Tag: Diezani

  • EFCC deletes controversial social media post on ex-minister, Diezani

    EFCC deletes controversial social media post on ex-minister, Diezani

    An Instagram post that quoted Diezani Allison-Madueke, the former minister of petroleum resources, discussing allegations of money laundering against her has been deleted by the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC).

    The social media post claimed that the former minister spoke in an interview with journalists in the United Kingdom.

    It was gathered that the unsigned post had been pulled down from the anti-graft agency’s official Instagram handle.

    Dele Oyewale, an EFCC spokesperson, however, rejected the report and clarified that it was not written by or approved by the anti-graft organization.

    Read Also: Diezani rattled my trust in women, says Danjuma

    “The report is not from the EFCC. Anything that is not signed by me is not from us (the EFCC),” Oyewale said.

    The Nation reports that Allison-Madueke, a former minister under ex-president Goodluck Jonathan, fled the nation after the EFCC accused her of money laundering.

    A top federal government source had revealed that in making the extradition request, the office of the AGF cited Section 2 (2) of Nigeria’s Extradition Act, CAP E25, Laws of the Federation of Nigeria, 2004, and the London Scheme of Extradition within the Commonwealth otherwise known as ‘The Scheme,’ a multilateral treaty which governs extradition between the United Kingdom and Nigeria.

    “The EFCC established a prima facie case against Allison-Madueke in a letter to the office of the AGF, after which a magistrate was ordered to issue a warrant of arrest. The Certified True Copy of the warrant of arrest was then attached to the extradition request written to the UK government by the AGF on the orders of the president.”

  • Diezani excelled in corruption, says TY Danjuma

    Diezani excelled in corruption, says TY Danjuma

    A former Nigeria’s Chief of Army Staff, Lt. General Theophilus Danjuma, has described a former minister of petroleum, Diezani Alison-Madueke, as an expert who excelled in corruption.

    Diezani has been facing a series of legal trials since 2015 after leaving office as minister including her ongoing trial over an alleged £100,000 bribe by British authorities.

    Speaking on Tuesday, November 28, in Umuchigbo, Iji Nike, Enugu, while commissioning the Goodwill Medical Centre (GMC) built and equipped by TY Danjuma Foundation, Danjuma said Diezani set a record that is yet to be beaten by anybody in terms of corruption.

    The GMC project is the brainchild of Prof Uche Amazigo, Nigeria’s renowned pro-poor public health specialist, and one of the few female Africans to have led a specialized UN Agency, overseeing a highly successful multilateral partnership in global health.

    He said: “I used to say that if you want anything properly done and deliver on time without any excuses, give the job to a woman until we had a female minister of petroleum. That woman excelled in corruption. She set a record that is yet to be beaten by anybody.

    “So, I was in the process of reviewing my statement when I met one lady, Prof. Uche Amazigo. Uche and I have come a very long way. My first encounter with Uche was around mid-October 2010 when she, accompanied by Mrs. Franca Ilamiji, another Igbo woman.”

    He said Prof Amazigo made him believe again that women remain the most trusted people to prudently manage public funds.

    Read Also: UK court adjourns hearing in Diezani’s case till 2025

    Danjuma said: “Uche and I have been colleagues for many years. After working for the TY Danjuma Foundation, I thought I had seen the end of Uche. I was mistaken.

    “In early March 2022, Prof Uche, accompanied by two other female professors, presented to me a request to provide financial support for building and equipping a low-cost efficient medical centre to provide excellent medical services by predominantly female medical doctors, nurses and midwives who chose to dedicate their time to humanity.

    “I listened to her carefully and asked a few questions. I wanted to know if they have cash and the name of the organization. And how she thinks an all-female-staff medical centre will function. She was ready for my questions.

    “The result of all these questions is what you see here today. This magnificent edifice can only be built by women at the price they accounted to me. Men will take your money and you won’t see any building or money.”

    While saluting and congratulating Prof Uche and her team for a job well done, Danjuma expressed hope that they would surpass the goals they set for themselves.

    Governor Peter Mbah of Enugu State, who was represented by his deputy, Ifeanyi Ossai, hailed the elder statesman for epitomizing leadership both in public service and private life.

    He also lauded Prof Amazigo for initiating the project which is primarily going to be of immense benefit to the people of Enugu State.

    He vowed to do all within the government’s power to protect the investment by giving them maximum support.

    The CEO of Goodwill Medical Centre, Prof Amazigo, the objective of establishing the hospital was to provide quality healthcare for all.

    She said: “This Centre with the assistance of seven Consultant specialists and Professors, will provide low-cost treatment for indigent patients and charge others (the rich) the standard medical fees”.

    She disclosed that the center had perfected plans for the enrollment of 1000 or more indigent people randomly selected from communities, into the National Health Insurance Authority/ Group, Individual, Family Social Health Insurance Programme (NHIA GIFSHIP).

    “This will cost about NGN 15 million at the rate of NGN 15,000 per enrollee. This programme will provide comprehensive and robust health care services to the poor.”

  • JUST IN: UK court adjourns hearing on Diezani’s case to 2025

    JUST IN: UK court adjourns hearing on Diezani’s case to 2025

    The court hearing involving former minister of petroleum resources, Diezani Alison-Madueke in the United Kingdom, over bribery allegations has been adjourned to November 2025.

    The Westminster Magistrates Court adjourned hearing on the suit on Monday, October 30.

    The Nation reports that 63-year-old Alison-Madueke is on trial for allegedly accepting a £100,000 bribe.

    On October 2, Michael Snow, the district judge at the Westminster Magistrates Court in the United Kingdom, granted Alison-Madueke bail in the amount of £70,000 after judging her “a flight risk.”

    Before she was granted bail, Snow had put harsh conditions on Alison-Madueke, including an 11 p.m. to 6 a.m. curfew and the wearing of an electronic tag at all times.

    Alison-Madueke and four other people were detained in the United Kingdom in October 2015 on suspicion of bribery and money laundering.

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    The UK’s National Crime Agency (NCA) stated in August 2023 that they suspected Alison-Madueke of accepting bribes in exchange for awarding multi-million pound oil and gas contracts.

    The NCA stated on its website that Alison-Madueke “is alleged to have benefited from at least £100,000 in cash, chauffeur-driven cars, private jet flights, luxury vacations for her family, and the use of multiple London properties.”

    Meanwhile, the Attorney-General of the Federation and Minister of Justice, Lateef Fagbemi, SAN, has submitted a warrant of arrest and request to the Crown Prosecution Services of the United Kingdom for the urgent extradition of Allison-Madueke.

    EFCC had on October 2, revealed that it had commenced extraditing Mrs Alison-Madueke from the United Kingdom back to Nigeria over 13-count charges bordering on money laundering levelled against her by the anti-graft agency.

    The commission further revealed that the money laundering charges for which Alison-Madueke is answerable to the EFCC, covered jurisdictions in Dubai, the United Arab Emirates, the United Kingdom, the United States of America, and Nigeria.

    The EFCC alleged that the former minister in the administration of former President Goodluck Jonathan from 2010 to 2015 stole $2.5bn from the Nigerian government while she was a minister.

    In January 2023, Alison-Madueke asked the Federal High Court in Abuja to vacate an order granted to the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission for final forfeiture of her seized assets.

    Also, on Saturday 27 May 2023, she instituted a suit against the EFCC and the office of the Attorney-General of the Federation over what she termed a false and malicious attempt to “paint her as a common criminal”.

    This was filed in the Federal High Court, Abuja Judicial Division, with Suit No. CV/6273/2023, and signed by her legal representation led by Mike Ozekhome, SAN.

  • Asset forfeiture: Court shifts Diezani’s suit against EFCC to Dec. 7

    Asset forfeiture: Court shifts Diezani’s suit against EFCC to Dec. 7

    A Federal High Court, Abuja, on Monday, postponed the hearing of a suit filed by former Minister of Petroleum Resources, Diezani Alison-Madueke, challenging the orders obtained by the EFCC for final forfeiture of her seized assets.

    The matter, which was scheduled on number 15 on the cause list, could not proceed due to the absence of the presiding judge, Justice Inyang Ekwo.

    The court subsequently fixed Dec. 7 for hearing of the suit marked: FHC/ABJ/CS/21/23.

    The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports that Justice Ekwo had, on June 21, fixed today for hearing of the case after the lawyer who appeared for Alison-Madueke, Mr Benson Igbanoi, and EFCC’s counsel, M.D. Baraya, regularised their processes in the suit.

    NAN reports that the anti-corruption agency had planned to conduct public sale of all the assets seized for being proceeds of crime as ordered by courts to be permanently forfeited to the Federal Government

    The auctioning exercise, conducted on the seized assets believed to include Diezani’s property, started on Jan. 9.

    The immediate-past chairman of EFCC, Abdulrasheed Bawa, had revealed that $153 million and over 80 property had been recovered from Alison-Madueke.

    She was alleged to have escaped to the United Kingdom (UK) and remained there after her exit from public office as the petroleum minister, an office she held between 2010 and 2015 under the administration of former President Goodluck Jonathan.

    But the ex-minister, in her suit, sought an order extending the time within which to seek leave to apply to the court for an order to set aside the EFCC’s public notice issued to conduct public sale on her property.

    In the motion marked: FHC/ABJ/CS/21/2023 dated and filed on Jan. 6 by her lawyer, Chief Mike Ozekhome, SAN, the former minister sought five orders from the court.

    While Alison-Madueke is the applicant, the EFCC is the sole respondent in the suit.

    The former minister, who argued that the various orders were made without jurisdiction, said these “ought to be set aside ex debito justitiae.”

    She said she was not given fair hearing in all the proceedings leading to the orders.

    “The various court orders issued in favour of the respondent and upon which the respondent issued the public notice were issued in breach of the applicant’s right to fair hearing as guaranteed by Section 36 (1) of the 1999 Constitution, as altered, and other similar constitutional provisions,” she said.

    She argued that she was neither served with the charge sheet and proof of evidence in any of the charge nor any other summons howsoever and whatsoever in respect of the criminal charges pending against her before the court.

    She further argued that the courts were misled into making several of the final forfeiture orders against her assets through suppression or non-disclosure of material facts.

    “The several applications upon which the courts made the final order of forfeiture against the applicant were obtained upon gross misstatements, misrepresentations, non-disclosure, concealment and suppression of material facts.

    “This honourable court has the power to set-aside same ex debito justitiae, as a void order is as good as if it was never made at all.

    “The orders were made without recourse to the constitutional right to fair hearing and right to property accorded the applicant by the constitution.

    “The applicant was never served with the processes of court in all the proceedings that led to the order of final forfeiture,” she said, among other grounds given.

    But the EFCC, in a counter affidavit deposed to by Rufai Zaki, a detective with the commission, urged the court to dismiss her application.

    Read Also: Yahaya Bello: No assassination attempt on my life

    Mr Zaki, who was a member of the team that investigated a case of criminal conspiracy, official corruption and money laundering against the ex-minister and some other persons involved in the case, said investigation had clearly shown that she was involved in some acts of criminality.

    He said Alison-Madueke was therefore charged before the court in charge no: FHC/ABJ/CR/208/2018.

    “We hereby rely on the charge FHC/ABJ/CR/208/2018 dated 14th November, 2018 filed before this honourable court and also attached as Exhibit C in the applicant’s affidavit,” he said.

    The EFCC operative, who said he had seen the ex-minister’s motion, said most of the depositions were untrue.

    He said contrary to her deposition in the affidavit in support, most of the cases which led to the final forfeiture of the contested property “were action in rem, same were heard at various times and determined by this honourable court.”

    He said the courts differently ordered the commission to do a newspaper publication inviting parties to show cause why the said property should not be forfeited to the Federal Government, before final orders were made.

    Mr Zaki argued that one Nnamdi Awa Kalu represented the ex-minister in reaction to one of the forfeiture applications.

    “We humbly rely on the judgment of Hon. Justice I.LN. Oweibo dated 10th September, 2019 shown in Exhibit C of the applicant’s affidavit,” he said.

    The officer said contrary to her, the final forfeiture of the assets which were subject of the present application was ordered by the court since 2017 and that this was not set aside or upturned on appeal.

    According to him, the properties have been disposed off through due process of law.

    NAN reports that the EFCC had equally filed a money laundering suit against the ex-minister.

    The suit, marked: FHC/ABJ/CR/208/2018 and brought by the anti-graft lawyer, Farouk Abdullah was presently before Justice Mobolaji Olajuwon.

    Justice Olajuwon, on Jan. 24, 2022, issued an arrest warrant against Alison-Madueke, following an oral application by Abdullah that the defendant had refused to come to the country to stand her trial.

    The EFCC accused the former minister of fleeing the country for the UK in order to escape justice.

    The lawyer, in a document filed along with a motion ex-parte, said it sought to question Diezani, without success, in relation to many allegations against her.

    This, he said, includes “her role as the Minister of Petroleum Resources and her role in the award of Strategic Alliance Agreement (SAA) to Septa Energy Limited, Atlantic Energy Drilling Concept Limited and Atlantic Energy Brass Development Limited by NNPC.

    He said it also wanted Diezani to respond to questions about “her role in the chartering of private jets by the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) and Ministry of Petroleum Resources and her role in the award of contracts by NNPC to Marine and Logistics Services Limited.”

    Abdallah said the agency was investigating Diezani’s business relationships with Mr. Donald Amamgbo, Mr. Afam Nwokedi, Chief lkpea Leemon, Miss Olatimbo Bukola Ayinde, Mr Benedict Peters, Christopher Aire, Harcourt Adukeh, Julian Osula, Dauda Lawal, Nnamdi Okonkwo, Mr. Leno Laithan, Sahara Energy Group and Midwestern Oil Limited.

    He added that Dezani was also required to clear air on “her role in financing the 2015 general elections, particularly the money that were warehoused at Fidelity Bank Plc in 2015 prior to the elections.”

    He said it equally wanted the ex-minister to speak on several items, documents and Jewelleries recovered from her house at No: 10, Chiluba Close, off Jose Marti Street, Asokoro, Abuja, and  some identified property that were linked to her In Nigeria, UK, United States of America (USA), United Arab Emirate (UAE) and South Africa.

    NAN reports that Alison-Madueke is also standing trial before the Westminster Magistrates Court in the UK over an alleged £100,000 bribe.(NAN)(www.nannews.ng)

  • Diezani’s UK trial: Justice abroad?

    Diezani’s UK trial: Justice abroad?

    • The former petroleum minister may join the growing list of politically exposed Nigerians who evaded justice at home but got served abroad

    Since she left the country just days before the end of former President Goodluck Jonathan‘s administration in May 2015, hardly has a month passed without one allegation or the other against former petroleum minister Diezani Alison-Madueke surfacing in the news. This month was no exception, but this time, the news was from abroad.

     The internet was awash on October 2 with news that Ms. Allison-Madueke had been arraigned for alleged bribe-taking by the United Kingdom (UK) police. The former minister, who currently lives in St John’s Wood, an upmarket area of West London, is alleged to have accepted £100,000 in cash, chauffeur-driven cars, flights on private jets, luxury holidays for her family, and the use of multiple London properties from oil and gas contractors.

     Other gratifications listed against her by the International Corruption Unit of the UK’s National Crime Agency (NCA) are furniture gifts, renovation work and staff for the London properties, payment of private school fees for her son, and gifts from high-end designer shops such as Cartier jewellery and Louis Vuitton goods. Appearing at Westminster Magistrates Court, Alison-Madueke spoke only to give her name, date of birth and address. She was not asked to formally enter a plea, although her lawyer Mark Bowen told the court she would plead not guilty.

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     The charges against her, read out in court, all related to events alleged to have taken place in London. Prosecutor Andy Young said she was alleged to have accepted a wide range of advantages in cash and in kind from people who wanted to receive or continue to receive the award of oil contracts, which he said were worth billions of dollars in total. District Judge Michael Snow granted Alison-Madueke bail but imposed terms including an 11:00 p.m. to 6:00 a.m. curfew, an electronic tag to be worn at all times and a 70,000-pound surety to be paid before she could leave the court building. Her next court appearance will be at Southwark Crown Court, which deals with serious criminal cases, on October 30.

     Following the news, the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) said it had obtained an arrest warrant for Alison-Madueke and initiated extradition proceedings. “She will soon have her day in our courts,” it said in a statement.

    The 63-year-old Bayelsa-born former senior official of Shell Petroleum served as a key figure in the administration of former President Goodluck Jonathan administration between 2010 and 2015. She also acted as president of the Organisation of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC). The former minister has been on bail since first being arrested in London in October 2015.

    Andy Kelly, head of the NCA International Corruption Unit, said: “We suspect Diezani Allison-Madueke abused her power in Nigeria and accepted financial rewards for awarding multi-million-pound contracts. These charges are a milestone in what has been a thorough and complex international investigation. Bribery is a pervasive form of corruption, which enables serious criminality and can have devastating consequences for developing countries.” 

    Kelly said that assets worth millions of pounds in relation to the case have been frozen as part of the investigation. In March, the NCA which targets international and organised crimes, provided evidence to the United States Department of Justice allowing them to recover assets totalling $53.1 million linked to Alison-Madueke’s alleged corruption. The Federal High Court Abuja had in January 2022 issued a second arrest warrant against Allison-Madueke over money laundering by the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC).

    Failed extradition bids

    When news of her current travails broke, it renewed interest in Nigerian anti-graft agencies’ eight-year bid to prosecute her for alleged looting. Alison-Madueke has been in the sights of EFCC since leaving office and, following a series of direct and indirect links with several corruption cases, has become one of the country’s most politically exposed persons since the era of former President Muhammadu Buhari. The Buhari administration often cited Alison-Madueke’s activities at the Ministry of Petroleum Resources and the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) as part of the worst forms of corruption under Jonathan.

     However, several attempts by the Buhari government to bring her home from abroad and put her in the dock failed.  The suspended EFCC chairman, Abdulrasheed Bawa, who was at one time appointed by Magu to head the team investigating Alison-Madueke and her allies, once travelled to the United Kingdom to interrogate the former minister but could not gain access to her.

    EFCC’s investigations culminated in the money laundering charges filed against her in 2018. The commission also targeted high-worth assets it believed she acquired with proceeds of crimes for forfeiture. The Federal High Court, Abuja, on January 24, issued an arrest warrant against Alison-Madueke, over corruption charges pending against her. It was the second arrest warrant to be issued against the ex-minister. On December 4, 2018, a judge of the High Court of the Federal Capital Territory (FCT), Valentine Ashi (now deceased), ordered the EFCC, the Police, the Department of State Security (DSS), and all other security agencies to arrest her within 72 hours.

     Similarly, the International Criminal Police Organisation (Interpol) on February 3, 2023 said the UK Government rejected its request to extradite the former minister. Assistant Inspector General of Police (AIG) Garba Baba Umar, who is the Head of Interpol’s National Central Bureau (NCB), Abuja, stated this on the side-lines of an investigative hearing by a House of Representative Adhoc committee. The committee was investigating the alleged illegal sale of 48 million barrels of crude oil. Umar told the Committee that mutual legal assistance (MLA) processes were followed in a bid to bring Alison-Madueke back but the UK government refused.

    Billions in cash, assets seized

    If EFCC failed in extraditing her, it did succeed at confiscating billions in cash and assets reportedly linked to her through the judicial system. About N47.2 billion and $487.5 million in cash and properties were traced to Alison-Madueke after investigations, according to an EFCC statement. However, the EFCC was not the first to record some success against the former minister’s perceived assets.

     On October 3, 2015, Alison-Madueke was arrested with four other people by the International Corruption Unit (ICU) of the UK’s National Crimes Agency (NCA). She was, however, granted bail after she had been detained for several hours. The agency announced that the arrests were part of an investigation into suspected bribery and money laundering offences. Two days later, the NCA secured the seizure of the sum of £5,000 and $2,000 from Alison-Madueke’s mother, Mrs. Beatrice Agama. The court also seized £10,000 from Melanie Spencer, one of the other persons arrested in the case. The NCA also secured the seizure of the sum of £27,000 (N8,155,164.37) in the case involving Alison-Madueke at the Westminster Magistrates Court, London.

     But the former minister has consistently maintained her innocence. On May 26, she accused the EFCC and the Attorney-General of the Federation (AGF) of falsely portraying her as corrupt. Alison-Madueke sued them for N100 billion as compensation for their alleged libellous publications which, she said, falsely portrayed her “as a common looter of the national wealth and a debased and corrupt public officer.”

     The suit filed at the High Court of the Federal Capital Territory (FCT), Abuja, is challenging publications that date back to 2016. Through her lawyer, Mike Ozekhome (SAN), she urged the court to declare some specific corruption allegations, which appeared on various news platforms and EFCC websites between 2016 and 2022 as false. Apart from asking for compensation, the former minister also urged the court to order the EFCC and the AGF to retract the alleged libellous publications. She also urged the court to order the EFCC and the AGF to “publish an unreserved apology in at least three (3) national newspapers, including ThisDay, The Punch and The Sun newspapers within seven (7) days from the date of judgment.”

     She has also addressed the belief that she fled the country shortly after the Jonathan administration ended in May 2015 in fear of being caught and prosecuted by the Buhari government. Alison-Madueke said she flew to the UK on 22 May 2015, about a week before the new government came to power, to attend to her failing health. She said towards the end of the Jonathan administration, she was diagnosed with “the most aggressive form of breast cancer –Triple Negative Cancer and was hurriedly flown to England on 22 May 2015, in order to undertake a critical course of treatment.”

     The treatment she took, according to the former minister, “consisted of two operations, eight months of intensive chemotherapy and five weeks of radiotherapy and I have remained in England ever since then, undergoing medical care and treatment.” In November 2015, a photo showing an emaciated Ms Alison-Madueke was released on social media platforms by a media personality, Dele Momodu.

     But the former minister seems to have made a full recovery. A crisp photo of her at an event surfaced online on July 20, in a rare public show since she declared her struggle with cancer. It featured her smiling beside Senator Ben Bruce during the celebration of her son’s graduation from the University of Reading. Her son’s achievement is a testament to the power of good parenting. Excellence indeed runs in the family.” The photo, however, raised curiosity as to whether she was indeed sick ab initio.

    Will Alison-Madueke go the way of Ibori?

    Britain, the former colonial power of Nigeria, has always been a favoured destination for wealthy members of the Nigerian political elite looking to enjoy the fruits of their wealth. But this is not the first time a Nigerian politician has been accused of and charged with financial crime abroad. The charges mostly result in convictions. An exception is the case of the former governor of Bayelsa State, Deprieye Alamieyeseigha, who was arrested in London in 2005 on charges of corruption amounting up to $1million. He however fled and escaped trial.

     In March 2023, an agreement was signed between the United States and the Nigerian government to return the amount. In 2012, former Delta State Governor James Ibori pleaded guilty at London’s Southwark Crown Court to 10  charges of fraud and money laundering and was sentenced to 13 years in jail. Earlier in May this year, Senator Ike Ekweremadu, his wife and a doctor were sentenced to prison by British courts for attempted organ harvesting in the UK. Ekweremadu was sentenced to nine years and eight months. His wife, Beatrice, was sentenced to four years and six months, and the doctor, Obinna Obeta, was sentenced to 10 years at the Old Bailey in the UK.

     In a country where corruption trials involving politically exposed persons often last or are stalled for years with eyebrow-raising outcomes, many in Nigeria will see Alison-Madueke’s UK trial as, perhaps, their best chance for justice whether she is convicted or acquitted.

  • The Diezani makeover

    The Diezani makeover

    People like her always make news. Whether in good or bad health, there is always a story on them. It is in their nature for activities to be created around them. She left office since 2015, but she has not left public eye. All eyes have been on her since she fled home for London where she has been staying for some years now.

    To avert this public scrutiny, her minders came up with an ingenious plan, which some will describe as evil. What was this plan? They came up with the story that she has cancer. Cancer? Yes, cancer of the breast. She also confirmed it at a time, describing it as “the most aggressive form of breast cancer”. She gave its name as “Triple Negative Cancer”, adding that it started towards the end of President Goodluck Jonathan’s tenure in 2015. Does Diezani Alison-Madueke really have cancer? Perhaps, the poser should now be: did she have cancer?

    The latter may be appropriate because the Diezani her compatriots saw on television on Monday as she appeared before the Westminster Magistrates’ Court in London did not look like a cancer patient. Better put: she did not look like the scarecrow her countrymen and women saw back home in 2015 in the picture that illustrated her cancer story then. In the photograph, she was not anywhere near the Diezani we all know.

    She cut a sorry picture, with her bald head and a scarf thrown around her shoulders. She looked pathetic, but she got no sympathy. Nigerians could not care less, if she had cancer or not. They were more interested in the recovery of the loot she is believed to have stashed abroad. They saw her, though a woman, as the Man Friday of her principal, then President Jonathan under who she served as transport minister and petroleum resources minister.

    Diezani was a powerful member of the Jonathan cabinet and she rose to great heights as petroleum minister, becoming the first woman president of the Oil Producing Exporting Countries (OPEC) in a male-dominated cartel. The cancer story did not fly. Instead of prayers, it earned her curses. The people’s bitterness showed through at a moment she thought she could get some sympathy from them.

    “Did she sympathise with us when she was in government?” “What did she do to ameliorate our sufferings?” Cancer ko, cancer ni! Many said, without feeling as they reacted to the story. In the story anchored by a well known publisher some of whose actions in the past strengthened the unbelievability of the report, he wrote inter alia:

    Read Also: £100,000 bribe trial: UK court slams tough bail terms on Diezani

    “The Diezani before me was not the ebullient woman I used to see on television and in newspapers. Her head had become a Sahara Desert of sorts almost totally bald with a sprinkle of freshly growing hair, all grey. She requested to sit on a classroom chair as her back was hurting badly and she could not sit so low. Wow, what a terrible time she must be having, I almost screamed out but cautioned myself. Sitting across from me was a woman who was a shadow of herself, almost like an apparition or ghost”.

    “Awon Journalists sha! Someone blurted out after reading what he perceived as an image laundering job, wondering the need for the story at a time she was wanted back home to answer some questions relating to her enormous wealth. She is still wanted and some of her properties found to be proceeds from crime have been forfeited to the government. She is being tried in London for receiving bribe by Britain’s National Crime Agency (NCA).

    Bribery and corruption are the bane of our public service. People go into public service not to serve but to enrich themselves and when the bubble bursts, they blame it all on pressures from family members, friends and peers. Diezani has been named in serial allegations back home for which she is wanted for trial. These allegations are not different from those now levelled against her in London.

    What she is running away from at home has caught up with her abroad. It is just a matter of time before she is repatriated home to also stand trial for the myriad allegations against her. Eventually, justice will be done to the satisfaction of the people, the state and the defendant herself, whether or not she has cancer. But her cancer appears to be in remission considering the way she was looking gay and bright when she appeared in court on Monday.

    Lucky Diezani, she is getting well from her ‘cancer’, but Nigeria is not that lucky. The country is still bleeding from its years of pillage by public servants like her. There can be nothing more cancerous than the blind theft of a nation’s commonwealth by those in charge of its affairs.

  • £100,000 bribe trial: UK court slams tough bail terms on Diezani

    £100,000 bribe trial: UK court slams tough bail terms on Diezani

    • EFCC to press on with her extradition

    Despite the imposition of £70,000 bail condition and other terms on a former Petroleum Resources Minister, Mrs. Diezani Alison-Madueke by a London court yesterday, the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) is insisting on her extradition.

    Mrs Alison-Madueke is standing trial for bribery, among other charges.

    The other bail terms are:

    • an 11pm to 6am curfew
    • an electronic tag to be worn by her at all times.

    Mrs. Alison-Madueke was arraigned by the UK’s National Crime Agency (NCA) before a Westminster Magistrates’ Court for alleged £100,000 bribe.

    According to news agency, Reuters, the NCA said it suspected that the ex-minister had accepted bribes for awarding multi-million pounds oil and gas contracts.

    She was also charged with receiving bribes in the form of cash, luxury goods, flights on private jets, and the use of high-end properties in Britain in return for oil contracts.

    The former minister, during her appearance only to gave her name, date of birth, and address.

    According to the Reuters report, she was not asked to formally enter a plea. But her lawyer Mark Bowen told the court she would be pleading not guilty.

    The charges against her as read out in the court, all related to events alleged to have taken place in London while she held the fort as minister under the administration of President Goodluck Jonathan.

    Prosecutor Andy Young said Mrs. Alison-Madueke was alleged to have accepted a wide range of advantages in cash and in kind from those seeking oil contracts which he said were worth billions of dollars.

    The advantages included: delivery of £100,000 (about $121,620) in cash; payment of private school fees for her son; use and refurbishment of several luxurious properties in London and in the English countryside. 

    Other advantages included: use of a Range Rover car; payment of bills for chauffeur-driven cars; furniture and purchases from the upmarket London department store Harrods and from Vincenzo Caffarella, which sells Italian decorative arts and antiques.

    District Judge Michael Snow granted Mrs. Alison-Madueke bail but imposed terms, including an 11pm to 6am curfew, an electronic tag to be worn at all times and a £ 70,000 surety to be paid before she could leave the court building.

    Read Also: Diezani’s day in court  

    Her next court appearance will be at Southwark Crown Court, which deals with serious criminal cases, on October 30.

    Mrs. Alison-Madueke is the second high-profile Nigerian politician to face prosecution in Britain in recent years, following former Delta State Governor James Ibori, who was convicted of fraud and money laundering in 2012.

    He got 13-year jail sentence, which he had since served out.

    The former minister was arrested in London in 2015, shortly after stepping down as minister. She was charged in August with six bribery offences.

    She has spent the past eight years on police bail, living in St John’s Wood, an expensive area of London.

    But reacting, the EFCC in a statement by its Acting Head of Media and Publicity, Mr. Dele Oyewale, said the commission has initiated extradition process against Mrs. Alison-Madueke.

    The statement said: “The Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC), welcomes, with keen interest, the arraignment of a former Minister of Petroleum Resources, Mrs. Diezani Alison-Madueke at the Westminster’s Court in London, United Kingdom, following alleged bribery allegations. 

    “Although the charges preferred against her at the London court, are diametrically different from the 13-count charges bordering on money laundering the EFCC has raised against her, it is instructive to note that criminality is criminality, irrespective of jurisdictional differences.”

    “No crime can go unpunished.  The money laundering charges for which Madueke is answerable to the EFCC, cover jurisdictions in Dubai, United Kingdom,  United States of America and Nigeria.

      “To bring the former Minister to trial in Nigeria, an arrest warrant has been obtained and extradition proceedings have been initiated.  The Commission is on course on her trial. She will soon have her day in our courts.”

  • Diezani’s day in court  

    Diezani’s day in court  

    Dub her the Queen of Rot out of the Goodluck Jonathan era, and you wouldn’t be so wrong — so grievous are the allegations of sundry sleaze around her name.  

    Yet, by the prosecutorial legal system Nigeria and the United Kingdom operate, even if you were caught with the proverbial smoking gun, you’re presumed innocent until the majesty of due process decides otherwise.

    Which is why it’s rather nice: Diezani Alison-Madueke, President Jonathan’s high-flying Oil minister, but on self-exile in the UK, is finally having her day in court.  At last, the court will decide: is she the charming economic villain that all the charges swirling around her suggest?  Or just an innocent soul just caught in a warp of sleaze?

    The news didn’t exactly come out of the blues.  Just as with our Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC), the International Corruption Unit of the U.K. National Crime Agency (NCA), just charged Mrs. Alison-Madueke with receiving £100, 000 in bribes, among other alleged felonies.  

    Read Also: Emefiele opts for plea bargain in alleged N6.69b fraud case

    The investigation has been going on since 2015.  Indeed, all these years, she has been on administrative bail.  But on August 22, the NCA decided to dock her on October 2.  It’s early days yet.  But it could be the beginning of closure for the alleged economic crimes the former minister had become notorious for.

    Indeed, between the local EFCC findings and the U.K. agency’s there would appear a convergence of charges: vanity fairs and lifestyle crimes, with alleged illicit property acquisitions to boot. 

    UK charges her with allegedly pocketing £100, 000 in bribe cash, aside from sundry others in kind: chauffeur-driven cars, sweet flights in private jets, luxury holidays for self and family, and enjoying multiple London properties — alleged illicit favours from oil and gas contractors.

    She’s also alleged to have gone on another binge of gratifications: payment of private tuitions, gifts from high-end designer shops: as Cartier jewel leery and Louis Vuitton high-end luxuries, furniture gifts — all the works in vanity fair.

    At 63, it might be a long night in the criminal justice system across two continents.   “We suspect Diezani Allison-Madueke abused her power in Nigeria and accepted financial rewards for awarding multi-million-pound contracts,” said Andy Kelly.  ”These charges are a milestone in what has been a thorough and complex international investigation.”

    Here in Abuja, the Federal High Court, in January 2022, had issued a second arrest warrant against Mrs.  Allison-Madueke for alleged money laundering for which EFCC is charging her.  Her lawyers, home and abroad, are swearing to prove her innocence.

    Let justice prevail!

  • UK police charge Diezani with bribe taking, fraud

    UK police charge Diezani with bribe taking, fraud

    • ‘Ex-Petroleum minister accepted £100,000 cash, chauffeur-driven cars, others’

    Former  Petroleum Minister Diezani Allison-Madueke has been charged with bribery-taking by the United Kingdom (UK) police.

    Allison-Madueke is alleged to have accepted £100,000  in cash, chauffeur-driven cars, flights on private jets, luxury holidays for her family, and the use of multiple London properties from oil and gas contractors.

    Other gratifications listed against her by the International Corruption Unit of  U.K’s National Crime Agency (NCA)  are furniture gifts, renovation work and staff for the London properties, payment of private tuitions, and gifts from high-end designer shops such as Cartier jewellery and Louis Vuitton goods.

     Allison-Madueke, who currently lives in St John’s Wood, an upmarket area of west London, according to Reuters, will appear before Westminster Magistrates’ Court on October 2.

    The 63-year-old Bayelsa-born former senior official of Shell Petroleum served as a key figure in the administration of former President Goodluck Jonathan administration between  2010  and 2015.

    She also acted as president of the Organisation of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC).

    The former minister has been on bail since first being arrested in London in October 2015. 

    Soon after her arrest, her family’s lawyer told Agence France Presse(AFP) that she would strongly contest corruption allegations that have dogged her during and after her time as a minister. 

    The family also announced that she had undergone chemotherapy for breast cancer.

    Andy Kelly, head of the  NCA International Corruption Unit,  said: “We suspect Diezani Allison-Madueke abused her power in Nigeria and accepted financial rewards for awarding multi-million-pound contracts.

    “These charges are a milestone in what has been a thorough and complex international investigation.

    “Bribery is a pervasive form of corruption, which enables serious criminality and can have devastating consequences for developing countries.”  

    Kelly said that assets worth millions of pounds in relation to the case have been frozen as part of the investigation.

    Read Also: BREAKING: UK police charges Diezani to court over £100,000 bribery allegation

    In March, the  NCA which targets international and organised crimes, provided evidence to the United States  Department of Justice allowing them to recover assets totalling $53.1 million linked to Alison-Madueke’s alleged corruption.

    The Federal High Court  Abuja had in January 2022 issued a second arrest warrant against Allison-Madueke over money laundering by the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC).

  • BREAKING: UK police charges Diezani to court over £100,000 bribery allegation

    BREAKING: UK police charges Diezani to court over £100,000 bribery allegation

    The British police have charged the former minister of petroleum, Diezani Alison-Madueke with bribery offences.

    The UK police said they suspected she had accepted bribes in return for awarding multi-million-pound oil and gas contracts.

    Read Also: Asset forfeiture: Court to hear Diezani’s suit against EFCC October 23

    The 63-year-old ex-minister served during the administration of former President Goodluck Jonathan, from 2010 to 2015.