

Corruption continues to rock Nigeria. A lot of public resources ended up in private pockets. The brash new tycoons made their fortunes from corruption. Too many people have gotten rich based on their proximity to the government. There are two sets of laws in Nigeria: one for the common people and another for political princelings and industrialists.
Both government and private sector are incapable of building roads, factories, cities, reservoirs, power grids, other infrastructures and basic amenities due to corruption. Corruption produces bad decisions. Concern over corruption produces indecision. Graft is responsible for the inert bureaucracy, greasing the sized-up wheels of industry. Shady and shaky loans to industries, businesses, and the well connected have collapsed many banks in Nigeria.
Ninety-nine percent of bank loans in Nigeria gone sour. Inept contractors who are cronies of the ruling elites have messed up vital road and power projects. Mines and other assets lie idle, untapped, unexplored. Corruption helps in financing networks of cronyism, nepotism, and patronage. Corruption is rife and pervasive in all sectors in Nigeria: rapacious elites, politicians, managers, university professors, medical doctors, judges, journalists, and top bureaucrats. The police and customs are hopelessly compromised.
Our democracy is not working because of corruption. Rampant corruption hinders our democracy to take root. It gives way for instability, polarization, secession, military coups, dictatorships, and violence. In addition, corruption weakens our laws, erodes the people's faith in government institutions, divides our society, and increase nepotism. Our democracy is ineffective and a disaster. To make democracy work, we must have good governance. The judiciary and bureaucracy must function properly, and strong measures must be taken to tame corruption.
Nigeria's anti-graft agency, the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC), reached an absurd milestone when it took almost three years to prosecute Senate President Bukola Saraki. Not too long ago, Nigerians were relieved of the unending comic soap opera of a case that keeps on coming back to life like Wole Soyinka's poem – Abiku. Other potential big tigers such as the Kogi Senator Dino Melaye, Abdulrasheed Maina, Abba Kyari, Bashir Abubakar, Tukur Buratai, and so many others have so far eluded the EFCC dragnet. Failure to successfully prosecute a single big tiger, opens EFCC to ridicule and makes it redundant agency. The EFCC is as good as dead.
Now, there's need to revise the laws that established EFCC. If passed, elements of the revision could strengthen the agency's power to investigate and prosecute corruption thus making it a new, kinder, and gentler anti-graft agency. The remaking of EFCC will be music to the ears of 469 members of the National Assembly who believe the agency is a witch-hunting body with the primary function to terrorize, intimidate, and humiliate them. The National Assembly would like to appoint the EFCC chairman which is why Magu the current chairman, is lawmakers' public enemy number one.
How can we make EFCC kinder and gentler? Simple. I think Senate President Bukola Saraki should be given the honor to reform EFCC. As a first step, he should appoint Senator Dino Melaye as the new EFCC chairman. The agency is only good at harassing, arresting, and prosecuting the honorable legislators and governors. Newspapers are inundated with stories of many arrests by EFCC. After so much noise making and fanfare, nothing is heard again. Of what use is anti-graft agency that specializes in issuing only warrants and arrests on pages of newspapers? Of what benefit is EFCC that's dysfunctional, powerless, and ineffective? Of what relevance is EFCC that basks in front page prosecutions of suspects? Of what use is a toothless and gumless EFCC that can neither bark nor bite?
The new EFCC under Melaye will be different. Melaye with chains of degrees from ivy league universities from seven continents of the world, will conscript his colleague senators into the EFCC to wage a successful war on corruption. With the professional team of Saraki, Maina, David Mark, Ike Ekweremadu, with governors of Ekiti State Ayodele Fayose, Ogun State Ibikunle Amosu, Kaduna's El Rufai, and other big tigers of the National Assembly Corruption Incorporated (NACI), the new EFCC will be well positioned to fight corruption. The focus will shit from arresting and prosecuting corrupt politicians to fighting corruption among petty thieves, pickpockets, shoplifters, house burglars, home invaders, price gougers, mail fraudsters, wife beaters, husband beaters, drunkards, and other low lifers. After all, this is what EFCC has been doing these years.
Curbing corruption is the signature campaign promise of President Muhammadu Buhari. The Buhari administration has struggled to contain public anger at a seemingly endless stream of corruption scandals which threatens its legitimacy. With barons of corruption in charge of EFCC, corruption should decline especially in the federal government. Nigeria's economy is still badly positioned on various indications of corruption. Corruption has been crippling Nigeria;s ability to attract foreign investment.
The EFCC under Melaye and with oversight by Saraki, corruption will have no means of fighting back. Melaye and Saraki will put corruption and its patrons out of business. For the first time in our history, we will kill corruption before it kills us. Corruption will be history! We can then sing the Old Negro Freedom Song: Free at last, thank God Almighty, Nigeria is free of corruption!

You can reach him via bjoluwasanmi@gmail.com


DASUKI’S MEMORY LOSS: $2.1 BILLION FRAUD CHARGE CAN DO THAT TO YOU, BY FREDRICK NWABUFO

Before I go into the meat of this article, let me state this for the purpose of record. The case of Sambo Dasuki, former national security adviser (NSA), will become one of Nigeria’s unsolved mysteries.
His trial will become a poltergeist of how power is exacted for submission and not for justice. It will become an inscrutable patch of history and of government’s confusion.
Dasuki has been on trial for two years. When the Buhari government took off, its first assignment was to probe the office of the NSA and the armed forces.  After months of thudding investigations, the government released a report alleging that $2.1 billion was magicked from the treasury for bogus arms purchase by the office of the NSA.
The Department State Services (DSS) whisked Dasuki into custody and filed a charge of illegal possession of firearms and money laundering against him at a federal high court in Abuja. This particular charge was filed in 2015. But the case is gasping for breath in court.
Also, the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) filed a multi-billion naira charge of financial fraud against the former NSA in 2016 at the Federal Capital Territory high court, but the case, like the other one, sputters like a jalopy in court. The DSS has refused to release him to face the trial.
It is really stupefying that the case is snarling up in court. I would have expected the government to act with dispatch since the former NSA is a suspect of importance. Oddly, it is the government, Dasuki’s “housemaster”, that is putting a wedge in his trial.
In addition, it is clear to me that the government is not really concerned about the enormity of Dasuki’s alleged offence, but about “keeping him out of circulation”. He may be guilty or innocent of the charges against him, but he is already doing time in a DSS cell.
However, I find it perplexing Dasuki’s claim of “memory loss” in the N400m trial of Olisa Metuh, former spokesman of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP). This claim is absurd. It is simple, he either admits that he approved the release of the funds to Metuh or he confutes the former PDP spokesman’s claim that he did.
I think the former NSA may be trying to game the court by this stunt. Or is he so dazed by the amounts of money his office released that he cannot recall this particular transaction?
I had expected Dasuki to do some explaining of how funds for arms purchase allegedly ended up in the PDP campaign till. Nigerians deserve to know. It was a perfect opportunity for the former NSA, who has come under a blitz of accusations, to get his own side of the story into the public square.
I believe Nigerians were expecting fecundating disclosures from a man, who has been accused of gross financial malevolence, but has said little or nothing in his own defence. I hope he puts citizens out of this “misery” on Friday when he appears in court again.
In conclusion, government prosecutors and the court must pace up in bringing closure to trials linked to the $2.1 billion arms-purchase scandal. Nigerians deserve a denouement to this drama.

Facebook: Fredrick Nwabufo, Twitter: @FredrickNwabufo


Source: The Cable




Suspect in ghost workers’ syndicate has 200 bank accounts – EFCC

THE Economic and Financial Crimes Commission, EFCC, Wednesday, told an Abuja High Court that one of the nine suspects docked over allegations of inserting several ghost workers on the payroll of the Federal Government operated about 200 different accounts with banks in Abuja, while another has over 50 houses.
The defendants— Dayo, Opeyemi, Adedokun, Sylvanus, Ayodeji, Dada, Dada, Ejeh and Taiwo— were arraigned before an Abuja High Court at Apo.
According to the charge sheet, most of the defendants were civil servants from government agencies such as the Office of the Accountant General of the Federation, Ministry of Agriculture and Water Resources; Ministry of the Environment and the Federal Civil Service Commission, FCSC.
EFCC accused them of creating and inserting fictitious names in the payroll of the Federal Government for salaries and allowances without official consent, thereby causing the loss of several millions of Naira.
The offence they committed was said be in contravention of Section 289 of the Administration of Criminal Justice Act, ACJA, 2015.
However, the defendants pleaded not guilty to the charge even as they were remanded in prison custody by trial Justice Peter Kekemeke based on an application by EFCC lawyer, Mr. Mukhtar Mohammed.
EFCC applied for them to remain in prison custody pending the commencement of their trial.
Plea by the defendants to be granted bail, pending determination of charge against them, was refused yesterday.
Whereas the female suspects were remanded in Suleja Prison in Niger State, the court remanded the male defendants in Kuje Prison.
3 go for plea bargain
The court fixed November 8 to hear applications by counsel to three of the defendants, who said they were willing for a plea bargain.
The three suspects had applied through their lawyers to forfeit some property and cash in lieu of their conviction for the crimes.
EFCC told the court that its investigators uncovered that one of the defendants owned and operated about 200 personal accounts with different banks in Abuja.
Another one reportedly used particulars of his family members to operate several accounts in various banks.
More so, another defendant was said to own more than 50 houses in various locations in Abuja and its environs. The alleged payroll fraud was uncovered by the Presidential Initiative on Continuous Auditing, PICA, constituted by President Muhammadu Buhari in March 2016 to strengthen controls over government personnel and pension costs.
PICA was set up to ensure that all Federal Government revenue receipts and payments were subjected to financial rules and regulations.
It is the first time government will be arraigning civil servants for allegedly inserting names of ghost workers into government payroll despite years of reports of losses of billions of Naira through such practices at ministries, departments and agencies.

Despite government’s claim of recovering huge sums in recent times, no official of any of the agencies had been brought to face trial.

Source: Vanguard

Buhari asks EFCC to proceed with investigation of Babachir Lawal, Oke

President Muhammadu Buhari on Monday night said he was aware of the investigation of two sacked officials by anti-corruption agencies, saying the investigation should continue.

Mr. Buhari’s spokesperson, Garba Shehu, in a statement said “the position of the President therefore is that investigation agencies which have already commenced the investigation of the two officers removed from office will go on with their work of investigation without any interference or hindrance.”
Mr. Shehu added that the president “who is fully conversant with the provisions of the constitution will not stop the investigation of anyone because he has no such power under our laws. This is a decision of the Supreme Court.”
The spokesperson was reacting to criticisms that trailed the sack of Babachir Lawal and Ayodele Oke, former Secretary to the Government of the Federation and former head of the National Intelligence Agency respectively.
President Buhari had ordered the sack of both men earlier on Monday following a review of a panel report that investigated allegations against them. The panel was headed by Vice President Yemi Osinbajo.
Many Nigerians, though commended the dismissal of both men, asked that Mr. Buhari order their arrest and prosecution.
Mr. Shehu, however, indicated that the two men were already being investigated by the anti-corruption agencies.
“Based on his wish and desire for a strict observance of the law, the President expects the EFCC, ICPC and such agencies to proceed with ongoing investigations,” the spokesperson said.
“When and where they have reasonable grounds to charge former or serving officers to court under our laws, they do not require the permission of the President to do so,” he added.
THE INDICTMENT
The spokesperson for the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission, Wilson Uwujaren, could not be reached for comments about the status of the investigations.
However, the panel headed by Mr. Osinbajo found Mr. Lawal culpable in a slew of allegations that included questionable diversion of funds meant for the internally displaced persons in the North-east.
Consequently, the investigative committee, which included Attorney-General Abubakar Malami and National Security Adviser, Babagana Monguno, recommended termination of Mr. Lawal’s appointment, the presidency said in a statement.
Mr. Oke was the head of NIA when the EFCC found N13billion belonging to the foreign intelligence office in an apartment in Ikoyi, Lagos, on April 12.
As with Mr. Lawal, Mr. Osinbajo’s panel recommended Mr. Oke’s dismissal after looking into the circumstances surrounding the cash haul.
The panel submitted its report onAugust 23, but Mr. Buhari did not act on it until Monday. Another presidential aide, Femi Adesina, told Channels Television’s ‘Politics Today’ Monday evening that the president was being painstaking with the content of the report.
Before their appointments were ultimately terminated, Messrs. Lawal and Oke had been placed on suspensionsince April 19. They appeared before the panel on several occasions during its 14-day, closed-door sitting. 
DEMAND FOR PROSECUTION
While welcoming their sack on Monday evening, a civic rights group, Socio-Economic Rights and Accountability Project, SERAP, admonished Mr. Buhari to reassert his anti-corruption posture by calling for a thorough prosecution.
“This is a positive development in the fight against grand corruption, although this decision is coming rather late,” SERAP said in a statement signed by its deputy director, Timothy Adewale. “Buhari now has to go a step further by making sure that both Lawal and Oke are promptly brought to justice in fair trials.”
“What the government needs at this time is a revolutionary approach to the fight against corruption if Buhari is to show his commitment to ‘kill’ corruption before corruption ‘kills’ Nigeria.
“Without effective prosecution of high-ranking public officials charged with corruption, this government’s fight against corruption may sadly turn out to be all motion and no movement, and this will eventually undermine the legitimacy of the anti-corruption efforts,” Mr. Adewale said.
The group also reminded Mr. Buhari to pursue criminal charges against the fugitive former head of presidential task force on pension reforms, Abdulrasheed Maina.
Mr. Maina was revealed byPREMIUM TIMES penultimate Friday as having sneaked back into the public service four years after he was sacked for alleged pension fraud.
Mr. Buhari ordered Mr.Maina’s dismissal with immediate effect and called for an investigation into how he was recalled.
“Buhari also has to move swiftly to publish a report of the investigation into the secret reinstatement of the fugitive former civil servant, Abdulrasheed Maina, and without delay identify and bring to justice anyone suspected to be involved,” SERAP said.
PAST ARREST CALLS
While President Buhari did not authorise the immediate arrest of Mr. Lawal and Oke, he has ordered arrests of persons indicted of corruption in the past.
When Mr. Buhari received the reports of the presidential arms probe panel in 2015, he ordered immediate arrest or former National Security Adviser, Sambo Dasuki, and other officials of the last administration who were indicted.
Mr. Buhari raised the Committee on Audit of Defence Equipment Procurement in the Nigerian Armed Forces on August 24, 2015, in furtherance of his “determination to stamp out corruption and irregularities in Nigeria’s public service.”
The panel submitted its interim report on November 17, 2015, finding Mr. Dasuki culpable in the award of “fictitious and phantom contracts to the tune of N2,219,188,609.50; 1,671,742,613.58 dollars and 9,905,477.00 Euros,” amongst others.
Soon after receiving the report, Mr. Buhari “directed the relevant organisations to arrest and bring to book, all individuals who have been found complicit in these illegal and fraudulent acts,” according to a State House statement on November 17, 2015.

Source: PremiumTimes

OPINION: Let’s not deceive ourselves; Corruption is Winning, by Umar Sa'ad Hassan

‘Corruption is fighting back’.That phrase has long assumed cliché status.As a lot of us have learnt,it is the easiest way to justify a hypocritical war on corruption. Corruption isn’t fighting back when Buhari sits on the SGF probe or refuses to look into how some states are still owing workers 8 months salaries despite bailouts and huge Paris Club refunds, it is winning.
Over the last week,we have been treated to one revelation after the other on how an EFCC fugitive and Former head of the presidential task force on pension reforms under President Jonathan, Abdulrasheed Maina was recalled to the ministry of interior affairs. Maina got away right under the Presidency’s nose and its lame attempt at saving face by ordering his sack wouldn’t buy back even an ounce of lost integrity.As we watch with keen interest the blame game on who helped the Attorney-General Of the Federation perpetrate this contemptible act between the Minister of interior affairs, Abdulrahman Dambazzau and Head of Civil service, Winifred Oyo-Ita,it is also important questions are asked of the EFCC boss, Ibrahim Magu. The same Magu who was indicted by the DSS for hobnobbing with questionable persons and corruption.Where was he and the agency when a person wanted by them was employed as a director in a ministry?
Just before Mainagate, the EFCC had approached a court seeking the forfeiture of properties belonging to an NGO belonging to the former first lady,Dame Patience Jonathan. Not forgetting it has successfully gotten an order on a 5-storey hotel of hers. For the umpteenth time,why is the EFCC scared of prosecuting the woman if it has any compelling evidence against her? Why hasn’t it as much as invited her for questioning if indeed it is serious about ‘investigations’? Admittedly though, it would be expecting more than we should of an agency that didn’t do that after her public claim to ownership of $15m in a bank. The EFCC wound up being sued by her instead. Add the audacity to her recent claim of witch-hunt by Magu which was countered by the Presidency and you’ll have to conclude she not only has the EFCC by the balls but President Buhari too. Maybe she and her husband know something about Buhari we don’t. President Jonathan was never questioned about his role in Dasukigate despite being named by the man himself.
In what many deem a technical foul, the wife of the president, Aisha Buhari slammed the state house clinic for not having a single syringe. That clinic has received an average allocation of a billion naira annually over the last 10 years. The President kept mute and didn’t order an investigation into how a clinic that couldn’t treat his ear infection with a billion naira budget utilized its funds.
I always say the Buhari government became a failure the very first day we started comparing it to the Jonathan administration. That we fared better under GEJ makes our case more pathetic. Buhari may very well be the biggest scam ever pulled. If we start to compare him to Jonathan on corruption,the most prominent reason why we opted for change, then we are in more trouble than we can imagine. While it is true most facts start to reveal themselves after governments have stepped aside, the little we have seen so far of our anti-corruption crusader suggests we would be fooling ourselves to think he is playing clean. Senator Isa Misau just days ago alleged the IG of police bought 2 SUVs for the President’s wife after a request was sent in for a Toyota Sienna and a hiace bus. The police subsequently claimed the cars were for the security in her convoy and this much was corroborated by her Director of information. I couldn’t help wondering if the DSS were the ones who bought the ‘personal’ car she rides in. Does the police actually buy cars for a Presidential convoy?
Considering she is holding that office contrary to a breach of campaign promise by President Buhari to Nigerians, one would expect her to thread with some caution.But sadly,that hasn’t been the case. The woman wore the one of the most expensive wrist watches at the 72nd United Nations General Assembly in New York. A £10,000 choppard diamond wrist watch. The biggest lies are ones we tell to ourselves. Corruption is winning.
We have to accept that.

Hassan is a lawyer based in Kano.

Source: The Cable


#MainaGate: Those protecting Maina are making his arrest difficult - Magu

Ibrahim Magu, acting chairman of the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC), says those offering protection to Abdulrasheed Maina, ex-chairman of Pension Reform Task Team (PRTT), have made it difficult for the agency to arrest him.
Magu, who did not disclose the identity of the persons allegedly protecting Maina, absolved himself of any blame in connection to the initial escape of Maina.
In 2013, Maina fled the country after the EFCC declared him wanted over alleged pension fraud.
The top civil servant returned to the country under controversial circumstances and was reinstated as a director in the ministry of interior.
President Muhammadu Buhari ordered his dismissal and demanded a probe.
Speaking when he featured on Sunrise Daily, a programme on Channels Television, Magu described Maina’s reinstatement as “devastating”.
He said the anti-graft agency would not spare anyone involved in it.
“We would go after everybody who is involved. I am telling you, we will not spare anybody,” Magu said.
“He has people who are protecting him and that has made it difficult for us to get him arrested. You can imagine, he was promoted. It is devastating, it is beyond my understanding.”
When asked if he knew the whereabouts of Maina, he said: “Of course if I knew why would I be appealing to Nigerians to give us support.
“We are determined to get to the root of this matter. That’s why we have renewed the investigation. We will retrieve all property or whatever must have been stolen from public funds.
“This is something that we have done as far back as 2011. The matter has been in court, and Maina was also charged before the court. He was arraigned in absentia. I assure you, we will get him sooner or later. The national assembly is supporting us. We are collaborating and we are also giving them support. We have no problem with national assembly.”
Magu said the support from other security agencies was not satisfactory, while calling on them and other Nigerians to give more support to the anti-corruption fight.
“There are some support, synergy, cooperation from time to time but it is not satisfactory because every security agency has some responsibilities in the fight against corruption,” he said.
“I want us to be fully committed in the fight against corruption because the greatest enemy of Nigeria today is corruption and the corrupt people are now celebrating.
“The way the media and other Nigerians can help us is to give us information to get Maina arrested.”

Source: The Cable

#MainaGate: Ex-EFCC Boss, Former IGP Others Allegedly Implicated in N17bn Fraud

About N17billion pension cash has been traced to the dismissed chairman of the Presidential Task Force on Pension Reforms Task Team, Mr. Abdulrasheed Abdullahi Maina, with a long list of highly-placed beneficiaries.
The said cash was diverted by Maina from the N24billion budgeted by the Federal Government for payment of pension liabilities through the Presidential Pension Reforms Task Team headed by Maina.
The funds were stolen in five years from 2008 to 2013 in tranches of N2.7billion and N14.374billion respectively.
While the N2.7billion was converted to personal use through the connivance of banks and family members, N14.374billion was shared by Maina and those in the chain of pension management in different Ministries, Departments and Agencies (MDAs).
Maina and his cohorts dipped their hands into the till under the guise of phantom biometric verification.
Those implicated in the pension funds bazaar in the Pension Task Force  Payment Vouchers Include include a former Chairman of the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC), A former Acting Chairman of ICPC, a former Inspector-General of Police, two former Heads of Service, Permanent Secretary (State House) and top directors in the civil service, 18 slush companies, some operatives of the EFCC and the National Intelligence Agency (NIA).
Other beneficiaries included some officials of the Independent Corrupt Practices and Other Related Offences Commission (ICPC), bankers, Bureau de Change owners, family members, top officers in the Budget Office and the Office of the Accountant-General of the Federation (OAGF).
The EFCC has so far filed 12 cases against 19 of those implicated, including Maina; a former Head of the Civil Service of the Federation, Mr. Steve Oronsaye; Osarenkhoe Afe; Fredrick Hamilton Global Services Limited and others.
The list of the bigwigs who allegedly benefited from Maina’s benevolence was contained in a report submitted to the Attorney-General of the Federation by the EFCC and the PRTT Payment vouchers for the trial of Maina by the Office of the Director of Public Prosecution (DPP).
The report titled CR: 3000/EFCC/ABJ/FAFI/VOL.1/ 238 was dated August 1, 2016 and signed by the Acting Chairman of the anti-graft commission, Mr. Ibrahim Magu.
According to the document, Maina perpetrated the fraud through the use of the Collective Allowance System; compilation of ghost pensioners; fictitious contracts at inflated prices to both registered and non-registered companies; and fake pension verification trips.
The breakdown of the stolen N14, 374,236,846.09 cash before the pension fraud was as follows:  (I) Fictitious Contracts (N 5,761,150,608.44); (II) ghost pensioners (N829, 902, 260.40) ;( III) Collective Allowance (N1, 365,821,942.91) (IV) Payments to States Pension Boards& Others (N4, 192,825,310.99); (V) National Union of Pensioners (N 2,290,593,322.35) and VI. Association of Federal Public Service Retirees (AFPSR) N253, 390,300.
EFCC said: “The use of Collective allowance: Under this fraudulent tactic, which became very handy under Maina and the OHCSF, the Director would approve payment of purported staff of the office to one single individual. After the payment is made, the person whose account was used will withdraw 90% and hand over cash to the Director or whoever was responsible for the payment.
“Key officials of the HoCSF asked their staff and friends to purportedly register companies with the Corporate Affairs Commission (CAC) in which payments were made for contracts that were never executed; some contracts partly executed though grossly inflated and such payments diverted to the suspects.”
Some of the highly-placed public officers were also allegedly allocated estacodes for biometric verification trips without going anywhere.
Some of the fake trips covered foreign shuttles to the United States and the United Kingdom among others.
The wanted ex-PRTT doled out about N23million for a “phantom” trip to the United Kingdom as follows:
·         The Inspector-General of Police (N2,386,000);
·         A late Deputy Inspector-General of Police (N1,475,600)
·         A former Head of Service (N2,386,000)
·         Two EFCC operatives got N1,362,960 each
Also out of a N36million approved for a “fake” trip to the US by Maina’s PRTT, the following government officials were allocated estacodes:
·         The Head of Service and the Permanent Secretary in the OHCSF, who received N3, 286,000 each
·         A Director in the office of the Accountant-General of the Federation (N2, 838,000)
·         The Director General of the Budget Office (N4,854,000)
·         A Director in the Budget Office (N2,895,000 )
·         Assistant Director in Budget Office (N2,045,000)
The PRTT vouchers confirmed payment of another sum of N40.6 million to some top officials for a shuttle to Atlanta in the United States to screen Nigerian pensioners.
Those who benefited were the following:
·         A former Head of Service (N4,854,000)
·         Ex-EFCC Chairman (N4,854,000)
·         Permanent Secretary State House (N4,086,000)
·         Another N2,738,000 was paid to Ex-EFCC Chairman
·         Two operatives of the EFCC got N1,482,960 and N2,638,000 respectively.
·         A staff of the NIA (N 2,638,000).
The document showed a breakdown of how pension funds were shared to finance pension verification teams to ‘South Africa, ‘Ghana’, and the 36 states’ of the federation, ‘zonal levels’ and others to siphon different sums of public funds into their banks accounts in the name of biometric verification.
Out of the N18.4million released to Maina for a trip to South Africa, the Director -General of Budget was allocated N3,056,000 .
The per diem for the trip to Ghana cost N9.1 million out of which a former Director of Defence Intelligence received N1,388,000 through his First Bank account. Two female staff of EFCC got N1,275,000 each as part of the national cake.
While those who went round the 36 states, allegedly collected N160,471,200 from Maina, a few others were paid N15,477,900 for going round the six geo-political zones of the country
The report gave the details of how Maina allegedly collaborated with former Head of the Civil Service of the Federation, Mr. Steve Oronsaye, and two others in N2billion pension funds allegedly mismanaged for biometric contracts.
The N2billion was part of the looted N17billion cash.
The others are Osarenkhoe Afe and Fredrick Hamilton Global Services Limited suspected as fronts
The report added: “Mr. Oronsaye and Maina engaged the services of the following individuals to assist them in looting pension funds.
  •         Osarenkhoe Afe: (charged to court together with Mr. Maina & Oronsaye):  He is an IT consultant who introduced Innovative Solutions to the OHCSF for biometric enrolment project. He stated that, Mr. Steven Oronsaye [former Head of Service) asked him to join the Pension Reform Committee headed by Mr. Abudulrasheed Maina.
  •     Robert Ikazoboh: (Prosecution witness) He is the CEO of Innovative Solutions & Projects Ltd – a company invited by OHCSF to offer services regarding biometric enrolment exercise. He stated that he was brought in to the project by Osa Afe.
He also stated that Mr. Afe verbally instructed him to work with 2 other companies namely Uptrach and Frederick Hamilton and further instructed him as to the amount to be paid to the companies whenever he received payments.
  •  Ahmed Mazangari: (Already charged to court): He is the owner of Xangees Technologies Ltd, an information technology consultancy firm and a friend of Maina’s brother, Khalid Biu. He was ‘engaged’ by the OHCSF through Maina based on ‘word of mouth’. He was tasked with the job of computerizing the pension payroll but in the process ironically ended up inserting his own 11 fake pensioners and was used by Maina to receive N153 million for non-existing biometric contract which was withdrawn and handed over to Maina in cash after converting same to dollars through his brother, Khalid. Ahmed, his mother and company are presently standing trial. He stole N230 million as ghost pensioners’ payment from the OHCSF (including the biometric contract).
“During the course of our investigation, the following facts emerged: That Mr. Osarenkhoe Afe (Osa Afe), the owner of Fredrick Hamilton Global Ltd introduced Innovative Solutions to the OHCSF where they were awarded the contract of biometric data capture.
“That the initial contract sum was N63 million as indicated in the award letter which was paid to Innovative Solution. However, Innovative Solution requested for a contract extension of the sum of N136 million which brings the total contract sum to N199 million (both initial and additional amount).
“That from the analysis of Innovative Solution’s bank statement, it was discovered that the total sum of N224.85million was fraudulently paid to them showing an excess payment of 25million against N199 million. Mr. Osa Afe confessed that, the contract sum was inflated at the instance of Mr. Abdulrasheed Maina and the inflated amount delivered to him.
“That Robert Ikazoboh was discovered to have transferred the total sum of N166.5million from his company Innovative Solution’s account to Frederick Hamilton Ltd, a company owned by Osarenkhoe Afe.
“A transfer of N35million was discovered from Innovative Solution to Uptrach Communication Ltd after which Robert Ikazoboh confirmed the payment as amount paid to the company that actually executed the contract of the biometric exercise.
“That Osarenkhoe Afe was also discovered to have been paid the sum of N l19.4 million as biometric enrolment exercise through his company Fredrick Hamilton. Investigation revealed that the company has no contract award letter from OHCSF nor did it carry out any contract.
“That including the amount remitted to Fredrick Hamilton from Innovative Solution, Fredrick Hamilton Ltd was discovered to have been fraudulently credited with the total sum of N 289.05 million out of which Mr. Osarehkhoe Afe confessed to have remitted over N250 million to Mr. Abdulrasheed Maina. Mr. Osa Afe admitted to have benefited N35million only and promised to refund same.
“Mr. Osa Afe confessed that, he issued blank cheques from his Skye Bank Account no. 1341770007353 to Mr. Maina which he used for making the withdrawals and sometimes he goes with Maina to Oceanic Bank to make the withdrawals and hand them over to him instantly. This has been confirmed by Oceanic Bank Fredrick Hamilton Ltd account officer.
“That one Salami Kareem Adesokan a storekeeper attached to the PRTT  confessed that the total sum of N147,765,400.00 fraudulently paid through various banks from OHCSF to three different companies namely Fatidek Ventures, Jolance and Oblando Nigeria Ltd for fictitious Biometric contract  were collected cash by him and delivered same to Mr. Maina through  one Ann Igwe (Maina’s confidential secretary).
“That the total sum of N153,146,719 fraudulently paid to XangeTechnologies Limited from OHCSF for fictitious Biometric contract was transferred to a Bureau de Change, converted to U.S. dollars and then delivered to Mr. Maina through his relative, one Khalid Ali Biu.”
The report gave the details of how Maina had used some firms, individuals and many accounts to siphon pension funds.
The EFCC said: “Investigation revealed that Mr. Maina fictitiously owned and operate the following accounts in the following names: Cluster Logistics, Drew Investment & Construction Ltd, Kongolo Dynamics Cleaning Ltd, “Dr” Abdullahi A. Faizal, Nafisatu Aliyu Yeldu and Abdulrasheed Abdullahi Maina,
“That analysis of the above listed accounts revealed a total turnover of more than N2.7 billion.  It is important to note that 95% of deposits into the fraudulent accounts were cash deposits made by bankers in their own names and other fictitious names.
“Investigation revealed that Mr. Maina fraudulently opened and fictitiously operated all the accounts with the active connivance of bank staff namely: Danjuma Zubairu, Toyin Meseke (Account Officer to some of the accounts investigated), Khalid Ali Biu (Maina’s relation) and Abubakar Gombe (Account officer of one of the accounts  investigated) in Kaduna Branch.
“Forensic analysis of Toyin Meseke telephone handsets revealed several text messages and email correspondences regarding specific instructions on running the accounts from Abdulrasheed Maina
“Investigation revealed that Danjuma Zubairu (Group Head of Private Banking) mostly approved those transactions via telephone and email instructions from Maina.
“That Toyin Meseke bought the sum of ($200,000) equivalent of N33,800,000 from one Bashir Mohammed Taura, a Bureau de Change operator, and instructed him to facilitate the delivery of same money to Abdulrasheed Maina  in Dubai, U.A.E on 05/05/2014.
” Toyin Meseke also bought another sum of $250,000) equivalent of N42,500,000) from one Bashir Mohammed Taura, a bureau de Change operator and instructed him to facilitate the delivery of same money to Abdulrasheed Maina in Dubai U.A.E on 05/06/2014
“That Toyin Meseke facilitated the transfer of the total sum of N33,105,000 to ALNASRA BDC & JIEK BDC on behalf of Abdulrasheed  Maina from Cluster Logistics account for the purpose of buying U.S. dollar on 10/03/2014
“That Toyin Meseke also facilitated the part liquidation of Maina’s fixed deposit of N100,850,000 and subsequent transfer to Neural Wax  BDC  on 07/07/2015 for buying U.S. dollars on behalf Abdulrasheed Maina  and delivered same to one Mairo Bashir (Maina’s relation) of UBA Maitama Branch Abuja.
“That the total sum N26.5 million was paid to the Federal Housing Authority from Kongolo Dynamics Ltd and a balance of N4.4 Million was paid to Alhaji Tijjani Yusuf between 20/10/08 & 19/11/08 for the purpose of buying a property located at No.12, 11th Road Kado Estate Abuja owned by Abdulrasheed Maina.
“That four bank drafts totaling N30 million were issued same day (15/03/2010) in favour of one Titus Adeboye from Kongolo Dynamics Ltd account. Mr. Adeboye confirmed that the fund traced to him was for the purpose of acquiring a property for Mr. Maina (block of shops) located at C2 Ibrahim Taiwo Road, Kaduna.
“That Mr. Abdulrasheed Maina bought another property located at No. l0 Amisi Musa Street, Jabi Abuja FCT from one Alhaji Adamu  Modibbo and paid the sum of $2m cash, equivalent of N340 million in June 2012.
“Finally investigation has established that all the accounts are linked to Mr. Maina either through his phone number, email address or transactions between the accounts and testimonies of the account officers/ bankers involved in this complex money laundering scheme.
“A total number of eight GSM lines have been traced by the EFCC as the ones used by Maina to give instructions to banks, cronies and associates to launder the huge amount under investigation.
The numbers were listed by the anti-graft agency as 08098887733, 08037872471, 08142277550, 07037900714, 08106842813, 08091501002, +971552717234 and +971526294678.
“Furthermore investigation also confirmed that the source of funds in the accounts could only be from those fictitious contracts and other bogus payments from government, particularly OHCSF Pension Department and CIPPO where Maina superintended at various times between 2008 and 2013, as no known existing and viable business was  identified as source of funds into the account and the account officers  confirmed same.
“It is also pertinent to note that the Special Audit conducted by the Auditor-General of the Federation also confirmed those violations investigated by the commission.”
As at press time, those standing trial for the pension fraud in the Office of the Head of the Civil Service of the Federation are Oronsaye; Maina; the Director of Finance and Account, Dr. Sani Shuaibu Teidi, Mrs. Phina Ukamaka Chidi, Deputy Director, Aliyu Bello, Special Assistant to Director of Administration, Olanipekun Emmanuel, Head of Final Account, Abdul Mohammed, Assistant Cash Pay Officer, Garbo Tahir, Cashier and M.K. Ahmed, Assistant Director, Variation.
Others charged for abetting laundering are Osarenkhoe Afe; Fredrick Hamilton Global Services Limited;  Franklin Nwankwo and Eric D. Omoefe; one Abdullahi Omeiza (charged for his role in operating 13 pension accounts in 13 different banks with 13 different names; Alhaji Ali Abatcha and Elder Actor Zal, former President and Secretary General of the Nigerian Union of Pensioners.”

Source: The Nation

Paris Club Refund: Court Orders Interim Forfeiture of N1. 2bn, N220m

Justice O. Oguntoyinbo of the Federal High Court sitting in Ikoyi, Lagos, on Friday, October 13, 2017, ordered an interim forfeiture of the sum of N1, 222, 384, 857..84 (One Billion, Two Hundred and Twenty-two Million, Three Hundred and Eighty-four  Thousand,  Eight Hundred and Fifty-seven Naira,  Eighty-four Kobo)  recovered by the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission, EFCC, from the account of Melrose General Services Company Limited.
Justice Oguntoyinbo also ordered the temporary forfeiture of the sum of  N220, 000, 000. 00 (Two Hundred and Twenty Million Naira) recovered from two other companies namely Wasp Networks Limited  and Thebe Wellness Services.
The order came following a motion ex - parte filed by E. E. Iheanacho, a prosecutor with the  EFCC, pursuant to Section 44(2)  of the Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria, 1999 as amended and Section 17 of the Advance Fee Fraud and Other Fraud Related Offences Act No. 14, 2006.
In granting the EFCC  prayers, Justice Oguntoyinbo ordered anyone interested in the money to appear before the court  within 14 days to show cause  why the money should not be permanently forfeited to the Federal Government.
The judge also directed the  Commission to publish in any national newspaper for anyone who is interested in the money to appear before the court  to show cause why the order for the final forfeiture should not be granted.
On May 26, 2016, the 36 states' governors, through the Nigeria Governor Forum, NGF,had engaged the services of a consortium of consultants made up of GSCL Consulting and Bizplus Consulting Services Limited ("Messrs GSCL Biz Plus Consortium") for the purpose of verification, reconciliation and recovery of over - deductions on Paris and London Club Loans on the accounts of states and local governments between 1995 and 2002.
The company had carried out the said assignment and declared a total sum of US$ 6, 483, 282, 424. 61 as due for refund to the states .
Following this, the Federal Government had approved an initial payment of the sum of US$ 1, 730, 930.53 for the benefit of the various states.
The Minister of Finance, Kemi  Adeosun,  had, through the Central Bank of Nigeria,  CBN, paid the sums of US$ 86,546, 526.65  and N19, 439, 225, 871.11 representing 5% of the approved initial Paris and London Club refunds.
On December 14, 2016, the NGF had  paid the sum of N4, 389, 207,099.05 to the Consortium of GSCL BizPlus as part of the agreed consultancy fee.
Melrose General Services Limited, who was the first respondent, was never engaged by the NGF to carry out any consultancy services in relation to the said Paris and London Club refund.
However,  in order to obtain public funds, the first respondent had allegedly  re-copied and misrepresented the work of GSCL BizPlus Consortium to the Nigeria Governor Forum (NGF) for payment.
As a result, the first respondent was allegedly  paid the sum of N3, 500, 000,000.00 by the NGF on December 14, 2016,  even when it did not execute any consultancy job for the Forum.
The first respondent's Access Bank Plc account No. 0005892453 was said to be in red at the time the sum of N3, 500,000,000.00 was paid into it.
Between  December 15, 2016 and January 20, 2017, the first respondent allegedly  moved out about N2, 277,615,142,  in a bid to launder the money, leaving a balance of N1,222, 384, 857.84 before the intervention of the EFCC.
Investigation revealed that hundreds of millions of Naira from the Paris and London Club refund were withdrawn in cash, while the company wired some amounts of money  outside the shores of the country and paid some amounts to third parties in Nigeria.
The Commission,  however, recovered the sum of N200,000,000.00,  which Melrose General Services Limited  transfered to Wasp Networks Limited,  the second respondent, on January 11, 2017 purportedly for investment in the company.
The EFCC  also recovered another sum of N20,000,000.00  transferred to Thebe Wellness Services, the third respondent, on December 19, 2017 also purportedly for  investment.
However, both Wasp Network and Thebe  were said to have voluntarily returned the money transferred to them by the first respondent..


Source: efccnigeria.org