Tag: Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC)

  • Dasukigate: Court grants bail to businessman allegedly paid N2.4bn

    Dasukigate: Court grants bail to businessman allegedly paid N2.4bn

     

    A Federal High Court in Abuja has granted bail to a businessman, Olugbenga Obadina, the Managing Director, Almond Projects Limited who was allegedly paid about N2.4billion by the Office of the National Security Adviser, ONSA, under Col. Sambo Dasuki (rtd), without evidence of services rendered.

    Obadina was arraigned with his company last Friday by the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) on an eight-count charge for allegedly collecting N2, 417, 000,000.00 paid into his company’s account in tranches, between 2013 and 2015 from the account of the ONSA under Col. Sambo Dasuki (rtd) without contract award.

    The offence is contrary to Section 15(2), (d) of the Money Laundering (Prohibition) Act 2011 as amended in 2012 and punishable under Section 15(3) of the same Act.

    Ruling on Monday, Justice Nnamdi Dimgba admitted Obadina at N500million  with two sureties who must each endorse a bond of N250m.

    The judge said the sureties can be a private businessman, professional or civil servant of the rank of a director.

    “The sureties must have landed properties either in Asokoro, Maitama, Apo Legislative quarters, Wuse II area of Abuja, or Victoria Island, Lagos State. The sureties are to provide evidence of income tax payment for three years,” the judge said.

    He directed Obadina to deposit his international passports with the registrar of the court, and must go to the EFCC to comply with Section 15 of the Administration of Criminal Justice Act, which entails submitting himself for biodata collection, fingerprinting, snapshot and necessary profiling.

    Obadina is to be remanded in prison custody pending satisfaction of his bail conditions.

    The judge adjourned to September 30 and October 4, 2016 for trial.

     

  • EFCC releases Fani-Kayode

    EFCC releases Fani-Kayode

    The Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) has released the former Minister of Aviation, Femi Fani-Kayode, from detention, after more than two months in custody.

    Fani-Kayode’s media adviser, Jude Ndukwe, confirmed his release on Friday.

    He said the ex-minister may leave Lagos for Abuja on Friday night.

     Details later…

  • Dasukigate: Court okays EFCC’s detention of Omisore

    Dasukigate: Court okays EFCC’s detention of Omisore

    Detained former Osun State Deputy Governor, Iyiola Omisore failed Friday in his quest for freedom as a High Court in Abuja dismissed his bail application.

    Omisore was arrested by the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) on July 3 for allegedly receiving about N1.3bn from the Office the immediate past National Security Adviser (NSA), Sambo Dasuki in 2014 with no evidence of projects executed.

    He applied to the High Court of the Federal Capital Territory (FCT), alleging unjust detention, breaches of his fundamental rights and sought to be admitted to bail.

    In a ruling Friday, Justice Olukayode Adeniyi faulted Omisore’s rationale for filing the application.

    The judge said Omisore’s prayers could not be granted because he filed the application while the order of the court, empowering the EFCC to remand him, was still subsisting.

    The judge noted that the order to remand him for 14 days was made by Justice J.O Okeke (also of the FCT High Court) on July 8, while Omisore filed the bail application on July 11.

    Justice Adeniyi held that the only option open to Omisore was to await the expiration of the remand order to renew his application for bail.

    The judge said under the Administration of Criminal Justice Act (ACJA) 2015, where an order for the remand of a suspect is made by a High Court, the order can only be reversed or set aside by a court sitting as an appellate jurisdiction.

    Justice Adeniyi observed that lawyer to Omisore, Goddie Uche (SAN) failed to show with “any legal submission” that the court has the power to grant bail to the suspect despite the subsistence of the earlier order for his remand.

    He noted that: “In the present case, the remand order was issued on July 8, 2016. It is not in dispute that this instant application was filed on the same date on July 8, 2016 and up till date, the said remand order has yet to fully run its course.

    “Therefore, by my understanding of the provisions of the ACJA, the only time the court is competent to consider whether or not to exercise its discretion to grant bail to a suspect, in the same situation with the applicant in the present case, is either pursuant to section 295 of the ACJA, at the point the application for remand is made, or in the case when a suspect is still in custody or remand at the expiration of the order of remand made pursuant to section 296(1) and (2) of the Act,” the judge said.

    Justice Adeniyi said if Omisore’s lawyer had informed Justice Okeke that the EFCC had granted the ex-Senator an administrative bail, the order for his remand may not have been made, and perhaps, Justice Okeke might have granted bail to Omisore.

    The judge added, “Nevertheless, the court, having in its wisdom and competently so, ordered the remand of the applicant in the first respondent’s (EFCC’s) custody for 14 days, which order is still subsisting, any attempt to grant the instant application will be tantamount, in my firm view, to vacating the remand order.

    “I do not suppose that the ACJA envisages or contemplates the situation wherein, a court other than a court exercising appellate jurisdiction, having made an order of remand under sections 294 and 296 thereof, should proceed within the lifespan of the same order to make such other order upon the application of the suspect which has the effect of countermanding the remand order.

    “The applicant’s learned counsel has failed to show what power this court has and I am not aware of any to make an order in the nature as prayed in the instant application which has the tendency and implication of upturning a subsisting order of my learned brother, Okeke J.

    “I must therefore agree with the submissions of the first defendant’s counsel that in the present situation, that the court having made an order for the remand of the applicant for a period of 14 days, cannot turn around to make another order countermanding the same order for remand for the release of the applicant on bail.

    “In other words, the issue of bail to the suspect cannot arise before the same court that has validly made an order for his remand during the lifespan of the order.

    “In my view, the cause open to the applicant is to await the expiration of the order made on July 8, 2016 and thereafter exercise his rights under section 296(3) of the ACJA to renew his application for bail.

    “In totality, and without any further ado, my decision is that the instant application is premature in the circumstance. It is hereby incompetent and inappropriate.

    “Even though, I have not considered it on merit, the application must and is hereby dismissed,” Justice Adeniyi said.

    The EFCC had, while opposing the bail application on Thursday, justified its continued detention of Omisore and urged the court to refuse his application.

    The commission, in a counter affidavit deposed to by one of its operatives, Kassim Yusuf, said it was‎ still investigating Omisore for alleged offences including, retention of proceeds of crime, among others. Yusuf, who stated that Omisore’s arrest and detention were backed by court orders, said the commission was planning to invite a number of the ex-Deputy Governor’s associates, who he named during interrogation.

    He said the EFCC is ” investigating cases of alleged payments $ade by the office of immediate past National Security Adviser, Col. Mohammed Sambo Dasuki (rtd) to individuals and companies, with nothing to show for it.

    “In one of the alleged cases which the 1st respondent (EFCC) is investigating, the name of the applicant (Omisore) featured prominently as a sole signatory to Firmex Gilt Ltd’s bank account domiciled at United Bank for Africa (UBA) Plc.

    “A copy of a letter to UBA, forwarding signatory mandate card and statement of account of Firmex Gilt Ltd is hereby attached.

    “Several payments were also made by the office of the immediate past National Security Adviser, Col. Mohammed Sambo Dasuki Trtd) into the bank account of Sylvan Menamara Ltd domiciled at Diamond Bank, with nothing to show for for it.

    “Copies of e-payment schedules from ONSA and statement of accounts of Sylvan Menamara Ltd are hereby attached.

    “From Sylvan Menamara Ltd’s Diamondaccount, the sum of N160,000,000 was deposited into the said account on 4th August, 2014 by the then NSA. Thus sum was subsequently transferred into Firmex Gilt Ltd’s bank account domiciled at UBA Plc on 8th August 2014.

    “Investigation so far carried out, reveals that the applicant recieved hundreds of millions of naira from the office of the National Security Adviser, with nothing to show for it.

    “In the course of interviewing the applicant, he has mentioned names of persons and companies through which monies from the office of the National Security Adviser got to him.

    “There is need to those persons and companies mentioned by the applicant to make some clarification. If the applicant is granted bail, he will interfere with witnesses and he will also prejudice and frustrate our on-going investigation,” Yusuf said.

  • We abide by all financial laws in Nigeria, says First Group

    We abide by all financial laws in Nigeria, says First Group

    The First Group, A British owned international hotel and property development company based in Dubai has denied allegations  that it served as a front for laundering money by politicians and government officials in Nigeria. The company also strongly denied that it is involved in a $200b real estate scam.

    The Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) on Wednesday sealed off the premises of the group’s Nigerian agent, TFG Real Estate Limited in Abuja after claims that it was being used as a front for money laundering and involved in property scam to the tune of $200b.

    In a swift reaction, Eve Humphreys, First Group’s director of Brand and Marketing Communication the company always abides by Nigeria’s anti-money laundering laws and has never been involved in any illegal business deals in the country.

    In a press statement made available to our correspondent, the company said its agent in Nigeria regularly files  the required reports with the section of the Special Control Unit on Money Laundering (SCUML) of the EFCC in Abuja.

     The statement reads: “The First Group categorically denies the baseless allegations published by certain sections of the Nigerian press regarding its alleged involvement in money laundering or any other form of illegal business dealings in relation to its Nigerian clients.

    The First Group’s Nigerian agent, TFG Real Estate, Limited, fully abides by Nigeria’s anti-money laundering regulations. In line with this commitment, TFG Real Estate, Limited regularly files the required reports with the section of the Special Control Unit on Money Laundering (SCUML) division of the EFCC in Abuja.

    “Furthermore, The First Group’s Dubai operations, which are indirectly implicated in these

    baseless allegations are governed by UAE Federal Law, and in particular, the country’s anti-money laundering laws, which rank among the world’s most robust.

    “The First Group’s clients are also protected by the Dubai government’s rigorous and world-class real estate regulations, which are designed to protect the interests of local and international investors in this dynamic property market.”

    The First Group  says it will explore all legal options to defend its commercial reputation in Nigeria while protecting the interests of its clients and complying with all legal statutes in the markets in which it operates.

  • Alleged fraud: Court approves defendant’s foreign medical trip

    Alleged fraud: Court approves defendant’s foreign medical trip

    The Federal High Court, Lagos Division, Friday granted permission for foreign medical travel to an official of the Nigerian Airspace Management Agency (NAMA), Mrs Adegorite Joy, facing a N2.8 billion fraud charge.

    Joy, who, along with six others and five companies, is being prosecuted by the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC), knelt in prayer and shed tears of relief following the judge’s ruling.

    Justice Babs Kuewumi made the order following Joy’s application through her lawyer, Mr. A. B. Onifade, seeking the release of her passport to enable her travel to Dubai for medical treatment.

    Onifade told the court during hearing last Monday that his client was suffering from acute sinusitis, asthma and hypertensive heart disease.

    He said she had earlier scheduled a medical appointment with her doctor at the Saudi-German Hospital Group and had already purchased an air ticket before she was arrested in April.

    Joy’s health, he added, had since suffered a decline and he urged Justice Kuewumi to order the EFCC to release her passport to enable her travel abroad, assuring that she would not jump bail or abscond.

    “The fifth defendant will be away for a maximum of four weeks. We urge Your Lordship to exercise discretion in favour of the fifth defendant,” Onifade said.

    Although opposed by the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission, (EFCC), the judge, held in a short ruling, held that Joy’s application, dated June 15, was meritorious.

    The judge observed that her application contained eight grounds in 19 paragraphs and was supported by documents of her medical history as well as travel documents.

    “The applicant also filed an affidavit of extreme urgency for travel to the Saudi-German Hospital in Dubai, for medical treatment,” Justice Kuewumi noted.

    The court held that the applicant was entitled to enjoy the constitutionally guaranteed presumption of innocence which enured in her favour.

    “It’ll be in the overall interest of justice to allow the applicant travel.

    “Furthermore, the court is on vacation and the substantive matter has already been adjourned till after vacation. Health is wealth,” Justice Kuewumi held.

    He continued: “The defendant is hereby granted leave to travel to Dubai for specialised medical treatment. She is given four weeks to embark on the trip to Dubai and return to Nigeria.”

    The judge further ordered the EFCC to “release immediately” the defendant’s international passport.

    It also ordered that after the trip, the defendant must deposit the passport in the court’s custody.
    Joy, the fifth defendant in the suit, was arraigned by the EFCC on April 12, alongside NAMA’s Managing Director, Ibrahim Abdusalam, and five other NAMA officials for an alleged N2.8bn fraud perpetrated within NAMA between August 2013 and January 2016.

    The five others are Agbolade Segun, Clara Aliche, Olumuyiwa Adegorite, Bola Akinribido and Sesebor Abiodun.

    Also joined as defendants are five companies, namely: Randville Investment Limited; Multeng Travels and Tours Limited; Delosa Limited; Airsea Delivery Limited and Sea Schedule System Limited.

    They are standing trial on a 21-count charge bordering on conspiracy, advanced fee fraud and money laundering.

    All defendants denied the charge and were granted N20m bail each with one surety each in the like sum.

    They were also ordered to deposit their passports in the custody of the court until the conclusion of the trial.

     

  • Why we can’t release Omisore now – EFCC

    Why we can’t release Omisore now – EFCC

    …Gives details of how ex-Osun D/Gov got funds from Dasuki

     

    The Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) has justified its continued detention of former Deputy Governor of Osun State, Iyiola Omisore.

    The EFCC gave details of its findings as regard how state’s funds were allegedly transferred to Omisore from the Office of the National Security Adviser (ONSA).

    It said its investigation of Omisore’s alleged involvement in the diversion of state’s funds through the ONSA was still on-going and that it would need to hold on to the ex-Deputy Governor to prevent him from absconding.

    An EFCC’s investigator, Kassim Yusuf, said these in a counter-affidavit the commission filed against an application for bail filed by Omisore before the High Court of the Federal Capital Territory (FCT), Abuja.

    Yusuf, who stated that Omisore’s arrest and detention were backed by court orders, said the commission was planning to invite a number of the ex-Deputy Governor’s associates, who he named during interrogation.

    He said the EFCC is ” investigating cases of alleged payments $ade by the office of immediate past National Security Adviser, Col. Mohammed Sambo Dasuki (rtd) to individuals and companies, with nothing to show for it.

    “In one of the alleged cases which the 1st respondent (EFCC) is investigating, the name of the applicant (Omisore) featured prominently as a sole signatory to Firmex Gilt Ltd’s bank account domiciled at United Bank for Africa (UBA) Plc.

    “A copy of a letter to UBA, forwarding signatory mandate card and statement of account of Firmex Gilt Ltd is hereby attached.

    “Several payments were also made by the office of the immediate past National Security Adviser, Col. Mohammed Sambo Dasuki Trtd) into the bank account of Sylvan Menamara Ltd domiciled at Diamond Bank, with nothing to show for for it.

    “Copies of e-payment schedules from ONSA and statement of accounts of Sylvan Menamara Ltd are hereby attached.

    “From Sylvan Menamara Ltd’s Diamondaccount, the sum of N160,000,000 was deposited into the said account on 4th August, 2014 by the then NSA. Thus sum was subsequently transferred into Firmex Gilt Ltd’s bank account domiciled at UBA Plc on 8th August 2014.

    “Investigation so far carried out, reveals that the applicant received hundreds of millions of naira from the office of the National Security Adviser, with nothing to show for it.

    “In the course of interviewing the applicant, he has mentioned names of persons and companies through which monies from the office of the National Security Adviser got to him.

    “There is need to those persons and companies mentioned by the applicant to make some clarification. If the applicant is granted bail, he will interfere with witnesses and he will also prejudice and frustrate our on-going investigation,” Yusuf said.

    Arguing the counter-affiadvit yesterday, EFCC’s lawyer, Takon Ndifon argued that Omisore’s detention was not unlawful and did not amount to an abuse of his rights.

    He contended that the fundamental rights enforcement suit initially filed before the court by Omisore, was merely intended to frustrate his investigation.

    Ndifon stated that Omisore was invited by the EFCC on April 11, in relation to the investigation, but promised to honour the invitation on April 14.

    “Instead of honouring the invitation in line with his rescheduled date of 14th April, 2016, he came and misled this court by obtaining an order of interim injunction restraining the 1st respondent (EFCC) from unlawfully arresting and detaining him without following the due process of law,” Ndifon said.

    He stated that his agency, in compliance with the law, obtained a warrant of arrest and remand warrant “to keep the applicant in its custody for 14 days pending the conclusion of its investigation and the arraignment of the applicant in court.

    Ndifon faulted Omisore’s claim to ill health, noting that he did not mention his ailment in his motion and that he also failed to establish that his purported ailment cannot be treated in the country.

    “We further submit that, based on the applicant’s antecedent, if he is granted bail, he will abscond and he will never willingly present himself to the 1ts respondent for arraignment before any court of law.”

    Omisore’s lawyer, Chris Uche (SAN) urged the court to grant his client bail. He faulted Omisore’s continued detention and argued that the court, having restrained the EFCC from arresting him, his current detention was illegal.

    Uche also referred to his cleint’s ill health, which he said required that he be released from custody and allowed to attend to seek medical attention outside the country.

    Justice Olukayode Adeniyi, after listening to parties, fixed ruling for Friday.

  • Bayelsa workers threaten to drag Dickson to EFCC over N1.2bn bailout

    Bayelsa workers threaten to drag Dickson to EFCC over N1.2bn bailout

    Local government workers in Bayelsa State, yesterday, reached a resolution to drag the state Governor, Mr. Seriake Dickson, to anti-graft agencies if after seven days he fails to produce the N1.2bn bailout he got from the Federal Government for their salaries.

    The workers vowed that Dickson and his officials would have a case with the Economic  and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) and the Independent Corrupt Practices Commission (ICPC) if they failed to produce the money.

    Workers in the state are undergoing economic hardship following the inability of the Dickson-led Restoration Government to pay them backlog of salaries.

    While the local government workers are owed over 13 months of salaries, civil servants have not been paid for about six months.

    Dickson got N1.2bn from the first tranche of bailouts doled out to local government areas by the Federal Government.

    The state has also been receiving allocations for local government areas from the Federation Account.

    Dickson, in the last Transparency briefing, while rendering account of how his government spent N95bn the state received from the federation account in the past one year, said out of the money, N12bn went to the eight local government areas.

    But the workers who rose from a joint emergency meeting under the aegis of the National Union of Local Government Employees (NULGE) and Medical and Health Workers Union (MHWUN) were angry that despite all the money, Dickson had refused to pay them.

    They were particularly unhappy that President Muhammadu Buhari pitied their condition, provided money for them but Dickson refused to pay them.

    The workers said they were going to also write a letter to the President to formally report their plight to them.

    The employees in a communique issued by a joint executive council of the two unions and signed by their secretaries, Mr. Tonye Jaja and Mr. Arafat Wibani, said they would ask the EFCC and the President to recover the money.

    “We will have no other option than to invite the Economic and Crimes Financial Commission to step in and recover the money”, they said.

    The workers further said they would not accept the proposal by the governor to pay them 50 per cent of their salaries.

    “The wages and salaries of workers are guided by law and cannot be slashed except the employees are convinced of the financial position of the state”, they said.

    They further called on the Commissioner for Local Government and Administration, Agatha Goma to always release the monthly statutory allocation to local councils after the Joint Allocation Committee (JAC ) as required by law.

    They urged the state government to without delay release the full January and February salaries to the genuine verified and confirmed staff of the local councils.

    They also advised the government to release 10 per cent of the Internally-Generated Revenue(IGR) and 20 per cent of the derivation funds for the running of the councils.

  • #Dasukigate: Obanikoro accuses EFCC of evidence forgery

    #Dasukigate: Obanikoro accuses EFCC of evidence forgery

    Former Minister of State, Defence, Musiliu Obanikoro has accused the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) of plans to manufacture receipts from blank letter headed papers collected from his Lagos home.

    He raised the alarm Friday evening through his media aide, Jonathan Eze.

    Obanikoro who disclosed that the blank letter headed papers were among the things carted away during the raid of his home, added that the anti-graft agency was planning to use them to forge acknowledgement reciepts.

    The former Minister is currently being investigated by EFCC alongside his sons over their alleged collection of N4.7billion from embattled former National Security Adviser (NSA) Colonel Sambo Dasuki.

    “Recall that when the EFCC illegally raided my houses in Lagos, they went away with various documents which included blanked signed letter headed papers as testified in the Affidavit sworn in Court.

    “It has however come to my notice that the EFCC has allegedly written an acknowledgement on one of the document purportedly as evidence that I collected the equivalent sum of one million dollars in cash from a Bureau De Change and signed for it.

    “This is another lie from the pit of hell. How can anybody change money from a Bureau De Change and sign for it? I still insist that throughout my stay as Minister, I never collected any money from any Bureau De Change and as such, I urge the public to ignore the EFCC who are trying to skew up investigations in its favour.

    “The EFCC has obviously betrayed public trust by its latest sinister plan of manufacturing receipt in my name. Instead of genuinely carrying out its mandate, it has been grossly overshadowed by political wiles,” he said.

    Continuing, Obanikoro recalled a media report quoting EFCC they had evidence of his receiving the cash.
    “The paper said: the owner of A.A. G. B. S Oil and Gas confirmed to us that the company is a BDC but was only bearing the name of an oil company. He confirmed that he received N168m from Sylvan McNamara and $1million was delivered to Obanikoro in cash while he was the Minister of State for Defence based on the exchange rate at the time. Obanikoro acknowledged receipt of the cash and we have recovered evidence.”

  • Ex-Kogi council chair loses post-conviction bail bid

    The Federal High Court in Lokoja has dismissed a bail application by convicted former Caretaker Chairman of Ogori/Mangogo Local Government Area in Kogi State, Gabriel Daudu.

    He was convicted for advance fee fraud and money laundering.

    The Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) tried Daudu and a former Kogi Commissioner for Agriculture, Albert Adesina.

    They were charged with conspiracy, advanced fee fraud and money laundering involving about N1.4billion.

    Daudu was convicted on 77 counts and sentenced to two years imprisonment on each count, which is running concurrently.

    Adesina was, however, discharged and acquitted.

    Sentencing Daudu, Justice Inyang Ekwo on April 25 held that the prosecution proved the offence sufficiently.

    Through his lawyer, the former council chairmn, urged the Court of Appeal to nullify his conviction.

    He also filed a bail application seeking to be released pending the appeal’s determination.

    But, the court dismissed the application for lacking in merit.

    During the trial, prosecution counsel Mr Wahab Shittu called 13 witnesses and tendered 47 exhibits to prove the case.

    The trial started first before Justice Adamu Bello of the Federal High Court in Abuja before it was later transferred to the Lokoja Division where Daudu and Adesina were re-arraigned twice on amended charges.

    The defendant had called seven witnesses in an unsuccessful bid to prove his innocence.

     

  • N4.7b Election Fund: Protest erupts in Ekiti

    N4.7b Election Fund: Protest erupts in Ekiti

    The alleged involvement of Governor Ayo Fayose of Ekiti State in the sharing of N4.7 billion released for the 2014 governorship elections in Ekiti and Osun State Friday sparked a massive protest in Ado Ekiti,the state capital.

    Thousands of protesters stormed the streets condemning what they termed the looting of the treasury in the midst of wide spread suffering by the majority of the people.

    They asked the governor to resign having failed to pay civil servants for the sixth month running while he has billions of naira in his own personal account.

    The protesters declared their support for the anti-corruption crusade of President Muhammadu Buhari and called on the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) to bring Fayose and others who have been indicted to book.

    The anti-corruption agency during the week named Fayose as a major beneficiary of the slush fund.

    Consequently it restricted the governor’s Zenith Bank accounts which it said were used in sharing the alleged loot.

    Fayose has denied any wrongdoing and claimed that the bank funded offered to sponsor his election campaign.

    The governor’s denial made no impression on the protest organizers – Be The Change Organization (BCO) – which mobilized labour unions, Conference of Nigeria Political Parties (CNPP), artisans, market women, youth organizations and student bodies to join in the Fayose-must-go rally.

    They took off from the  Fajuyi Roundabout in Ado Ekiti at about 8.50am ,carrying placards with inscriptions such as: ‘Support Anti-Corruption Crusade, Probe Executive Looting in Ekiti’; ‘What Happened to Ekiti Airport Fund?’; ‘Fayose Must Go’; ‘ Fayose is a Disgrace to Ekiti People’; among others.

    From the Fajuyi Roundabout, they moved to Okesa, Ojumose and finally  Okeyinmi Roundabout throwing jibes at the governor.

    They distributed leaflets to traders, commercial drivers, pedestrians and bystanders detailing how the state treasury is being allegedly looted and the personalities and corporate organizations believed to be involved.

    Officers and men of the Ekiti State Police Command were on hand to ensure that the rally did not get out of control or hijacked by hoodlums.

    Executive Director of BCO, Mrs. Omotunde Fajuyi, said Ekiti people are embarrassed by the EFCC allegation against the governor and declared that all Nigerians must support any move to recover the people’s commonwealth from looters.

    Mrs. Fajuyi said: “We support President Buhari’s anti-corruption crusade. We have come out to protest the looting of our money, corruption in government and scandals dodging this government in Ekiti.

    “Workers are dying at home. We want Fayose to explain what he has done with the allocations he has so far collected because he has received more than N50 billion as allocation since he came to power.

    “Fayose claims to be a Christian, he must come out clean and give account to the people of Ekiti State and he must submit himself and all his aides and associates to the anti-corruption agencies for investigation.”

    A youth leader, Adeoye Aribasoye, challenged Fayose to explain what he did with the ecological funds and the N9.6 billion bailout funds he received from the Federal Government.

    Aribasoye said: “We have a governor who has over N4 billion in his account .He is the only one who can explain what he has done with all the funds he has received from the federal authorities.

    “He must explain the N2.4 billion ecological funds because we don’t know what has happened to the money. He must answer for the revelations of Ekitigate.

    “Pupils and students of public schools have been out home for over four weeks due to the strike embarked upon by civil servants and teachers.”

    The court-validated Chairman of Trade Union Congress (TUC), Kolawole Olaiya, urged the EFCC to probe the whereabouts of the N9.6 billion bailout money released for the payment of workers, pensioners and past political office holders.

    Olaiya said: “Corruption is responsible for the inability of Ekiti State government to pay workers’ salaries for six months.

    “Ekiti workers still believe that the N9.6 billion bailout is kept somewhere and we urge the EFCC to institute a probe into this fact so that workers can receive their six month salary arrears and secure their future.

    “Government is created for the welfare and security of the people and Governor Fayose has done nothing to improve the lives of the people and secure their today and their future. Enough of these lies, Ekitk people must be liberated.

    “Today in Ekiti State, public primary and secondary school students, including those in private schools are now paying taxes. This must stop. It is at variance with the 1999 Nigerian Constitution; imposition of obnoxious taxes in Ekiti State must stop.

    “We want Ekiti State workers to note that Fayose is nobody’s friend.Teachers, civil servants, public servants, local government workers, artisans, driver unions etc must note that Fayose is not your friend.

    “Workers are dying for non-payment of salaries for six months including pensioners. Fayose must be brought to book not minding Section 308 immunity.

    “It is criminal not to pay workers and pensioners for six months. The federal government sent N9.6 billion to Ekiti State as bailout, how was the bailout expended and who are the beneficiaries? What accrues to the state as Internally Generated Revenue (IGR) is not known to the people.”

    Speaking on behalf of artisans, Idowu Ayegbe said: “We regret all the burden the governor has imposed on us in Ekiti in form of levies and taxes on our pupils. We are not happy with what the governor is doing including his attacks on the President.”

    The state CNPP spokesman, Ayo Adelabu demanded Fayose’s resignation from office in the face of new evidence of alleged corruption .He also asked  the management of Zenith Bank to come out and explain the role  of the bank in the alleged funding of Fayose’s  campaign.

    Adelabu said : ” Fayose should resign  from office over his failure to live up to people’s expectations.He should come out and defend himself in the N4.7 billion arms deal scandal and we also challenge him to explain to Ekiti people how he has spent six months allocation without payment of workers’ salaries.

    “The CNPP warns Fayose to stop abusing Mr. President who has been enjoying the full support of the majority of Ekiti people.

    “The CNPP strongly condemns Ekiti State legislators who have turned themselves to political slaves in the hand of Fayose. The governor should also come out and explain the N2.3 billion loan he took from bank.

    “The CNPP advises Governor Fayose to immediately stop the flyover bridge project and caution his political thugs against the attack of innocent people in the state.”

    Meanwhile, an interest group, Ekiti Redemption Group (ERG), has called on Fayose to pay all the six month arrears of workers’ salaries or face a legal action and “unending protests”.

    The group gave Fayose a seven-day ultimatum to pay all arrears of salaries and pensions failure of which the administration will be dragged to court to explain how treasury is being managed.

    ERG National Coordinator, Morakinyo Ogele, in a statement yesterday  said Fayose’s campaign was anchored on stomach infrastructure but expressed surprise that his administration has unleashed hunger, hardship and untimely death on the people through poverty and financial recklessness.