Tag: Ibori

  • Crown court suspends confiscation hearing against Ibori

    Crown court suspends confiscation hearing against Ibori

    Convicted former Delta State Governor James Ibori won yesterday a major legal victory when the Southwark Crown Court in London ruled to suspend the start of the confiscation hearing against him.

    The reprieve will last until the conclusion of the investigation of corruption charges against the British police and the prosecution in jailing the former governor.

    A statement by Ibori’s Media Assistant, Tony Eluemunor and his lead counsel, Mr. Ivan Krolic, (Queen’s Counsel, QC) prayed the court to halt proceedings because the review, which will end in August, may also prove that the prosecution, having known of the corrupt and sharp practices, allegedly refused to disclose such evidences.

    Rather, it allegedly relied upon it and thereby misled the court in securing Ibori’s conviction.

    The prosecution was accused of desecrating the much-respected British legal system.

    His Honour Judge Tomlinson, who stoutly resisted Ibori’s application, had the following exchange with the former governor’s lawyer.

    Judge Tomlinson: What do I tell the listing officer for not continuing with this proceeding? I need to get a grip of this. Mr Ibori has been convicted nearly three years ago.

    Krolic (cuts in): Four years.

    Judge Tomlinson: Mr Ibori has been convicted nearly four years. When does the confiscation hearing start?

    Krolic: This proceeding will start when the Crown completes its review into police corruption. I ask, rhetorically: could the court continue with this confiscation hearing when there is an application on abuse of court process?

    The lawyer added: “We say the Crown Prosecution has manipulated this confiscation proceeding and Crown Prosecution counsel made misleading statements and submissions. This hearing will not be fair unless the review is completed. We know to what extent there has been an intent to mislead the court and the extent of corruption leading to non-disclosure of materials against Ibori.”

    With tension rising between the judge and Ibori’s lead counsel, Judge Tomlinson said: “I know that your (Ibori’s defence team) position has always been that this case be litigated sooner than later. You have always opposed the Crown on stay of proceedings only for you to bring an application on Monday for a stay of proceedings. But what I need to know is: how is this case going to be affected by the review? I still don’t know where we are going.”

    Krolic said: “The review into the police corruption not only concerns the safety of the conviction but also of the non-disclosure of materials used against Ibori. The background is that the prosecution had initially relied on Assumption 72AA of the Criminal Justice Act in only some of the charges, only to turn around after three weeks of proceedings when the case had been closed and submission made by all parties, to inform the court that the defence team had confused them and that they would be seeking to apply Assumption 72AA across board.

    “At the closing, the Crown claimed that they were confused and Judge Anthony Pitts said he was also confused and ordered the confiscation proceedings to start afresh, permitting the Crown to apply Section 72AA across board.

    “We say, they (Crown Prosecution) said to the judge that they were confused; if the court’s ruling was based on the intention by the Crown Prosecution to mislead the court, we say that was an abuse of court process.”

    Swayed by the appeal to the concept of justice, the new lead Crown Prosecution counsel (the earlier one, Shasha Wass as well as all others involved in investigating and prosecuting Ibori and his associates have since been dropped from the case over charges of impropriety and corruption) Mr. Kinnear said: “I, on behalf of the Crown, have always said that in the interest of justice, the case be adjourned until the conclusion of the disclosure review.

    “Your Honour, we ask: is it in the interest of justice that this matter be adjourned? Our response will be a resounding Yes. We can’t trample on the defendant’s right – in the interest of justice. Your Honour, the application to adjourn is an application this court must accede to in the interest of justice.”

    The Crown Prosecution sided with the defence team, pleading for “fairness and justice”.

    The judge said: “I am influenced by the submission of the Crown. I do, therefore, agree that this confiscation proceeding should therefore adjourn.”

    On the allegation of abuse of court process and the court’s being misled, issues that touch in the heart of dispensing justice in British jurisprudence, Judge Tomlinson said: “Issues raised on behalf of Mr Ibori is that Mr Kinnear’s predecessor manipulated proceedings. That does appear to me that it is a discreet matter that I can’t allow to go away; that previous counsel either misled or manipulated the court to abort the proceeding.”

    The review will be internal to the London Metropolitan Police. But the mass media, whose exactions over the years have been drumming that the review be made, will still be there to watch and ensure that nothing inappropriate is swept under the carpet.

    According to the statement, the import of that Wednesday’s court victory is immense.

    Ibori now stands a good chance of having his guilty plea and conviction revisited and probably quashed.

    But this would happen, if the review into disclosure and police corruption establishes that there had been failings leading to corruption on the part of the British police during investigation.

    Besides, it will also need to establish that the Prosecution deliberately withheld the materials used against Ibori to manipulate the court in securing his conviction.

    Beyond all else, the conclusion of the review will pave the way for Ibori’s defence team to appeal against his conviction and seek to quash it.

  • Ibori’s lawyer alleges abuse of process in London trial

    Ibori’s lawyer alleges abuse of process in London trial

    1. Mr. Ivan Krolic, the lawyer to convicted former Delta State Governor James Ibori, yesterday told the Southwark Court in London, the United Kingdom (UK), that there may be no fair trial in the confiscation hearing of the former governor.

    Ibori’s trial is due to start in June at a Southwark Crown Court in London.

    A statement by Ibori’s Media Assistant, Tony Eluemunor, said Krolic spoke during yesterday’s preliminary hearing preparatory to the confiscation trial against Ibori.

    The lawyer said there were established cases of corruption against the police and the crown prosecution counsel who investigated Ibori.

    This, he said, led to the dropping of every member of the police and Crown prosecution teams, which investigated Ibori and his associates.

    Krolic told the court that following the revelation that the police involved in probing the former governor for money laundry were also involved in corruption and “knowingly” covered up by the Crown prosecution, the integrity of the process was doubtful.

    He said: “There are cases of abuse of process against the Crown prosecution to deliberately manipulate the process to gain undue advantage and inflate the confiscation figure, which will require a stay of proceedings in this case to allow for the abuse of process to be dealt with.”

    The trial judge, His Honour Tomlinson, acknowledged the precarious situation of the Ibori case, especially the serious allegations of police corruption.

    This reportedly made the police authority to acknowledge the corruption charges and set up a review of the process and corruption allegations against its officers.

    Judge Tomlinson said: “There are a lot of perceptions, and it is inevitable that the team involved in the investigation and prosecution be changed, following these allegations.”

    Putting the judge on notice, should the confiscation trial begin as scheduled while the application for Crown and police abuse of process is held, Krolic said: “Our argument is that the whole process is infected and it will be wrong for the confiscation hearing to continue… The allegation is that the Crown consistently and deliberately manipulated the system and forced Ibori to plead guilty and inflate the figures (of the money involved) in the light of the serious allegation of police corruption in this case.”

    Judge Tomlinson replied: “I have an obligation to keep an open mind and keep this under constant review.”

    He noted that, having also read the statement by a witness and Ibori’s former defence lawyer, Mr Nicholas Purnell QC, that the Crown lawyers misled the former governor to plead guilty, “there are potentials in the statements”.

    A statement by Ibori’s Media Assistant, Tony Eluemunor, noted that though the confiscation trial may hold, “a number of potential hazards to this proceedings have been flagged off”.

  • Global coalition against corruption: Diezani, Ibori, Dariye, 57 other Nigerians may lose UK assets

    Global coalition against corruption: Diezani, Ibori, Dariye, 57 other Nigerians may lose UK assets

    Fresh facts emerged yesterday that more than 60 top Nigerians may lose assets and cash laundered in the United Kingdom.

    The Economic and Financial Crimes Commission ( EFCC) may soon submit a list of those convicted, under probe, the fleeing suspects and those watch-listed to the relevant agencies in the UK.

    The UK was said to be in custody of over £40 million stolen funds recovered from some Nigerian government officials in 2008.

    This is apart from about £22.5million recovered from the Island of Jersey.

    Of the cash, about £6.8million loot had been traced to ex-Governor James Ibori.

    Some of those likely to be affected  include ex-governors like James Ibori, Diepreye Alamieyeseigha, Joshua Dariye, the late Abubakar Audu, Chimaroke Nnamani, Lucky Igbinedion, the immediate past Minister of Petroleum Resources, Mrs. Diezani Alison-Madueke, and others.

    Others are about 13 ex-governors on trial for financial crimes, some former ministers either on trial or under investigation, some indicted top bankers during the 2008 financial crisis.

    Six of the ex-governors were  alleged to have acquired assets worth £15million in the United Kingdom, while in office.

    One of the governors allegedly  paid £1.6million at a go in 2005 for a posh mansion in London.

    According to findings, about 60 highly-placed Nigerians, especially politically exposed persons and their fronts, have assets and looted funds in the United Kingdom and Island of Jersey.

    For instance, Ibori’s assets in the UK are said to worth more than $150 million. A former director of Nigerian Ports Authority (NPA) owns a flat in St George Wharf worth about 450 pounds more than 10 years ago, while another top civil servant owns 1.65 million pounds Fulham property.

    It was learnt that the decision of the British Prime Minister, David Cameron, to collaborate with the administration of President Muhammadu Buhari has dimmed the hope of the affected treasury looters.

    A top source, who spoke in confidence, said: “With the pledge of the British Prime Minister, we will just go to our shelf and reel out the list of those with suspected loot and laundered funds in the United Kingdom.

    “Already, we have the dossiers of all these suspects right from the days of Mallam Nuhu Ribadu as the EFCC chairman.

    “We can talk of about 60 on our radar, including about 13 governors, former ministers, oil subsidy suspects, indicted top bankers and some of those involved in the $15billion arms deals.

    “We will recover all the stolen funds. In fact, very soon, we may start publishing the photographs of the identified assets of some of these suspects.

    “In fact, the Chairman of the EFCC, Mr. Ibrahim Magu, met with the Special Fraud Office in London on Thursday.

    “We can seize these assets under the Interim Forfeiture Order in Sections 26 and 29 of the EFCC Act.

    The section reads: “Any property subject to forfeiture under this Act may be seized by the commission in the following circumstances- (a) the seizure is incidental to an arrest or search; or (b) in the case of property liable to forfeiture upon process issued by the Court following an application made by the Commission in accordance with the prescribed rules.

    “Whenever property is seized under any of the provisions of this Act, the Commission may-(a) place the property under seal; or (b) remove the property to a place designated by the Commission.

    “Properties taken or detained under this section shall be deemed to be in custody of the Commission, subject only to an order of a Court.”

    The EFCC and the Metropolitan Police have been collaborating in the past few years.

    The British government had, in 2008, expressed its willingness to return about £40 million stolen funds recovered from some Nigerian government officials.

    A former Acting British High Commissioner to Nigeria, James Tansley, on September 27, 2007 handed over two cheques for more than $250,000 (£126,000, 29.3m naira) to Nigeria.

    The UK Metropolitan Police had said the amount was only a fraction of the fortunes that the former Governor of Plateau State, Chief Joshua Dariye, and other Nigerian officials had diverted to London.

    A cheque for $2 million belonging to a former Governor of Bayelsa State, Chief Diepreye Alamieyeseigha, was also returned to Nigeria by the British government.

    President Muhammadu Buhari had during the week pleaded with the UK to return stolen funds to Nigeria.

    “I am not going to demand any apology from anybody. What I am demanding is the return of assets,” Buhari said at a function in London.

  • Mark, Messi, Saraki, others named in secret assets leak

    Mark, Messi, Saraki, others named in secret assets leak

    Senate President: it’s my wife’s family assets

    Senate President Bukola Saraki was battling yesterday to fend off what looked like a fresh allegation about his assets. He said he fully complied with the provisions of the law on declaration of assets by public officers.

    The former Kwara State governor was reacting to the claim contained in the Panama Papers, a huge trove of documents by the offshore provider, Mossack Fonseca, and shared by the International Consortium of Investigative Journalists (ICIJ) that he failed to declare assets belonging to his wife, Mrs Toyin Saraki, in secret offshore territories. , He noted that he has in his various assets declarations included properties owned individually by himself and his wife.

    Saraki is not the only prominent Nigerian named in the document. There are also former Delta State Governor James Ibori, Saraki’s brother Laolu, his associate Obi Asika and Olufela Ibidapo.

    Russian President Vladimir Putin’s associates are named. So are South African President Jacob Zuma, soccer star Lionel Messi and son of former Ghanian President John Kufuor .

    Saraki’s statement, signed by his Special Adviser (Media and Public Affairs) Yusuph Olaniyonu, said the property in question formed part of his wife’s family assets.

    It said: “The property in question forms part of Dr. Saraki’s wife’s family asset. It is public knowledge that Mrs. Saraki comes from a family of independent means and wealth with numerous and varied assets acquired over decades in family estates and investments.

    “Furthermore, the law only requires a public officer to declare both his own assets and those held by his spouse and his children under 18 years of age. The law does not require a public officer to declare assets held by the spouse’s family.

    “It is not expected by the law that a public officer should declare such assets held in the spouse’s family estate.

    “Indeed, the Code of Conduct form does not make provision for declaration of spouse’s family assets.”

    But the report in the  Panama Papers alleged that at least four assets belonging to the Saraki family, tucked away in secret offshore territories, have been uncovered.

    It alleged that the Senate President failed to declare them to the Code of Conduct Bureau (CCB) as required by Nigerian laws.

    This revelation obtained by the German newspaper Süddeutsche Zeitung and shared by the International Consortium of Investigative Journalists (ICIJ) with Premium Times and over 100 other media partners in 82 countries, comes as Saraki battles to extricate himself from allegations of corruption.

    The Senate President’s case before the Code of Conduct Tribunal (CCT) is due to begin in Abuja today.

    In a written response to ICIJ, the Senate President insisted, through his UK lawyers, that he “declared his assets properly in accordance with the relevant legislation,” and that the charges against him “are both unfounded and politically motivated”.

    Last September, the CCB slammed false assets declaration charges on Saraki, accusing the Senate President of among other things, failure to declare his assets in full.

    In his declaration form,  Saraki listed property owned by his wife, Toyin Saraki, to include a plot of land at Lekki valued at N5 million, which he said was a gift received in January 1989.

    Mrs. Saraki was also listed as owner of a property at 15 Bryanston Square, London W1 and 69 Bourne Street, London.

    While the first, which rental income was put at £48,000 with a value of £900,000, was acquired in January 1989, the second, which value was put at £2m and had rental value of £150,000, was acquired for business in April 2000.

    However, a fresh investigation by Premium Times and its media partners, has uncovered a hidden London property in the name of Toyin Saraki but which was left out among the assets declared by the Senate President.

    The hidden property is located at #8 Whuttaker Street, Belgravia, London SW1W 8JQ. It has title number NGL802235.

    Similarly, the Senate President stated in his assets declaration form that his wife held an account in EcoBank, Broad Street, Lagos, where she had N1.5 million at the time he became governor in 2003.

    She also maintained an account in Coutts & Co Strand, London, where she owned £450,000 and $125,000 in addition to $3 million in Northern Trust International Banking Corporation Merrill Lynch Pierce Fenner.

    Mrs. Saraki was also listed as maintaining substantial shares in European and American Trading Company, Tyberry Corporation and Eficaz Limited just as she held 500,000 shares, valued at £500,000 at P.C.C (U.K) Ltd. He was, however, silent on the number of shares the former first lady had in Haussmann and Tiny Tee (Nig) Limited.

    Three additional overseas assets in the name of the wife of the Senate President were hidden from the authorities and are missing from the assets declaration form, a report said.

    Investigations reveal that Mrs. Saraki owns secret companies in some tax havens.

    The hidden assets

    The first, Girol Properties Ltd, was registered on August 25, 2004 (a year after Mrs. Saraki’s husband became governor of Nigeria’s north-central state of Kwara) in the British Virgin Island (BVI).

    Company documents show that Mrs. Saraki owns 25,000 shares with a par value of US$ 1,00 each, and was appointed the first and only director of the company.

    It however remains unclear what businesses Mrs Saraki transacted with the company. Mrs Saraki, however, in a letter to ICIJ, through her lawyers, denies ever owning any shareholding in Girol Properties

    The second company, Sandon Development Limited, was registered in Seychelles Island on January 12, 2011 and has Mrs. Saraki and Babatunde Morakinyo (a long-term personal aide and friend of Saraki) of 11 Okeme Street, Lagos, as shareholders.

    Incorporating that company, documents show, Mrs. Saraki bought a curious service from Mossack Fonseca & Co, the Panamanian firm that helped her to register the firm.

    Perhaps to avoid being identified as the beneficial owner of Sandon, the Senate President’s wife asked Fonsecca to provide nominee directors for the company. Nominee directors are sometimes used in tax havens to conceal real owners of companies and assets.

    She then made an undertaking indemnifying the Panamanian company “in respect of all claims, demands, actions, suits, proceedings, costs and expenses whatsoever as may be incurred or become payable by you in respect of or arising out of any member or employee or associate of your company or associated companies holding any office, directorship or shareholdings in the company or by reason of or in consequence of any act or decision made by any such person or company in connection with the management and/or administration of the said company.”

    Shortly after the company was incorporated, Mrs. Saraki used it in July 2011 to buy the property on Whuttaker Street, Belgravia, London SW1W 8JQ.

    The property, acquired from Renocon Property Limited, a company registered in the British Virgin Island, was never disclosed to Nigerian authorities as required by the country’s code of conduct law.

    The third hidden company in the name of Mrs. Saraki is Landfield International Developments Ltd., a company registered in the British Virgin Islands on April 8, 2014. Its registration number is 1819394

    While its registered office is 1 Akara Blog., 24 De Castro Street, Wickhams Cay 1, Road Town, Tortola, British Virgin Island.

    According to Mossack Fonseca, the registered agent of the company, Mrs. Saraki, at least until January 27, 2015, was sole shareholder and beneficial owner of the company which had two nominee directors – Glaisd Alie Limited and NewGombe Limited – both appointed on September 2, 2014. Its agent says Landfield is authorised to issue a maximum of 50,000 no par value shares.

    Mrs. Saraki said she sold her shares in the company to a third party in January last year.

    Mr. Laolu Saraki is said to own Polly Capital Holdings Ltd registered in Niue, a small island nation in the South Pacific Ocean.

    Another document showed that after some years, Laolu brought in another person as co-owner. The company is now co-owned with a certain Richard Pembroke, who has 25,000 equity shares, just like Laolu.

    Laolu’s other offshore companies are co-owned with his associates. Among the co-owners are Kojo Annan, son of former United Nations UN Secretary General, Kofi Annan, Asika and Ibidapo.

    Laolu and Annan hold equal shares of 25,000 in Blue Diamond Holding Management Corp. The duo, along with Asika, also own Sutton Energy Limited, registered in the British Virgin Island.

    Mr. Asika owns 15,000 units of shares, the same amount owned by Laolu Saraki and Kojo Annan. Mr. Asika was a Senior Special Assistant to former President Goodluck Jonathan, and is closely connected to the Sutton Group

    Mr. Asika’s profile on the website of the Copyright Society of Nigeria (COSON), of which he is Board member, refers to him as Founding Partner & Executive Director, Sutton Group from June 1999 to October 2002.

    The connection between Mr. Annan and Mr. Asika seems clear, as Mr. Annan sits on the Board of Mr. Asika’s other company, Dragon Africa. Additional documents show that the trio – Laolu, Kojo and Asika – also co-own Sapphire Holding Ltd., a company located in Samoa, a tiny Island of an estimated 194,320 people in the South Pacific.

    Company documents also indicate that Ensol Limited (Environmental Solutions), registered in the Republic of Seychelles, with registration number 028376, partly belongs to Laolu Saraki

    The company is co-owned with Ama Annan, a relative of Kofi Annan (former UN Secretary General), who was appointed director on May 19, 2006 but ceased to be director on July 2, 2008.

    Another Nigerian, Ibidapo, was then appointed to replace her on January 4, 2010.

    ‘Ibori connected to four offshore firms’

    Former Delta State Governor James Ibori is also listed as one of a large number of public figures who have hidden offshore assets.

    The report on the former governor reads:

    “James Ibori, governor of Nigeria’s oil-rich Delta State from 1999 to 2007, pleaded guilty in a London court in 2012 to conspiracy to defraud and money laundering offenses.”

    “Ibori admitted using his position as governor to corruptly obtain and divert up to $75 million out of Nigeria through a network of offshore companies, although authorities alleged that the total amount he embezzled may have exceeded $250 million.”

    “Ibori, who received a 13-year prison sentence, used millions of dollars to support a lavish lifestyle that included six houses in London and a fleet of Range Rovers, Bentleys and Mercedes.”

    “Mossack Fonseca was the registered agent of four offshore companies connected to James Ibori, including Julex Foundation, of which Ibori and family members were beneficiaries.”

    “Julex was the shareholder of Stanhope Investments, a company incorporated in Niue in 2003. Ibori was also connected to Financial Advisory Group Ltd. and Hunglevest Corporation, although Mossack Fonseca’s files do not specify the exact nature of his connection.”

    “In 2008, Mossack Fonseca received a request from the Seychelles government to produce documents as part of a probe by the Crown Prosecution Service, England’s principal prosecuting authority, of Ibori and alleged criminal activities.”

    “In 2012, Ibori pleaded guilty in a London court to laundering and fraud charges. During court hearings in the United Kingdom, prosecutors claimed that Ibori opened a Swiss bank account in the name of Stanhope Investments through which millions of dollars were later channeled to ultimately buy a $20 million private jet.”

    The investigation was started after an anonymous source contacted German newspaper, Süddeutsche Zeitung. The newspaper shared the files with the ICIJ which released the first report on Sunday.

    Other world figures who have been named include Bollywood’s Amitabh Bachchan, martial arts movie star, Jackie Chan, football star,Lionel Messi and associates of Russian President, Vladmir Putin.

     

  • Prisoners’ transfer: Ibori, others to complete jail term in Nigeria

    Nigerians serving jail terms in the United Kingdom will soon be transferred to Nigeria to complete their period, following an agreement signed yesterday between the Federal Government and the UK government. 

     According to a top government source, former Governor of Delta State, James Ibori, will be part of those that will be repatriated to complete their jail term in Nigeria.

    Ibori still has more than six months to stay in prison.

     The British government has also promised to give Nigeria one million pounds (about N280 million) to assist in the comprehensive reformation of Nigerian prisons to ease the stress of the inmates.

    The United Kingdom Minister of Justice, Mr. Jeremy Wright, revealed this when he led the UK team to visit the Minister of Interior to finalise the process of prisoner exchange between the two countries.

    He said under the agreement, which he signed, Nigerians in British prisons would be repatriated to complete their jail terms in the country.

    Wright told the minister the importance of the two countries respecting the agreement, saying there is need for the state of prisons in Nigeria to be improved.

    Wright, who led a five-man delegation to the ministry, said even though the prisoners were paying for the crimes they might have committed, conditions in detention centres where they were staying should be made humane and accommodating.

     He hailed the Federal Government and the Minister of Interior for making it possible for the two countries to finalise the agreement, which would lead to the mutual exchange of prisoners and said efforts would be made to foster the cordial relationship between Nigeria and the United Kingdom.

  • ‘Ibori has no loot anywhere’

    ‘Ibori has no loot anywhere’

    Former Delta State Governor James Ibori is not hiding stolen money anywhere, his Media Office said yesterday.

    A statement by the former governor’s media aide, Tony Eluemunr, was reacting to a report on Wednesday that

    the Minister of Justice and Attorney-General of the Federation (AGF), Mr Justice Abubakar Malami, said the Federal Government was priming to recover 6.9 million British Pounds described as “Ibori loot”.

    The statement said: “There is no Ibori loot anywhere in the world. Such money, whether in British pounds, American dollars or the Nigerian naira, just does not exist. This is because the Ibori London trial is not yet over. It is an incontrovertible fact that the confiscation hearing has not started at all, and remains months away into the future. This makes it disappointing that a high official of state, such as the Attorney-General, may have been misled into believing that an Ibori loot not only exists somewhere but he even put a figure (6.9 million pounds) to it…”

  • Ibori: Met Police in bribery scandal

    Ibori: Met Police in bribery scandal

    The London Metropolitan Police investigating a case of money laundering against former Delta Sttate governor, Chief James Ibori have been accused of bribery and corruption by Mr.BhadreshGohil, a lawyer who represented Ibori.

    According to several United Kingdom (UK) newspapers published yesterday, there have been calls for an independent investigation into the bribery allegations leveled against the police. According to the Sunday Times of London, the Crown Prosecution Service (CPS) is currently facing “serious questions” over allegations of bribery that could jeopardise investigations into Ibori’s case.

    “ The Crown Prosecution Service  (CPS) is facing serious questions over an alleged cover-up that could jeopadise the high-profile conviction of a billionaire Nigerian politician.

    “ The crisis follows the dramatic collapse of a case involving BhadreshGohil, a lawyer who represented James Ibori, a former governor of Nigeria’s oil-rich Delta state. Gohil was cleared at Southward Crown Court last week after the CPS withdrew a charge of perverting the course of justice.

    “ Gohil had been accused of leaking fabricated documents to media organizations and MPs on the home affairs select committee. The documents claimed a police officer involved in the Ibori inquiry had received corrupt payments from RISC Management, a private detective agency that worked for Ibori.

    “The decision to prosecute Gohil backfired when CPS lawyers were accused of withholding key documents, which could have proved police corruption.”

    The Guardian of London also reported that the CPS was accused of suppressing police corruption evidence in what has been called a “misconduct of a particularly serious nature”.

    The paper said: “The accusation has been made in the trial of two men charged with fabricating claims of corruption  involving Metropolitan police officers. The trial collapsed last Thursday at Southwark crown court in London after senior lawyers at the Crown Prosecution Service (CPS) decided to abandon the case. The CPS said new information has come to light, but did not elaborate.  It did not comment ibt he allegation of serious misconduct.”

    Mr. Gohil has been accused of perverting the course of justice by faking documents to make it look as though,  the Metropolitan Police were taking bribes. Gohil, who had already pleaded guilty to a charge of money-laundering said he was trying to expose corruption in the police.

    “ I was a whistle-blower and instead of investigating what I had uncovered and put forward, I was persecuted,” he said.  In court, defence lawyers had alleged that there was “clear and compelling evidence” of police accepting bribes in return for “unlawfully providing sensitive information” to private detectives. It was also alleged that the police own investigation into the matter was “deliberately designed to find no evidence of corruption and that the prosecution service “deliberately withheld evidence.”

  • Ibori, Uduaghan, Okowa and Delta’s N0.64tr debt

    Ibori, Uduaghan, Okowa and Delta’s N0.64tr debt

    Delta State Governor Ifeanyi Okowa last weekend stunned the state when he announced that his predecessor and former boss, Governor Emmanuel Uduaghan, left a whopping N637 billion debts in various forms.

    •Okowa
    •Okowa

    Okowa told members of the Delta State House of Assembly, most of whom were part of the past 5th Assembly, that his administration inherited a debt profile of N637.22 billion.

    According to Prince Victor Efeizomor, the governor’s Press Secretary, “ Giving a breakdown of the debt profile, Okowa disclosed that N98.62 billion is as a result of Revenue Bond and indebtedness to commercial banks, while outstanding contractual obligations stood at N538, 601,962,421.50.”

    By that revelation, Delta state vaulted to the top ‘States in Debt’ table. From the figure, which is yet to be disputed by the former governor, the state’s debt profile is higher than that of Lagos and a few others combined.

    More worrying for citizens of the state, is the disclosure by Oghenejabor Ikimi of the Centre for the Vulnerable and Underprivileged, who posited that that the state owed over N1 trillion to creditors. Ikimi cited a report by the transition committee in arriving at the figure.

    He said, “Though we are not oblivious of the fact that the actual debt burden of the State is well over a trillion naira as revealed in the transition committee report submitted to the incumbent Governor, we wonder why the State Governor has settled for the above sum of N636 billion.

    “We therefore call on the incumbent Governor for the avoidance of doubt to immediately publish the full extract of his transition committee report in the above regard as the above subject, such as the debt profile of the State cannot be traded for politics as same is not a PDP family affair or an Ibori Political family affair. “

    Ikimi’s parting shot was pregnant and in consonance with feelings of a section of the state, particularly the opposition All Progressive Congress, that the incumbent governor cannot extricate himself from the political merry ground that plunged the state into the chasm of debt. Besides being the Secretary to the Government during Uduaghan’s first tenure, Okowa was a serial commissioner under the eight-year two tenures of Governor James Ibori and therefore a partaker by association, at least.

    The ‘Debt Statement’ was also silent on how much of the debt went into the prosecution of the 2015 election both for Okowa and the state’s People’s Democratic Party candidates in the various positions. It was gathered that his Campaign Organization presented a whopping bill of N3.5billion to then Governor Uduaghan to enable it succeed at the polls. Although it could not be ascertained how the fund was sourced, a source close to the party leadership and the former governor disclosed that the budget was funded thoroughly without a review.

    Our source said, “Just weeks to the governorship election, N3bn had been released to the committee and I am sure the N500m balance was also released.”.

    It was against the above background that the APC in the state accused Okowa of being part of the cabal that plunged the state into that depth in the pit of debt.

    APC’s Media Adviser in Delta state, Dr Martins Mukoro, in a press release slammed Okowa for shedding ‘crocodile tears’ urging the people of the state not to get carried away by the subterfuge.

    Mukoro said Okowa’s lamentation was merely to prepare the minds of Deltans for another jamboree in the debt market, adding that he represented the misrule that had bedeviled the state in the hands of the PDP over the past 16 years.

     

    •Uduaghan
    •Uduaghan

    “From Gov Okowa’s days as Commissioner under Gov Ibori to his days as the Secretary to the Government under Gov Uduaghan that accumulated these debts , he has no moral excuse to attempt to distance himself as if he was an on-looker or bystander while the state was being wrecked!

    “Gov Okowa was not an onlooker but a key participant and a major co-conspirator in wrecking the finances and Economy of Delta State and he is in no position to rescue Delta from the mess created by him and the past PDP Administrations.”

  • How Ibori bought N3.4b jet, by UK police

    How Ibori bought N3.4b jet, by UK police

    •Report exonerates Bi-Courtney’s chair Babalakin

    Fresh facts indicated yesterday that a report of the Metropolitan Police has shown that the Chairman of Bi-Courtney, Dr. Olawale Babalakin or his company has no link with the purchase of a N3.4billion Challenger Jet by ex-Governor James Ibori.

    There was also no part of the report showing that Babalakin is wanted in the United Kingdom or anywhere in connection with the deal by Ibori.

    The EFCC had accused Babalakin and four others of laundering over N3.4billion through Mauritius for ex-Governor James Ibori to buy the controversial Challenger Jet Aircraft.

    The others are Stabilini Vision Limited, Bi-Courtney Limited, Alex Okoh, and Renix Nigeria Limited.

    It also accused the five suspects of siphoning $11.3million abroad for Ibori through Erin Aviation Account in Mauritius.

    But a document exclusively obtained yesterday by our correspondent revealed that neither Babalakin nor any of his firms was on the list of those investigated by the Met Police.

    None of the suspects implicated in the alleged scandal was referred to in the Met Police document.

    The Met Police said its officers are prepared to come to Nigeria to testify.

    The Met Police implicated a London based solicitor called Bhadesh Babulal GOHIL (BG) as the mastermind of how the controversial jet was purchased.

    These facts were contained in a bundle of information, dated August14, 2014, which was sent to the immediate past Attorney-General of the Federation, Mr. Mohammed Bello Adoke (SAN) from the UK Central Authority Judicial Cooperation Unit.

    In the document, which gave insights into how the Challenger Jet was bought, there was no mention of Babalakin or any of his company.

    The information reads: “A mutual legal Assistance Letter of Request was received by the United Kingdom Central Authority from Mr. Mohammed Bello Adoke, SAN, CFR the Attorney General of Nigeria dated 11th July 2012 and was referenced CAU/MLA/007/12.

    “This request was for assistance to obtain evidence in relation to an investigation conducted by the Metropolitan Police in relation to the funding of a jet aircraft by a company called Erin Aviation. This statement is made to clarify the investigation.

    “The funding of this aircraft was part of an investigation called Operation Tureen and centred on the money laundering activities of James Onanefe Ibori (JI). The investigation began in March 2005 and as it progressed it became apparent that JI has utilised the services of a London based solicitor called Bhadesh Babulal GOHIL (BG).

    “JI had instructed BG to purchase UK property, assist with his very day expenses such as utility bills, his children’s school fees and his Centurion American Express credit card bills amongst others.

    “The investigation also revealed that BG was involved in the purchase of a Challenger Jet aircraft from a Canadian company called Bombardier Inc. BG used his company’s client accounts to launder stolen monies received from Nigeria and falsified due diligence documents to authenticate the monies he received.

    “As the investigation progressed it became necessary to arrest BG for his role in the money laundering activity and to search his business premises.

    “BG was arrested by DC Greenwood on suspicion of money laundering at the premises and was cautioned. The premises were searched and a large quantity of documentation and computers were seized.

    “From examination of the material seized from the premises it became apparent that BG had been instructed to purchase a luxury business jet aircraft from a Canadian company called Bombardier Inc based in Texas and Canada.

    “BG, in his capacity as a solicitor, conducted the required legal work for the purchase price of the jet aircraft which was due to cost in excess of $20million.

    “BG used a variety of ‘off the shelf’ company vehicles to purchase property for JI and his family in particular BG used the services a fiduciary company called Copex Management Services (CMS) who were based in Mauritius to set up such companies.

    “For the purchase of the aircraft BG intended to use an ‘off the shelf’ company called Teleton Quays Ltd (TQ) which was a special purposed vehicle designed to simply hold the ownership.

    “TQ was incorporated by BG in the British Virgin Islands using a formation agency called Trident Trust on 22nd April 2005 and the early contracts paperwork with Bombardier Inc showed TQ as the initial purchaser.

    However, BG actually used TQ to purchase a house in Dorset, UK for JI situated at 42 Great Ground, Shaftesbury because the builders required a quick sale and BG had no other special purpose vehicle available.

    “ Therefore, BG then needed a new separate special purpose vehicle to hold the ownership of the jet aircraft. BG therefore instructed CMS to incorporate a company called Erin Aviation in Mauritius. “The papers seized from Arlingtons Sharmas Solicitors offices on the 7th November 2007 revealed that Erin Aviation was beneficiary owned by a NM who it was established was a known associate of JI.

    “It is my belief that NM was a ‘front man’ introduced into the intended aircraft purchase in order to keep JI’s name away from the ownership.”

     

  • Ibori’s men return in Delta

    Ibori’s men return in Delta

    But for the twist of faith and the death of former President Umar Yar’Adua, Chief James Onanefe Ibori could have been the indisputable leader of the South-South caucus of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP). His influence was sluicing through regional barriers and crossing the Niger River to the North, East and West of Nigeria. In spite of that tragedy, Oghara, Delta State-born Ibori still would have commanded immense influence in the region, but for his brush with anti-corruption agencies over his management of the funds of the oil-rich state that he ruled – or plundered according to the EFCC – for eight years.

    Yet, ardent followers and supporters of the convicted ex-governor are quick to point that his travails are due mostly to the fear of his immense influence and power by President Goodluck Jonathan, who he successfully upstaged during the brief Yar’Adua years. In spite of being the Number 2 Citizen, in those years, Goodluck Jonathan always came out a distance second best in his several brushes with Ibori, both in Aso Rock and regional politics.

    However, in the twilight of the Jonathan administration, there are indications that Ibori is coming back stronger and pulling the strings, even from far away London, where he is serving the last of his 13 years jail term, following his guilty plea and eventual conviction for money laundering, on Tuesday, April 17, 2012, by Southwark Crown Court for his crimes. Although there is possibility that he could face further trial in Nigeria, the stigma has not dampened his political clout and followership both within and outside his state. He has friends across the political divides and still enjoys cooperation of his former colleagues, including very powerful members of the National Assembly.

    Those who are conversant with the political landscape of Delta State during his reign could say that nothing much has changed from 1999 when the cherub-faced politician bestrode the scene like colossus’ to 2015, when one of his former commissioners is waiting in the wings to take over the state’s affairs on May 29.

    Ibori’s ‘men’ are back and still fully in control as indicated by the outcome of the last elections in the state. From the governor-elect (Senator Ifeanyi Okowa) to the three senators, there are few politicians in the state who can say ‘no’ to the man popular known as ‘Odidigborigbo’.

    One source said, “Rather than being tempered by his years in detention, Ibori has remained the power behind the throne in the state; not only because the outgoing governor is his brother, but the incoming administration is firmly in his sphere. There is a rumour now that the list of commissioners and other appointments being considered by Senator Okowa included 40 percent of names sent from London. The outgoing governor only has about 10 percent. That is to tell you how powerful Ibori still is in this state.”

    While the claim of the former governor getting 40 percent of the appointments seemed somewhat exaggerated, there is no doubt that the Ibori clique has bounced back strongly in the state. The list of those elected into the next republic and other appointments would firmly confirm this.

    From Uduaghan to Okowa

    From 1999 to 2007, Dr Emmanuel Uduaghan and Senator Ifeanyi Okowa, outgoing and incoming governors respectively; Senator James Manager and Chief Ighoyota Amori formed a powerful axis of key confidant to Chief James Ibori. Uduaghan, his blood cousin and childhood friend, was the Commissioner for Health from the beginning to the end of Ibori’s first tenure.

    He was appointed Secretary to the State Government on May 29, 2003; it was the first appointment made by Ibori immediately he took his oath of office during his second coming shortly after Ibori left the Asaba Cenotaph, venue of his inauguration.

    The duo administered the state without commissioners for nearly three months. Even when appointments were later made, there wasn’t any doubt that Uduaghan was the de facto governor; he held the rein of power while now embattled former governor travelled round the world in pursuit of further education and his business interests.

    Those who knew the relationship between the cousins predicted, rightfully as it turned out, that the ground was being prepared for the older cousin to take over from his more adventurous and political savvy younger sibling. Rewind to 2015 and Uduaghan is rounding up an eight-year two-tenure as governor.

    At a keenly contested governorship primary of the Peoples’ Democratic Party (PDP) at Ogwashi-Uku, Uduaghan barely defeated Senator Ifeanyi Okowa. The outcome of the rancorous almost threw a spanner in the works of Ibori and that of the party in the state, as the defeated Okowa and his supporters reportedly threatened to work against Uduaghan’s election.

    Ibori stepped in swiftly and an amicable agreement was reached. A source in the know about the deal, said it led to Okowa’s appointment as Uduaghan’s SSG. The aggrieved Ika-born Okowa was asked to await his turn at the expiration of Uduaghan’s eight-year tenure in 2015. As part of that deal, Okowa worked for and supported Uduaghan during the January 2011 re-run election and the proceeding election months later.

    While awaiting his date with destiny, Okowa contested and won both the PDP senatorial primaries and general election to represent the Delta North Senatorial District in the upper house of the National Assembly in 2011.

    Still, Okowa remained heavily linked to Ibori, who sources said had anointed him as Uduaghan’s successor long ago. Although the incumbent had two other aspirants, the Ibori apparition loomed large, with his daughter actively campaigning and supporting Okowa, who had appointed her as one of his aides.

    James Manager:

    Senator James Manager was the Ijaw element in the political quartet which wielded so much power under Ibori. He was the pioneer chairman of the PDP in the state and as Commissioner for Works; he was very powerful; so much so that when he left the position, the ministry he headed was split into three – Works, Housing and Transport.

    He was the first to move to the Federal Capital Territory (FCT) as a Senator in 2003. His victory at the PDP primary was reminiscent of the tension and threat of war similar to the one that forced Uduaghan to backtrack on his ambition to succeed him in the December 2014 PDP Delta-South senatorial primary.

    One school of thought said he was eased out because he was becoming too ambitious and uncontrollable, while another claimed that he was ‘deployed’ to the seat of power to prepare the way for Ibori’s ambition at the bigger stage. He is widely seen as a diehard loyalist of Oghara-born political maestro and his closeness with the former governor has enabled him become the first politician to make a sensational fourth term return to the Red Chamber in the Delta South Senatorial District.

    Ighoyota Amori

    Chief Ighoyota Amori is the Senator-elect on the platform of the PDP to represent the Urhobo people, who are mainly in Delta Central Senatorial District of the state. He is a man who prides himself as the alter ego of Chief James Ibori. Amori, like Ibori, hails from Ethiope West LGA of the state and he is believed to be instrumental to Ibori’s victory in 1999. He was very powerful in the eight year administration of the Ibori, so much so that he assumed the sobriquet of ‘Odidimadi’.

    He was believed to have used his relationship with the governor to influence the appointment of his loyalists into key positions. It was an open secret that the former governor allotted the Urhobo parts of the state as a fiefdom to Mosogar-born Amori.

    At the height of his prominence in the state’s politics under Ibori, he was seen as the kingmaker, not only in the politics of his locality and senatorial district, but in the state.

    Although he was demystified by the outcome of the governorship primaries and the subsequent election, Amori remained close to Ibori. Sources say he pays regular visits to his ‘Leader’ in London and usually returns with a political compass for the caged politician’s followers.

    Delta State House of Assembly

    On the other hand, Ibori’s first child and daughter, Erhiatake (Take for short) is also warming up to take a seat in the State House of Assembly after her victory in the April 11 election on the platform of the PDP. Power brokers in the state told our reporter that she would easily have been made the Speaker but for the rule that a first timer cannot assume the highest post in the House.

    However, it is not only in Take and the other high-flyers that the ‘legacies’ of Ibori has endured in the political scene of the state. His followers and supporters still hold very high elective political positions and appointments in all facets of the state’s politics from the House of Representatives to the State Assembly and even local government councils.

    The member representing Uvwie, Sapele and Okpe Federal Constituency in the House of Representative, Hon Evelyn Oboro, is a known fanatical supporter of the former governor, who mentored and played a key role in her emergence as Chairman of Uvwie LGA during his tenure. She is returning to the Green Chamber for a record second term in the Uvwie, Okpe and Sapele Federal Constituency.

    The incoming State Assembly also has a plethora of Ibori loyalists from the fourth term Hon Daniel Mayuku, Chairman House Committee on Appropriation to Speakership candidate, Hon Monday Igbuya, Talib Tebite and Tim Owhefere to greenhorns like Chief Michael Diden, a former Chairman of Warri North LGA and DESOPADEC commissioner; Reuben Izezi, a former student activist, who got his first political appointment under the former governor; Hon Orezi Esievo, who was drafted from Shell Petroleum Development Company and appointed a commissioner by the former governor and Toju Abigor among others.

    It is against the background of the above scenario that the fate ahead of Ibori and the outgoing President is strikingly contrasting. Although he was tamed, the situation on ground in Delta State and with his key allies still occupying prominent positions in the two main political parties, APC and PDP, nobody who truly understands Nigerian politics would want to bet against Ibori getting the last laugh.