Tag: EFFC

  • EFFC, ICPC join team to verify ex-Airways workers

    •‘Fed Govt to fast-track verification’

    OPERATIVES of Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) and Independent Corrupt Practices and other related offences Commission (ICPC) have joined the ongoing biometric data verification of ex-workers and pensioners of the liquidated national carrier, Nigeria Airways Limited.

    Besides the EFCC and ICPC agents, other security agencies were also enlisted for the exercise.

    The participation of EFCC and ICPC personnel in the exercise, according to Minister of Finance Zainab Ahmed, was to ensure transparency and accountability.

    It was also to ensure that people who were not qualified did not have access to the money.

    Speaking at the Skypower Catering Limited premises in Ikeja, Lagos yesterday, the minister said besides displaying the relevant documents, the EFCC and ICPC officials were obtaining thumbprints of the beneficiaries.

    She was represented by the Secretary of Presidential Initiative for Continuous Audit (PICA), an arm of the Ministry of Finance, Dr. Mohammed Dikwa.

    Dikwa, while addressing the ex-Airways workers and pensioners, said hitches experienced in the exercise were being looked into.

    He said the Federal Government would create more desks and deploy more personnel to fast-track the ongoing verification exercise.

    He said government was aware of the hitches and had approved extension of the verification by one week to ensure that beneficiaries were accommodated.

    But, scores of pensioners and former workers have berated officials of PICA for the sloppiness of the exercise. They alleged that there were not enough personnel to attend to beneficiaries that are very sick and the elderly.

    They noted the paucity of personnel at the desk dedicated to the EFCC and ICPC, which they said has accelerated the delay in the exercise.

    But, Dikwa said: “We were here to confirm that the verification is on course, and we have noted some hitches, which would be addressed with the extension of the verification for an additional week.

    “The whole idea is to ensure that all beneficiaries are captured. We call for orderliness and pledge that we will increase the personnel to take care of beneficiaries, whose names were omitted. We understand the consequences that have come with the delay in the payment of these severance benefits, especially those that have either died, lost their documents and others. We will create a special desk for them.”

    He said government was making plans to ensure that the ongoing verification would be the last.

    Dikwa said: “This will be the last verification before all payments are closed. Government is paying 50 per cent now to settle the balance in the next few months. We are making plans to ensure those living outside the country are not omitted. So, there is no cause for alarm.”

    On the involvement of security agencies, Dikwa said: “We have enlisted the services of EFCC, ICPC and other security agencies to ensure transparency and accountability of the exercise.

    “The whole idea is to ensure that the money does not get into the wrong hands. We are going to deepen their involvement by ensuring that beneficiaries undergo biometric data capturing with thumbprint.”

  • SGF to induct Board chairmen, members on Corporate Governance

    The Secretary to the Government of the Federation, Mr. Boss Mustapha will on Thursday 26th July, 2018 open an induction programme for recently appointed Board Chairmen and Members, on Corporate Governance in their agencies.

    A statement by Lawrence Ojabo, Director Press in the Office of the Secretary to the Government of the Federation, said that it aims at establishing and promoting good board governance culture rooted in the Federal Public Service Precepts, Policies, Procedures, Protocols and Organisational values.

    Read Also:SGF denies composition of Buhari 2019 presidential support committee

    “The Heads of EFFC, ICPC, BPP and a retired Head of the Civil Service of the Federation will facilitate the programme, which ends on Saturday 28th July, 2018”

    Agencies invited to the programme are Federal Road Safety Commission (FRSC), Nigerian Atomic Energy Commission (NAEC), National Agency for the Control of AIDS (NACA), National Lottery Trust Fund (NLTF).

    Others are Galaxy Backbone, National Lottery Regulatory Commission (NLRC), National Commission for Refugees, Migrants and Internally Displaced Persons (NCFRIMI) and Nigerian Christian Pilgrims Commission, National Centre for Women Development (NCWD), National Health Insurance Scheme (NHIS), National Agency for the Control of AIDS (NACA).

  • Whistle blower on Ikoyi money now a millionaire — EFCC

    Whistle blower on Ikoyi money now a millionaire — EFCC

    The Economic and Financial Crimes Commission ( EFCC ) says the “young man” who blew the whistle on the massive stash of money recovered from an apartment in Ikoyi, Lagos, is now a millionaire.

    Acting Chairman of the commission, Mr Ibrahim Magu, stated this in Vienna, Austria, on Thursday, spokesman of the EFCC, Mr Wilson Uwujaren, said in a statement.

    Uwujaren said Magu spoke at the ongoing 7th Session of the Conference of States Parties to the United Nations Convention Against Corruption.

    On April 7, EFCC operatives broke into a four-bedroom apartment on Osborne Towers, Ikoyi, and pulled out $43 million, £27,800 and N23 million stashed in a wardrobe.

    The commission said the discovery followed an operation triggered by a whistle blower’s alert received by its Lagos office.

    Uwujaren quoted Magu as saying that the whistle blower was already a millionaire by virtue of the percentage he was officially entitled to.

    “We are currently working on the young man because this is just a man who has not seen one million Naira of his own before.

    “So, he is under counseling on how to make good use of the money and also the security implication.

    “We don’t want anything bad to happen to him after taking delivery of his entitlement. He is a national pride”, he said.

    The EFCC boss called on Nigerians who want a positive change in the country to take advantage of the whistle blowing policy announced by the government early this year.

    He noted that aside from contributing to the eradication of corruption, potential whistle blowers also stood to “benefit from the illicit acquisition by the looters”.

    “So, we encourage more whistle blowers to come forward with genuine information that will lead to recoveries from looters of public treasuries.

    “That is part of the ways we can put an end to the looting madness in the public sector.

    “When they know that they have no place to keep the loot, as all eyes are on them, they will find looting of public treasuries unattractive, ” Magu said.

    On June 7, a Federal High Court sitting in Lagos ordered the final forfeiture of the money to the Federal Government.(NAN)

  • Businessman urges court to reverse ruling on EFCC seizure

    Businessman urges court to reverse ruling on EFCC seizure

    United Arab Emirates-based Nigerian businessman, Mr.  Olalekan Olakehinde, has urged the Court of Appeal, Abuja Division, to reverse a decision by the FCT High Court.

    Sitting as a vacation judge, Justice Yusuf Halilu dismissed Olakehinde’s rights’ violation suit instituted against the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) for illegaly seizing 18 cars, on display for sale, in Abuja.

    The anti-graft commission alleged that the cars were suspected to have been bought with proceeds of crime. But the car dealer claimed the seizure was carried out without lawful authorisation.

    In his six-ground notice of appeal filed on September 12 by his counsel, Aliyu Umar (SAN), the businessman is seeking a reversal of the ruling.

    The  dealer contended that the trial erroneously substituted his complaint of rights’ violation to own property to that of rights’ violation to dignity of person.

    “The learned judge erred in law when he substituted the appellant’s cause of action from a complaint of breach of fundamental human rights to own personal property to that of a case of applicant’s right to human dignity.”

    In the notice, the businessman said the judge failed to make a pronouncement on the legality or otherwise of the seizure of his cars by the EFCC without due process.

    He argued that he was never invited by the EFCC to make him a subject of any criminal investigation warranting the seizure of his cars.

    Besides, the businessman noted that since “no credible evidence was placed before him, it shows that the cars belonged to Mr.  Olalekan Olakehinde based on the original bill of lading and not to Liman Kantigi as asserted by the EFCC in its counter affidavit.”

    According to the notice of appeal, a reversal of the ruling is necessary because “the conclusions of a verdict of dismissal of his case reached by the judge were not based on evidence placed before him.”

    Saying the ruling breached his rights to fair hearing under the 1999 Constitution, the plaintiff urged the court to invoke its powers under Section 15 of its Act in determining the issues in his appeal and order the release of his cars.

    One of  his attorneys, Solomon Tunyan (esq), confirmed the filing of the notice of appeal, adding that the EFCC was served with a copy.

  • EFCC intercepts N49m at Kaduna Airport

    EFCC intercepts N49m at Kaduna Airport

    The Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) on Monday night discovered the sum of N49 million in  N200 and N50 mint notes at the Kaduna International Airport with the owner yet to be identified.
    The money consisting of N40 million in N200 notes and N9 million in N50 notes were wrapped in NSPM polythene wrappers and packed into five sacks.

    Two sacks contained only N200 notes, two sacks others had N200 and N50 notes, while the thrid sack contained only N50 notes.

    Head of EFCC Kaduna zonal office, Mr. Ibrahim Bappa said that the money was found at the baggage check-in of the Kaduna International Airport, ostensibly about to be taken out.

    The owner of the bags reportedly fled  when the EFCC operatives, on a tip-off, arrived the airport.

    He said investigation is still ongoing to find the owner of the money and discover if it is a proceed from crime. The money has been handed over to the Central Bank of Nigeria for onward transfer to EFCC recovery account.

    “The Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) Kaduna Zonal Office on the 13th of March, 2017 intercepted an undeclared sum of N49 million in five large black 150kg coloured sack following an intelligence report received by the zone.

    “The report, which was made at about 8:00pm stated that during the routine baggage screening of supposed checked in baggage, five sacks were sighted unattended to and without tags containing fresh bulk items suspected to be money, from the aroma perceived from the sack.

    “The owner of the money later showed up but couldn’t state the exact money in the sack or present any document authenticating the genesis of the monies.
    “However, his inability to give any concrete explanation made him become uncomfortable and he disappeared into thin air before the arrival of the EFCC operatives according to our source of information.

    “They found out that the suspect had fled the airport vicinity leaving the sack behind and upon careful scrutiny of the contents of the sacks, it was discovered that the sacks contained fresh crispy naira notes N200 denomination in 200 bundles totaling N40 million and N50 denomination in 180 bundles totaling N9 million all sealed purportedly emanating from the Nigerian Security and Minting Plc (NSPM) as seen in the labeled sealed packs.

    “There is no arrest yet but investigation is ongoing with a view to identify the owner and apprehend all those behind the crime,” Bappa said.

  • EFCC recovers $9.75m, N1.25bn in two weeks

    EFCC recovers $9.75m, N1.25bn in two weeks

    Mr Ibrahim Magu, Acting Chairman of Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC), on Thursday confirmed the recovery of 9.75 million dollars and 750,000 pounds from a residence in Kaduna state.

    He also confirmed that N1.25 billion was recovered from a public servant and said that all the monies were recovered within two weeks.

    Magu stated this in a report he presented to the House of Representatives Committee on Financial Crimes during the 2016 budget performance appraisal and defence of 2017 budget before the committee.

    He said the commission recovered N102.91 billion, 8.30 million dollars, GBP 29,155, 12,475 pounds, 117,004 Canadian dollars as proceeds of crime between January and December, 2016.

    Other monies recovered during the period, he said, were 806.50 Dirham, 5,000 Francs and 2,000 Rupees.

    “Out of the 37 accounts frozen/forfeited, six banks are yet to provide relevant information on the amount accrued into the suspected accounts within the period under review,’’ he said.

    The document revealed that the commission secured 135 convictions, out of which 46 were from Lagos zone, 30 from Abuja zone, 22 from Port Harcourt zone, 19 from Kano zone, 15 from Enugu zone and three from Gombe zone during the period.

    Magu acknowledged the support of the committee towards fast-tracking completing of EFCC headquarters in Abuja.

    He disclosed that the Federal Ministry of Finance had listed the payment of N1.8 billion out of N2.9 billion meant for completion of the headquarters.

    He, however, added that the commission had resuscitated its offices in Kaduna, Ibadan, Benin and Maiduguri as part of efforts to boost its operations across the country.

    Magu urged the legislature to support the fight against graft, saying “corruption is fighting back”.

    On recruitment, he said that the commission only recruited 331 cadets on equal quota basis across the country except Lagos, Ekiti, Bayelsa and Rivers with lower numbers.

    Giving breakdown of the 2016 appropriated allocation to the commission, Magu told the committee that total budgetary approval was N18.89 billion, but that N14.74 billion representing 78.04 per cent was released.

    He explained that N7.62 billion was for personnel cost, overhead was N2.75 billion while capital expenditure was N8.49 billion for the year.

    Magu added that 91.1 per cent component of the released funds had so far been utilised.

    Earlier, Chairman of the committee, Rep. Kayode Oladele, said that Nigeria had applied to join the league of members of Financial Action Task Force (FATF), an international anti-corruption agency.

    He said that the move was part of efforts to strengthen ongoing anti-corruption crusade in the country.

    Oladele, who lauded the development, expressed optimism that Nigeria would be admitted as “Observer Member’’ by the end of the year and would become full-time member in the nearest future.

    “Our collective efforts to unleash sustainable development in Nigeria through the rooting out of corruption will not produce the desired result if Nigeria is unable to transact in the international market place without let or hindrance.

    “In this regard, Nigeria has applied to join the FATF and based on the level of our commitment.

    “A high-level delegation from the FATF is due to visit Nigeria in March, 2017, to meet with various stakeholders and report back to its plenary in June, this year.

    “I have no doubt that we will be successfully accredited and admitted at the end of the exercise,” he said.

    Oladele commended EFCC for the successes recorded so far and said: “for the first time in Nigeria’s history, anti-corruption searchlights have been beamed on the judiciary and the revelations have been mind-blogging.

    “In addition, similar exercises in the arms procurement process by the Nigerian military have also led to several arrests.

    “Overall, the EFCC made the highest number of recoveries of stolen resources, running into billions of naira in a single year in the annals of Nigeria’s anti-corruption efforts.”

    The chairman solicited the support of Nigerians in stemming the scourge of corruption in various facets of the economy.

    According to him, the fight against corruption is one of the most potent weapons to fight recession which structural cause is rooted in waste, looting, misplacement of priorities and misappropriation of yesteryears.

    Oladele also pledged the support of the house to the EFCC and assured of life assurance for the commission’s operatives. (NAN)

  • Lamido’s persecution

    Lamido’s persecution

    Last month, on November 15, to be specific, President Goodluck Jonathan took a direct shot across the bows of Governor Sule Lamido’s ship in an apparent warning to the governor to reconsider his long running confrontation with the president over the 2015 presidential elections in which both have staked their claims. On that day, two sons of the governor, Mustapha and Aminu, were picked up by the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC), for allegedly laundering over N10 billion through several banks in which the state holds major accounts.

    Officially, the EFFC does not take orders from the president – or from anyone else for that matter. But this is only in theory. In practice it soon became notorious under President Olusegun Obasanjo, President Jonathan’s seemingly estranged benefactor who created it ostensibly to fight corruption in high places, as his battle tank for squaring and squashing opposition elements in and out of the ruling Peoples Democratic Party.

    As a good student of his erstwhile godfather it seems President Jonathan has since learnt to put the commission to good use in self-service, all in the name of fighting corruption. Ask Governor Rotimi Amaechi of Rivers State and former governor, Timipre Sylva, of the president’s home state, Bayelsa, both of whom have attracted the president’s great disaffection. Governor Lamido is thus only the latest among several of those to have attracted EFCC’s attention more for their politics than for mis-governance.

    Lamido’s offence, it seems, is not only his expression of interest in the presidency. Recently, he suggested in an interview with an Abuja based radio station, Vision FM, that the president protected a corrupt minister by refusing to act on information he gave the president that the minister had collected a $250 million bribe from an oil firm. This provoked an angry retort from the president who, through his spokesman, Dr. Reuben Abati, said the governor’s allegation was “patently bogus” and “an unacceptable and callous attempt to unjustly impugn the integrity of President Jonathan and cast aspersions on the seriousness of his administration’s efforts to curb corruption.”

    EFCC’s picking up of the governor’s sons last month was clearly an attempt to demonstrate to the world that the governor was going to equity with very dirty hands.

    That EFCC’s action was triggered more by politics than by any concern of the president about corruption will be obvious presently. Before examining the facts, however, I should make it clear that this is not in defence of the governor against the allegation of using his sons to defraud his state.

    Jigawa, as we all know, was created in 1991. Between then and now it has had seven governors, four military and three civilians. Sandwiched between the first two military governors, one under General Ibrahim Babangida who created the state and the other under General Sani Abacha who threw out Babangida’s transition government of Chief Ernest Sonekan in November 1993, Governor Ali Sa’ad Birnin Kudu, its first civilian governor, did not enjoy much resources nor had much time nor much room for initiative to make a significant difference in the state.

    The next civilian governor, Ibrahim Saminu Turaki, did enjoy all three factors: less than two years into the fully-fledged civilian dispensation under President Obasanjo, oil money, which the country’s treasury has depended heavily upon for its revenue, became no longer an object, as oil price soared through the sky; the governor had eight years to transform the state with the state’s statutory allocation; and as civilian governor he was, at least in theory, a co-ordinate, rather than a subordinate, of the big man at the centre in the governance of the country.

    As we all know, Turaki, like so many of the governors during the first eight years of the current civilian dispensation, was a disaster. The man, as we all know, hardly sat at home to work. Instead, he spent so much time globetrotting he could not make any significant impact on his state. And, as he himself testified in the course of his yet to be concluded long running prosecution by the EFCC, he used a considerable portion of his revenue allocation, under duress he said, to help fund President Obasanjo’s infamous Third Term agenda.

    Enter Sule Lamido in 2007. Anyone who had been to the state since then, as I have, would agree that the difference between Jigawa before Turaki and Jigawa under Lamido is the difference between night and day. Dutse, the state’s sleepy capital, for example, has since become home to its civil servants who, before Lamido, used to go to work daily from Kano. And except, of course, they never meant what they said, all very important visitors to the state, including President Jonathan, have had only praise for the way the governor has vastly transformed its infrastructure in education, housing, health and road network, among others.

    So even if in the end it turns out that the governor used his sons to steal from his state, at least he has some mitigating circumstances for his alleged action. This much, I am afraid, cannot be said of many states in the country, including the president’s home state, Bayelsa, where incredibly huge gaps exist between the levels of development and the resources that have accrued to those states.

    This does not, of course, mean Lamido’s sons should not be prosecuted and their father exposed as someone who preaches what he does not practice. By all means prosecute them if you have a prima facie case against them and expose their father as a hypocrite if you can prove it.

    What, however, Lamido’s almost universally acclaimed performance means is that there are many, many, many more deserving cases for EFCC’s attention than the governor’s. Anyone with even the most casual acquaintance with Nigeria’s political-economy can reel off at least a dozen such cases before you can say the C word. But the three examples that follow are enough to prove the fact that Lamido’s case is by far more politics than about the president’s concern for good governance and transparency.

    Easily the most glaring of such cases is that of Malabu Oil and Gas, reportedly controlled by Chief Dan Etete, a former Oil minister under General Abacha. According to several newspapers, including The Economist (June 15) of London, two years ago, a consortium of Shell and Eni/Elf which had controversial stakes in the oil well, OPL 245, paid nearly $1.1 billion to Malabu, reportedly on orders of the president, as settlement over a long running dispute with Malabu on the ownership of the lucrative oil well.

    The payment was made to Malabu against the background of the fact that Etete had been a fugitive from France convicted in the country for money laundering in 2007 – a conviction upheld in 2009, following his appeal. The payment was also made against the background of the fact that EFCC was yet to conclude its investigation of an allegation that Etete had fraudulently acquired the company.

    According to Premium Times (September 30), an investigative online newspaper, the former minister, in turn shared the money paid to his company into several dubious accounts, some of them owned by close political associates of the president’s.

    Clearly this payment, which the Minister of Justice and Attorney General of the Federation, Mohammed Bello Adoke, tried to rationalise away during a public hearing of a House committee investigating the deal, as voluntary with government acting only as an “obligor” and “facilitator”, reeked to high heavens of the worst form of cronyism, to put it mildly. Even more clearly Lamido’s N10 billion alleged corruption pales into insignificance compared to Malabu’s $1.1 billion, which comes to nearly N184 billion.

    Second, there was an earlier case of the president versus a publication called Spynet Magazine. In its maiden edition in August 2007, it accused him of perjury in declaring his assets and liabilities during his tenure as deputy governor and governor of Bayelsa, and eventually as vice-president under Umaru Musa Yar’Adua, as demanded by the Constitution. Days after the publication its premises were ransacked by the State Security Services and its editors detained. To date nothing more has been heard of the case. Not even after the president has angrily told the public, following persistent demands that he declares his assets and liabilities publicly as was done by his predecessor even though the Constitution does not demand such public declaration, that he doesn’t “give a damn” what the public thought of his refusal to do so.

    Finally, there is the case of the paradox of worsening insecurity in the land, especially from Boko Haram insurgency, in the face of the huge budgetary allocation to our security forces since 2009. One glaring illustration of this is the fact that the Army Chief, Lt-General Azubuike Ihejirika, has lately been complaining of an under armed and under equipped military confronting Boko Haram. The paradox is, however, not surprising, considering credible allegations that one security institution recently spent over N600 million to construct an artificial grass football pitch for the recreation of its staff!

    By all means let the EFCC go after each and every thieving government official and his relations and cronies, if the commission has good cases against them. However, since it has neither the time nor resources to do so, equity demands that it begins with the more glaring cases.

    Surely all three cases above are much more demanding of the EFCC’s attention than Lamido’s case. When the commission is seen clearly to pick and choose mostly cases of only those perceived as opposition elements, it can only open itself and the presidency it reports to through the minister of Justice and attorney general of the federation, to accusations that it is merely fighting a selective, and therefore futile, war against corruption.

  • Commission on cybercrimes in banking, oil and gas coming

    Commission on cybercrimes in banking, oil and gas coming

    The Chairman, House of Representatives’ Committee on Information and Communication Technology (ICT), Hon Ibrahim Shehu Gusau has said the House, is planning to set up a commission that would tackle cybercrimes in the banking, insurance, I CT, oil and gas, among others.

    Speaking to The Nation at the sidelines of the 6th edition of the West African Convergence Conference (WACC 2013) in Lagos, he said the Commission to be known as Cybercrimes Security Commission would help in checking online fraudulent practices.

    He said: “We are working on laws that would ensure that cybercrimes are reduced across sectors. We are a bill that would enable Cybercrime Security Commission to be in place. Of course, this will reduce among other things cybercrimes in banking, oil and gas, ICT, among other sectors. As soon as the President assent to the bill, we would pass it.’’

    He said the Economic and FinancialCrimes Commission (EFFC), and the police are the first port of calls when its comes to cybercrimes, adding that with the Commission will help in complementing the activities of such law enforcement agencies.

    He said there is no institution or office in the House of Representatives assigned to tackle cyber security crimes until recently when the Committee on ICT was set up.

    According to him, the Committee has passed Cyber Security Bill and Nigerian Communication Satellite Bill to ensure that the sector is afoot and stronger compared to its counterparts in developed countries.

    Gusua said this was the first time the House would have a Committee on ICT, noting that there was nothing of such in the past.

    Also, the Chief Executive officer, Omatek Computers, Mrs Florence Seriki, canvassed convergence, saying it is the in-thing globally, advising Nigeria to embrace it.

    He said with mobile devices, such as phones, I-PAD, among others, people can reach a convergence electronically on personnel and corporate interests.

    She said the company has an educational programme that enables it go to schools, distribute laptops to students, teach them how to use the device and making them IT compliant.

  • Ribadu is an hypocrite- Presidency

    The Presidency on Monday described the comment credited to former Chairman, Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC), Nuhu Ribadu that Nigeria is ‘sinking ship’ as false, hypocritical and self-serving claim.

    Ribadu, at a lecture in Kaduna on Saturday, was said to have declared that Nigeria is a “sinking ship” under President Goodluck Jonathan with the yearnings of the masses being neglected by a tyrannical leadership.

    A statement by the Special Adviser to the President on Media and Publicity, Dr. Reuben Abati noted that there is no tyranny greater than the tenure of Ribadu at EFCC when governors were removed via undemocratic means and illegally barring some persons from contesting elections.

    Ribadu, the statement said, ought to be grateful to the President for saving him from self-imposed exile, restoring his rank in the Nigeria Police and converted his dismissal from service to retirement.

    The statement reads: “The Presidency totally rejects the false, hypocritical and self-serving claim by Mallam Nuhu Ribadu at a lecture in Kaduna on Saturday that Nigeria under President Goodluck Jonathan is a “sinking ship” in which the yearnings of the masses are being neglected by a tyrannical leadership.”

    “We find it very sad and utterly deplorable that Nuhu Ribadu has resorted to shameless wolf-crying, the peddling of arrant falsehood and the denigration of the elected government of his fatherland in furtherance of his selfish quest for continued national political relevance after his wholesale rejection by Nigerian voters in 2011.

    “It is very unfortunate indeed that the once highly respected former EFCC Chairman has now taken to political prostitution and developed a penchant for irresponsible and reckless utterances aimed at improving the electoral fortunes of his new friends and “leader”, who he once famously denounced as a crook who is “not fit to hold public office.

    “There can be no doubt that nothing else but blind ambition for an office for which he is clearly unfit is driving Ribadu to infer that an Administration led by a President who welcomed him back to the country after his self-imposed exile, restored his rank in the Nigeria Police to save him from the shame of demotion and converted his dismissal from service to retirement has now become tyrannical and anti-people. We take special note of his ingratitude.

    “If Nuhu Ribadu wants to talk of tyranny then he should talk of the days when he orchestrated the impeachment of governors with an illegitimate quorum of legislators who had been threatened by the EFCC under his watch. It beats the imagination that Nuhu Ribadu, a man who once presided over an  EFCC which in 2007 compiled a list of disqualified politicians aspiring for office without a court order or legal backing now has the guts to accuse the man under whom Nigeria has had the most credible elections in this Fourth Republic of being  the leader of a “sinking ship.

    “Can there be a greater tyranny than the tyranny of removing governors via undemocratic means and barring legally entitled persons from contesting elections?” The Presidency queried

    “Nothing else but misguided ambition could have driven Ribadu to urge Nigerian youth to rise up and save the country from an Administration which he willingly served recently, but which he now duplicitously and insincerely claims is “imposing private interests on the majority”.

    “It is certainly the height of hypocrisy for Ribadu who built his entire reputation as an anti-corruption crusader by completely disregarding the rule of law and recklessly trampling on the rights of perceived enemies of the government of the day, to now accuse an administration that has consistently upheld the rule of law and respect for fundamental human rights of being tyrannical.

    “It is only a shameless man that will turn around and accept to be the political lackey of a man he once openly accused of corruption at various times between 2004 and 2007. Now that he has been used and abused by the undemocratic overlords that reign over the ACN and fearing that he may soon be dumped now that that vehicle is about to be subsumed into the so called All Progressives Congress, Ribadu is  desperately seeking fresh relevance.

    “Ribadu’s descent into a moral abyss since leaving the exalted office of EFCC Chairman, his equally ethically-challenged new friends and his willingness to vituperate against any person or institution he perceives as a challenge to the fulfillment of his unattainable ambitions, have clearly exposed him for what he truly is – a thoroughly unprincipled attention-seeker whose entire career in the public service was built on bootlicking and doing the bidding of the powers of the day without a care for legality which should have been his primary concern as an officer of the law.

    “President Jonathan and his Administration will not be distracted from the diligent implementation of the agenda for national transformation by the falsehoods and vituperations of Ribadu and his new friends.

    “Far from being tyrannical as Ribadu falsely alleged in Kaduna, President Jonathan will, as he has consistently done since assuming office, continue to strengthen institutions of democratic governance in Nigeria, uphold the fundamental human rights of all Nigerians including the youth, and protect their right to elect leaders in free, fair and credible elections.” Abati  stated