Tag: Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC)

  • Agency arrests ex-Plateau Speaker,14 others over alleged N2.5b scam

    Agency arrests ex-Plateau Speaker,14 others over alleged N2.5b scam

    The Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) has arrested a former Speaker of Plateau House of Assembly, Moses Sule, alongside 14 former lawmakers over allegations of money laundering and abuse of office.

    EFCC Spokesperson, Dele Oyewale, said the suspects were arrested by operatives of the EFCC’s Makurdi Zonal Directorate on Tuesday, following petitions from concerned citizens in the state.

    Oyewale explained that the former legislators allegedly violated the provisions of the Money Laundering (Prevention and Prohibition) Act, 2022, and were also implicated in procurement irregularities.

    He named the other lawmakers arrested alongside Sule as Gwottson Fom, Sani Abubakar, Jwe Gwom, Timothy Dantong, Happiness Akawu, and Cornelius Doeyok.

    Oyewale listed others to include Agbalak Ibrahim, Danjuma Azi, Fwangje Ndat, Salome Waklek, Namba Rimuyat, Nimchak Rims, Ishaku Maren and Paul Datugun.

    Read Also: Tinubu at 2025 PPP Summit: Nigerians want infrastructure, not promises

    He said: “Investigation showed that the former legislators spent only six months in office and the state government bought several luxury vehicles for them in their official capacities. Investigation further showed that the said vehicles are valued at N2.5 billion.

    “Upon leaving office, the vehicles were meant to be returned to the state government but were taken away by the legislators and all efforts to retrieve them have proved abortive.

    “The state government had to procure another set of vehicles for the present members of the House of Assembly valued at about N2 billion,” he said.

    Oyewale said the suspects would be charged to court upon the conclusion of investigations.

  • EFCC gets kudos for sack of 27 men for misconduct

    EFCC gets kudos for sack of 27 men for misconduct

    Journalists Against Corruption (JAC) has commended Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) for dismissing 27 officials for fraud and misconduct.

     In a statement in Abuja yesterday by Project Coordinator, Kehinde Osifisan, the group said: “This marks beginning of a new dawn in EFCC.

    Read Also: Minister felicitates FIRS boss Adedeji on 47th birthday

    ‘‘Since inception in 2002, this is the first time the commission will sack 27 officials in one fell swoop for fraud and misconduct. It speaks to the commitment of the Ola Olukoyede-led management to rid the commission of bad eggs.

     “We hail the leadership and urge the commission and its officials to, like Caesar’s wife, live above board. We hope this action will serve as a check on others and make them to eschew fraud or misconduct.”

  • Journalists urge EFCC to probe ex-cooperative president

    Journalists urge EFCC to probe ex-cooperative president

    Journalists at Sun Publishing Company, whose land have been allegedly confiscated by Arobieye community leaders in Ado Odo Ota Local Government of Ogun State, have urged Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) to review their petition and probe former president of Sun Cooperative Society Nigeria Ltd, Mrs Nkem Nwokocha, for alleged complicity.

    They accused the community leaders, Sulaimon Oke and Nurudeen Dada, of defying police and court orders by continuing selling the land and encouraging building on the land.

    Read Also: ‘How Nigerians can get zero collateral loans to study abroad’

    The journalists, who are members of Sun Cooperative Society Nigeria Ltd, had urged Ogun State Government to call the community leaders to order over encroachment on their land.

    They also called on the Olota of Ota, Oba Adeyemi Obalanlege, to prevail on the Baale of Arobieye community, Nurudeen Dada, to stop re-selling their land.

  • Armed Forces arrest 492 vessels in 8 years–Magashi

    Armed Forces arrest 492 vessels in 8 years–Magashi

    The Minister of Defence, retired Maj. Gen. Bashir Magashi has said no fewer than 492 vessels had been arrested by the Armed Forces of Nigeria (AFN), from 2015 till date.

    Magashi disclosed this on Monday at the 25th edition of the President Muhammadu Buhari administration scorecard and ministerial briefing.

    He explained that through the numerous operations conducted, the AFN successfully detected and arrested several vessels operating illegally within Nigeria’s territory and waterways.

    The minister that significantly, MT Heroic IDUN, a crude oil vessel that attempted to sail out of Nigeria after illegally loading crude oil from the Total Akp Oil Field, deep offshore in Bonny was arrested.

    He also said that the AFN also arrested MV CHAYANEE NAREE, adding that the ship was laden with 32.9kg of cocaine, which was valued at N6.5 billion.

    “Similarly, MV KATERIA was arrested within the Nigerian waterways. The ship was loaded with 13.65kg of cocaine valued at N4 billion”, he added.

    Magashi said from the total of 492 vessels arrested within the period under review, 139 had been handed over to the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC).

    “52 were handed over to the Nigerian Maritime Administration and Safety Agency (NIMASA), while two vessels were handed over to the National Drug Law Enforcement Agency (NDLEA).

    “30 vessels were handed to the Department of Fisheries, notably, 143 of the arrested vessels are still in the custody of the Armed Forces, while 83 have been released to the owners on completion of investigation or trial,” Magashi added.

    He said that at the inception of the present administration, the nation was at an all-low in terms of overall security throughout the regions.

    Magashi said: “For instance while Boko Haram ‘s insurgency was particularly severe in the North East, the North West was plagued by armed banditry, kidnapping and inter communal violence.

    “Additionally pipeline vandalism, and crude oil theft were problems in the Niger Delta region.

    “However through visionary and competent leadership of the administration, the Ministry of Defence and the Armed Forces were among other things weakened by the insurgency, strengthened internal security and curtailed crude oil theft.”

    Magashi further said that the AFN, in conjunction with other security services have been able to degrade the capacity of insurgents and armed bandits particularly in the Northern part of the country.

    He said that the increased deployment of Nigerian Navy (NN) platforms to maintain a round- the- clock presence at sea had yielded tremendous results.

    The minister said : ”More importantly, the NN partners with Private Maritime Security Logistics Company (PMSLCs) to further improve its presence at sea.

    ”This is particularly done through the deployment of NN personnel on these security vessels, which often are deployed to protect critical offshore assets.

    “These partnerships have over time produced a multiplier effect in the deterrence of illegal activities by non-state actors within the maritime environment.”

    (NAN)

  • How to stop politicians from being corrupt

    Sir: Corruption has been the bane of our lives ever since Nigeria came into existence: every year billions and billions of Naira of public funds are stolen with very few prosecuted.

    Our judiciary is laughable and with one former president claiming he doesn’t believe stealing is corruption, politicians will continue to loot with impunity knowing they can’t be punished. There is no shame in being corrupt as we live in a society that encourages it!

    The Economic and Financial Crimes Commission, EFCC, despite its best efforts and in the words of Obasanjo is ‘ just a toothless bulldog’. The commission investigates corrupt politicians, charges them and hands them over to the courts and this is where the games begin.

    How many politicians have been sentenced to prison? Very few! The EFCC that went to all that trouble to get them now becomes a laughing stock.

    Once a case is in the courts, the politicians know how to pervert the course of justice, either by bribing the judge or stalling for time. They have teams of brilliant lawyers who know how to drag on a case forever asking for adjournment after adjournment: some corruption cases have been going on for more than 15 years with no end in sight! As a result no corrupt politician is scared of the law for they know they will never be convicted or at the very worst, they’ll get a slap on the wrist.

    And the sad thing is this has now trickled down to include anybody who’s ever been accused of corruption, fraud or theft. If you have a good lawyer – and money- you’ll get away with anything. Only small minnows like yahoo-yahoo or area boys get to face the full wrath of the EFCC and the courts.

    So how do you stop Nigerians being corrupt when all the other forms of conventional punishment are not a deterrent?

    Recently the Osolo of Isolo, Lagos, Oba Kabiru Adelaja, made an interesting suggestion. He suggested that all politicians be made to swear an oath to the gods not to steal any monies whilst in office. Of course, we are all afraid of our local deities. It might sound like a primitive local solution to an age-old problem but it has the capacity to work. If you drag all these thieving politicians to the shrine to swear on their deities, how many will steal after that? Not many.

    Or perhaps it’s time to bring back military-style tribunals whereby corrupt politicians are arraigned before military officers (or persons of equal standing). The charges are read out, deliberated upon – no long talk, no adjournments, no big-lawyer-grammar and no wahala…just simple facts: you’re a thief, it’s been proven beyond reasonable doubt and you will be punished!  It works well in China and Russia and it could work in Nigeria.

    Another solution would be to give the EFCC more powers, like the FBI in America, and scrapping immunity for those who like to hide behind Section 308 of the 1999 Constitution. If you’ve stolen public funds, you’re nothing more than a common thief caught stealing noodles in the market and should not have any immunity from prosecution whether you’re still in office or not

    And if all that doesn’t work, how about a name-and-shame campaign to force those corrupt politicians to return what they’ve stolen?  Publish their photographs in the newspapers or on TV or on billboards until they give it back.

    But most important of all, people’s mind-sets need to change: people need to stop worshipping and celebrating corrupt officials as they are no different from the area boys you throw tyre on their heads to lynch.

    • Tony Ogunlowo, <archangel641@gmail.com>
  • Nigeria in danger over 11 contract breaches

    THE BREACHED AGREEMENTS

    • P&ID (Propane Dehydration (12-24 months) 88.198MMscf/d;
    • Octopol Energy Limited (LPG Extraction (12-15 months) 4.676MMscf/d, 3.039MMscf/d, 4.800MMscf/d, 2.100MMscf/d, 13.4MMscf/d;
    • Petrolog Oil &Gas Limited (CNG (9-24 months) 8.76MMscf/d, 20.600MMscf/d;
    • GFD Energy Nigeria Ltd (GFD) (2million MT Floating LNG) 5.7MMscf/d, 7.5MMscf/d, 2.2MMscf/d, 9.2MMscf/d;
    • Global Gas &refining Limited (GGRL) (LPG Extraction) 11.300MMscf/d, 12.398MMscf/d, 8.35MMscf/d.
    • Davubic Energy Development Comp. Ltd (LPG Extraction) 8.4MMscf/d, 21.516MMscf/d, 18.1MMscf/d;
    • Consortium of Drake Oil Limited & Partners (DOL) 7.42MMscf/d, 6.856MMscf/d, 14.564MMscf/d;
    • Tricity Oil Nigeria Ltd 1.266MMscf/d, 4.977MMscf/d, 2.026MMscf/d, 4.979MMscf/d, 3.777MMscf/d.
    • Colechurch International Ltd (LPG Extraction) 3.778MMscf/d, 3.335MMscf/d, 2.539MMscf/d, 2.071MMscf/d, 13.10MMscf/d, 1.000MMscf/d;
    • Eurafic Oil &Gas Ltd (LPG Extraction) 3.256MMscf/d, 5.075MMscf/d, 12.00MMscf/d;
    • Ibeto Group (LPG Extraction) 23.00MMscf/d, 34.3MMscf/d,
    • Borkir International Company Ltd. 26.558MMscf/d, 26.7MMscf/d.

    NIGERIA faces likely litigation for more breaches of gas agreements, it was learnt on Tuesday.

    Not less than 11 agreements signed with different firms have been breached and the companies are waiting for the outcome of the litigation of the Federal Government with Process and Industrial Developments (P&ID) to determine whether to press for claims.

    Nigeria is before a London court trying to reverse the $9.6 billion arbitral judgment against the country over a dubious gas agreement signed with the Ministry of Petroleum Resources without passing through due process.

    Some of the 11 companies were alleged to have initiated arbitration process against the Federal Government.

    The Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) has written to the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) to assist in probing how the 11 extra deals are tied to the ill-fated contracts with P&ID.

    The EFCC has raised a team of detectives to probe the deals.

    It was learnt that the Federal Ministry of Petroleum Resources on January 10, 2010 entered into separate agreements with P&ID and 12 other pre-qualified investors for gas production facilities at the nation’s oil fields.

    A source, who spoke in confidence, said: “Nigeria is in a serious danger because 11 other firms have issues with the Federal Government on the gas projects.

    Read Also: EFCC arrests ‘fake lawyer’

    “The Ministry of Petroleum Resources actually on January 10, 2010 entered into a deal with P&ID and 12 other pre-qualified investors for accelerated development of gas production facilities at the nation’s oil fields.

    “These oil fields included those on offshore, land swamp in different flare points. Both the government and the investors have their obligations spelt out in the MoU. And the two parties have defaulted with the P&ID and 11 companies seeking compensation or payment of damages.

    “Some of these firms have initiated arbitration process. A few others are awaiting the outcome of Nigeria’s case at the UK Court of Appeal to make a stronger case for payment of damages.

    “The concern of those in NNPC and other government officials is about how much Nigeria will now pay for the botched Gas Supply and Processing Agreement (GSPA). This is why the government is ready to give P&ID a good fight in the UK and in the United States.”

    Another source in the NNPC said: “This corporation does not want a repeat of P&ID arbitral award and it has referred the case of the 11 firms to the EFCC for investigation and advice on how the nation can go about it.

    “We want to try as much as possible to prevent a deluge of arbitration cases which can ground the nation’s economy.

    “Some of the companies have already initiated arbitration steps. It is only a firm that has decided not to either take Nigeria to a court or any arbitration panel.

    “Certainly, the GSPA was untidy, fraudulent and a plot by some of the companies to rip off the nation.”

    A team of special detectives was said to be handling the investigation of the deals with the 11 firms.

    “Our detectives are already investigating the deals with the firms. We have shortlisted about 25 persons to interact with.

    “We also discovered that the deals are inter-related with the ongoing case of P&ID. We will leave no stone unturned to end this type of challenge the nation is facing,” a source in the anti-graft agency added.

    Also, the Federal Government has invoked Mutual Legal Assistance Treaty(MLAT) to extradite a co-owner of P&ID, Brendan Cahill and  Adam Quinn, the son of owner of the Irish firm, the late Michael Quinn.

    A government source said: “We have already invoked MLAT between Nigeria and the UK and Ireland to bring the two key officials of P&ID to trial in Nigeria.

    “We have filed charges against a former Director, Legal Services in the Ministry of Petroleum Resources and they have been implicated Cahill.

    “We are hopeful that the extradition move will succeed.”

  • Bid to remove sealed warehouse property fails in Owerri

    THE police in Imo State have foiled an attempt by some people to cart away the property stocked in one of the warehouses seized by the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) in Owerri, the state capital.

    The police also impounded two trailers allegedly deployed to evacuate the warehoused property and arrested 12 suspects in connection with the crime.

    The warehouse owned by Mrs. Nkechi Okorocha, wife of the immediate past governor of Imo State Rochas Okorocha, is situated along Aba Road, Owerri.

    One of the police officers at the facility said law enforcement agents moved in on a tip-off, adding that 12 persons were arrested in the act.

    Read Also: Native doctor, five ‘robbers’ held in Imo

    “Following a tip-off last night (Sunday), after two trailers had moved into the warehouse late in the night, a police team was dispatched to the premises,” said the officer, who spoke to journalists in confidence.

    “Those inside the premises, however, refused to open the gate. The police team therefore cordoned off the building till this morning (Monday, 30/9/19) when we stormed the premises. The two trailers were impounded and 12 persons arrested.”

    The spokesman of the state police command, ASP Orlando Ikokwu confirmed the incident, adding that the two trailers impounded were taken to the command headquarters, Owerri.

    Two months ago, the EFCC sealed some properties reportedly traced to former governor Okorocha, as well as those of his family members and cronies.

     

  • EFCC arrests ‘fake lawyer’

    THE Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) has arrested a 53-year-old man, Muhammed Bolaji Abdulraheem for allegedly parading himself as a lawyer.

    The man was also accused of obtaining money under false pretences.

    Abdulraheem, who was arrested by detectives from the Ilorin zone of the anti-graft agency, was also accused of using a  dubious means to defraud one Mallam Yusuf Bello of N300,000.

    Bello, in his petition to the Counter Terrorism and General Investigations Section of EFCC, alleged that the suspect recovered the sum of N300,000 from his debtor and claimed that the money was in the custody of the EFCC.

    Read Also: We’re not probing Osinbajo, N-SIP-EFCC

    The ‘fake lawyer’ allegedly confessed that the money was never brought to the EFCC, adding that the commission knows nothing about it.

    In a dramatic turn of events yesterday he destroyed his statement where he admitted that he was called to the bar and had been practicing as a legal practitioner for more than two decades.

    It was gathered from EfCC that the suspected fake lawyer never finished from the Nigerian Law School, and that he failed the institution’s prescribed examinations twice.

  • Fear grips ex, serving officials as EFCC, NASS uncover more details

    SEVERAL former and serving government officials now live in fear over possible indictment in the $9.6 billion debt judgement obtained by the Irish firm, Process and Industrial Development (P&ID) Limited  against Nigeria.

    The federal government has gone to court in the United Kingdom to reverse the judgement, while the House of Representatives and the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) are probing where it all went wrong.

    Investigators are said to have uncovered more information on the deal.

    “Investigators are daily uncovering a web of conspiracies  and connivance in violation of known best practices as well as local and international laws, that could be used to nail a number of former public office holders who broke the laws and aided the foreign firm to hoodwink past administrations as far as P&ID claims are concerned,” a well-placed source said on Saturday.

    It was also gathered that the EFCC has established strong cases against a number of former federal government appointees.

    The affected persons may be   invited soon for questioning in relations to the ongoing probe.

    A former presidential aide told The Nation that allegations made by the anti-graft agency against some people on the controversial deal could be just a tip of the iceberg.

    He said: “We are all waiting to see how all these will farm out. The P&ID issue may just be the opportunity some people have been waiting for to nail some of us. It is not yet time to talk but I can tell you we are all worried with the turn of events.”

    Read Also: Buhari condoles with EFCC’s Secretary’s family

    Another source, a former technical assistant to a minister said: “the ongoing saga over the P&ID is scandalous enough to put anybody with the remotest link to it in trouble. Names are being mentioned and everybody is critical.

    “Nobody is considering the fact that many of us acted in official capacity and in fact, as instructed back then. So if you are asking me if I am worried, I say yes, I am worried and for good reasons too.”

    He added that some of the discoveries are already giving Nigerians the impression that all those who served in the concerned administrations are culpable in the alleged shady deals.

    He said a number of former officials in the Umar Musa Yar’ Adua administration have been questioned by investigators.

    He added: “one bad official can tarnish the whole team.”

    While expressing his readiness to be questioned, the Kogi-born Engineer urged that the ongoing investigations should be devoid of politics.

    The EFCC, it was learnt, made more discoveries in its quest to unravel how some government officials allegedly aided the foreign firm to swindle the country. Reliable sources said that more persons would be invited for questioning soon. One of the sources said: “Statements by some of the people we have spoken to as well as findings by our legal team have uncovered some more people who played one role or the other in the scam.

    “We are poised to listen to all of them and subsequently determine how culpable they are. One thing that I can tell you is that what led to this situation was a conspiracy that was planned right from the very moment the botched project was conceived.

    “Those who participated in the conspiracy as well as the subsequent cover-ups know themselves and I am sure they are also expecting to be summoned.

    “We have even received correspondences from some of them we have not invited. They claimed some reports mentioned them directly or indirectly. It is good we are making these discoveries.”

    The House of Representatives commenced the investigation of the controversial issue a fortnight ago.

    This followed the adoption of a motion of urgent national importance on the need to look into act of negligence of the P&ID’s transaction by the Ministries of Justice and Petroleum Resources.

    The motion was sponsored by Prof Julius Ihonvbere.

    Consequently, the Speaker, Femi Gbajabiamila, constituted an ad-hoc committee to probe the circumstances surrounding the award of the contract.

    The Nation learnt the committee has been questioning some people as part of its assignment.

    Speaking on the matter, Ihonvbere said: “the House is alarmed that the agreement was somewhat shrouded in secrecy and as such apparently dubiously procured, as those who ought to know about its existence did not and more importantly, the relevant laws in Nigeria for the transaction to be consummated was not applied especially, Part IV of the Bureau of Public Procurement Act 2007 which deals with the Fundamental Principles of Procurement.

    “The House is worried that the lack of diligent prosecution of cases in which Nigeria is involved by those whose duty it is to do so, is due to our tendency to either politicise everything or focus more on personal interests, or failure on the part all parties involved.”

    The ad hoc Committee chaired by Sada Soli (APC, Katsina) is to recommend appropriate sanctions where necessary without fear or favour or preference for status in line with Order 14 of the Standing Orders of the House, against those involved in the contract that led to judgment debt.

    The House further resolved to initiate a process of reviewing all Agreements and Treaties signed by Nigeria through the appropriate committees to create opportunities to discover anomalies and avoid a repeat in the future.

     

     

  • Firms linked to P&ID ‘withdraw $700,000 in cash’

    FIRMS linked to Irish firm Process and Industries Developments (P&ID) withdrew $700,00 cash at once in breach of Nigeria’s financial law, the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) has uncovered.

    Nigerian prosecutors are probing payments through Allied Irish Banks Plc to unravel who received what and how as they close in on individuals and companies behind the P&ID $9.6 billion failed contract.

    The EFCC has expanded its probe into the deal by making formal requests for assistance from Irish law enforcement and the United Kingdom’s National Crime Agency.

    The prosecutors said they had evidence of two bank transfers totaling $20,000 made by Dublin-based Industrial Consultants (International) Ltd.- part of the P&ID group of companies  to Grace Taiga, a a former Ministry of Petroleum top official, who presided over the award of the gas plant contract.

    The payments, in 2017 and 2018, were made from an Industrial Consultants account at Allied Irish Banks and were purportedly for “medical costs,” Bala Sanga, the lead prosecutor, said.

    Investigators haven’t yet been able to trace the recipients of the $700,000 withdrawal, Sanga said.

    The massive withdrawals were done by companies linked with the founder of P&ID, Michael Quinn and co-founder, Brendan Cahill.

    The recipients of the cash, suspected to be bribe, could not be located by EFCC detectives.

    A Bloomberg report quoted EFCC’s lawyer as saying: “The Nigerian anti-corruption agency’s investigators have uncovered large cash withdrawals from several companies linked to Quinn and Cahill since 2009, in breach of Nigerian money laundering regulations, according to Sanga. The largest withdrawal was for about $700,000 in cash. Investigators haven’t yet been able to trace the recipients of the money.”

    Read Also: $9.6bn judgment: Court liquidates P&ID, affiliate

    Sanga also said “an Irish citizen who worked for Michael Quinn has been arrested and charged in Nigeria and he remains in custody.

    He added: “P&ID co-founder Brendan Cahill and Quinn’s son Adam will in due course be charged.”

    He said he would seek the extradition of both men from Ireland to Nigeria. Cahill and Quinn didn’t respond to an email seeking comment.

    Attorney-General of the Federation and Minister of Justice, Mr. Abubakar Malami, told  Bloomberg  that ”the enforcement of the $9 billion cannot stand having been based on a foundation that is rooted in fraud, corruption, tax evasion and procedural circumvention.”

    As the government delegation was getting set for today’s legal matter in London, there was anxiety in EFCC yesterday over a plot to remove Magu by some forces sympathetic to the P&ID firm.

    It was learnt that some of the plotters wanted what a source described as “outright negotiation with P&ID” but the EFCC’s probe bungled such plans for amicable resolution of the matter.

    Ahead of the legal battle, the Federal Government delegation met for hours with the foreign lawyers engaged to set aside the $9.6billion judgment.

    But despite in-depth forensic investigation into the controversial contract by the EFCC, some forces are pushing for the removal of the chairman of the anti-corruption agency.

    The forces have launched a fresh bid to prevail on the government to send Magu to the National Institute for Policy and Strategic Studies(NIPPS), Kuru.

    It was gathered that they rated the EFCC’s investigation as “beyond the brief” given to Magu.

    A source said: “In spite of the outcome of the forensic investigation, some powerful forces are unhappy with Magu for allowing the EFCC to go too far into the P&ID matter. Some of them had been in the vanguard of out of court settlement.

    “The sympathizers of P&ID are really fighting back, they alleged Magu went “beyond the brief given to him” by exposing  the untouchables behind the $9.6billion judgment.

    “There are many more big men on the radar of EFCC on this judgment cash. Most beneficiaries including past  top government officials, corporate players and lawyers are just uncomfortable with Magu. They want to hide under NIPPS course to get rid of Magu and stall the ongoing investigation.

    “I think from the look of things, they may have their way unless President Muhammadu Buhari intervenes.”