Tag: Obono-Obla

  • Present your 22-year scorecard, Obono-Obla tackles Tambuwal 

    Present your 22-year scorecard, Obono-Obla tackles Tambuwal 

    A former Presidential Aide, Okoi Obono-Obla, has challenged former Sokoto Governor, Senator Aminu Tambuwal, to give account of his achievements after spending 22 years in power in various capacities.

    Obono-Obla was reacting to Tambuwal’s recent interview where he attacked the administration of President Bola Ahmed Tinubu and the personality of the Federal Capital Territory (FCT) Minister, Chief Nyesom Wike.

    He particularly asked Tambuwal to mention the tangible efforts he had made to tackle the myriad of problems facing the country.

    Obono-Obla told Tambuwal to show to Nigerians why he deserved to stay in power for such a prolonged period.

    Read Also: Tinubu sincere, requires our support, says Obono-Obla 

    Addressing Tambuwal, the Cross River born-lawyer said: “You served as Speaker of the House of Representatives for four years.  You were a member of the House of Representatives from 2003 to 2015.  You governed Sokoto State from 2015 to 2023.  You are currently a Senator of the Federal Republic of Nigeria.  

    “Cumulatively, you have been in government for 22 years—amounting to over two decades. Kindly present your scorecard.  

    “What have you done to justify this prolonged stay in the corridors of power?  

    What tangible efforts have you made to address the myriad challenges confronting this country?  

    “Is your presence in government merely to enjoy the perks of office, the glamour, and the razzmatazz of power?”.

  • FG panel uncovers land fraud in Abuja

    The Special Presidential Investigation Panel for the Recovery of Public Property (SPIP) said it has uncovered fraudulent practices in land allocation in the Federal Capital Territory (FCT).

    The panel said the Federal Government has lost huge funds to the fraudulent practices where parcels of land are allocated for mass housing projects without the necessary payments made.

    Read Also:Two NECO officials suspended for alleged N400m fraud

    SPIP said findings by its investigative team revealed that, as at June this year, over 300 parcels of land were allocated for mass housing projects, but that 79 per cent of the beneficiaries “have not complied with statutory requirements and payments.”

    SPIP Chairman, Okoi Obono-Obla disclosed these during a visit to the Minister of the FCT, where he sought the Minister’s support for his panel’s planned public hearing on the issue.

    Obono-Obla said: “It may interest you to know that the panel is here to discuss issues concerning fraudulent leasing of land for mass housing development resulting in the non-payment of rates and fees amounting to billions of naira.

    “The panel, in the course of discharging its mandate, received intelligence on fraudulent leasing of land for mass housing development which has resulted in non-payment of rates and fees amounting to billions of naira.

    “Analysis of documents collected and collated in the course of investigation activities revealed as follows: As at June, 2018 over 300 mass housing lands were leased to developers.

    “Only 252 developers leased mass housing lands have reported and documented with the Department of Mass Housing. Only 71 sites have been inspected.

    “Only 64 developers have completed and signed lease agreements. 79% of the developers that benefited from Mass Housing Land leases have not complied with statutory requirements and payments.

    “From 2010 to June, 2018, the total fees collected amounted to N1, 086, 750, 000 only. This falls far short of the amount that ought to have been realised by the FCT.

    “Moving forward and in consonance with the Recovery of Public Property (Special Provisions) Act, 2004, the non-compliance of the beneficiaries of mass housing leases to statutory requirement is an act of economic adversity.

    “Therefore there is the need to recover the outstanding public funds,” Obono-Obla said.

  • AGF stops Obono-Obla panel

    AGF stops Obono-Obla panel

    •Aide declines comment

    Vice President Yemi Osinbajo has expressed discomfort about the activities of the Special Investigation Panel for the Recovery of Public Property (SIPRPP).

    The panel is headed by the Special Assistant to President Muhammadu Buhari on Prosecution, Mr.Okoi Obono- Obla.

    The panel set up under the Recovery of Public Property (Special Provisions) Act, was constituted in August by the government.

    However, the Vice President is said to be unhappy with the way the panel’s Chairman was exercising his power.

    Although no details of any wrongdoing was disclosed, Obono-Obla is alleged to have disregarded Civil Service’s established administrative procedures and protocols.

    Minister of Justice and Attorney General of the Federation (AGF) Abubakar Malami disclosed this in a November 1, 2017 letter to Obono-Obla, a copy of which was sighted at the weekend.

    It was learnt that Malami’s letter was informed by an earlier letter by the VP and in which he (the VP) complained about the activities of the Obono-Obla-led panel.

    It was learnt that the AGF has now asked Obono-Obla to halt further activities in his capacity as the Chairman of the panel.

    The AGF, according to a source within the Federal Ministry of Justice, has also asked Obono-Obla to provide an up-to-date report of the panel’s activities till date, and to seek clearance from the Minister of Justice before taking further actions.

    Obono-Obla is said to have also been asked to seek clearance from the AGF before granting interviews.

    The AGF in his letter in which he acknowledged receipt of the letter from Osinbajo, expressed his concerns on the activities of the Panel which runs contrary to the enabling Act establishing it.

    He also noted that “the activities of the Panel run foul or contrary to established administrative procedures and protocols in the Federal Civil Service structure.

    “In view of the foregoing, coupled with the directives contained in the letter under reference, you are hereby directed to refrain from any further action or taking any step in your capacity as the Chairman of the Special Investigation Panel on the Recovery of Public Property with immediate effect until directed otherwise by His Excellency, the Vice President.

    “While you are to await further instructions in respect of the panel’s mandate, you are hereby directed to promptly provide a detailed up-to-date report on the activities of the panel to the undersigned for onward transmission to the Vice President.

    “Furthermore, you are required to henceforth seek clearance from the Honourable Attorney General of the Federation and Minister of Justice before granting any media interview or making press releases on official matters.”

    Obono-Obla confirmed the AGF’s letter to him, but declined to comment on its content or react to issues contained in it.

    He said he would not comment because it was still an issue between him and the AGF.

    He said the issue referred to was contained in a letter the AGF wrote to him, and to which he was preparing his response.

    Obono-Obla said it would be wrong for him to discuss such an issue in the media when he had not responded to the AGF’s letter.

    “I cannot comment. Is it about the letter from the AGF to me? Who took it to the Press? We have to find out first.

    “Because. it is a private communication from the AGF to me, and to which he requires me to react. And to which I am preparing my reaction.

    “So, I don’t know why it should be made a matter of controversy in the media.

    “I will have to first react to the minister’s letter before answering any questions from the media,” Obono-Obla said

    Read Also: FG drops Obono-Obla as recovery panel chairman

  • FG drops Obono-Obla as recovery panel chairman

    FG drops Obono-Obla as recovery panel chairman

    The Federal Government has dropped Mr Okoi Obono-Obla as the Chairman, Special Investigation Panel on recovery of Public Property.

    The announcement was made on Sunday by Mr Salihu Isah, Special Adviser, Media and Publicity to the Minister of Justice, Mr Abubakar Malami.

    He said that Obono-Obla was directed to stop carrying out operations as head of the panel.

    Isah said that the directive which was issued in a letter addressed to the panel’s chairman was signed by Malami.

    According to Isah the decision to release Obono-Obla of the position was based on the grounds that his recent actions were contrary to the enabling act that established the panel.

    He said that the letter equally stated that the activities of the panel had contravened the established administrative procedures and protocols in the nation’s civil service structure.

    Obono-Obla was instructed to, henceforth, seek clearance from the minister before granting any interview or issuing press statements on official matters.

    He was also directed to provide a detailed report on the activities of the panel to Malami for onward transmission to the Vice President, Prof. Yemi Osinbajo. (NAN)

  • Prosecution office to take over Abuja houses – Obono-Obla

    Prosecution office to take over Abuja houses – Obono-Obla

    The Chairman of the Special Presidential Investigation Panel for the Recovery of Public Property, Okoi Obono-Obla, said on Tuesday the Federal Government would soon take over empty houses in Abuja and sell them.

    Obono-Obla, who is also the Senior Special Assistant to the President on Prosecution, stated this when the “Say No Campaign,” a civil society organization, paid him a courtesy call in Abuja.

    He said there was need for the government to collaborate with civil society groups in order to search out properties of looters of national treasury.

    He said: “I want the houses taken over. That is where CSOs will have to work together with us.

    “We have to take over those buildings and sell them and maybe put the money into education for our children.

    “I was appointed to work to galvanise the anti- corruption war. This assignment is a very important one and I will do it well.”

    Obono-Obla said there was a law known as the Recovery of Public Property special provisions Act which had been in existence for the past 40 years without being implemented by successive regimes.

    NAN

     

     

  • EFCC, Obono-Obla and anti-corruption war

    One of the constitutional amendments that Nigerians have been clamouring for is the separation of the office of attorney-general from the position of minister of justice. For many citizens, the continuous lumping together of the portfolio of attorney general with the minister of justice, a politician, will never improve the administration of justice in the land, strip it of all political encumbrances and in the end and make justice delivery truly blind.

    Typically, the 8th Senate, a parliament that has earned the notoriety of representing the people only by nomenclature, spectacularly failed the people yet again by voting against that item. Anyway, who expects a Senate that draws a sizable portion of its membership from politicians running from justice to pass such a fundamental law? Yes, this Senate has been reduced to a safe sanctuary for allegedly corrupt former governors, and some ‘crooked’ politicians and businessmen that can only make the day in court for any professional attorney general, not a politician appointed as minister of justice!

    In no other place has the tenuous relationship and contradictions inherent in the continuous merging of the office of the attorney general with a politically biased minister of justice inhibiting the administration of justice than the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission, EFCC. Naturally, the EFCC as a commission reports to the Attorney General and Minister of Justice. The history of the relationship between the EFCC and its supervisory authority has not been what was envisaged by its founders.

    Instead, this relationship has been characterized by power play, intrigues and clash of interests. Except for the pioneer chairman, Nuhu Ribadu, no other chairman of EFCC, has enjoyed the relative independence of the commission, devoid of the hot breath of the supervisory authority down its shoulders. Even in his wee hours as chairman – when the government that appointed him left office – Ribadu was being subjected to the daily scrutiny of the attorney general who was pursuing his own political interests. Ask Ibrahim Lamorde and Mrs. Farida Waziri, they probably would not have nice things to say about their working relationship with Mohammed Adoke and Michael Aondoakaa, respectively.

    This background is perhaps necessary to locate the trajectory of the Special Assistant to the President on Prosecution, Okoi Obono-Obla. The previous week, Obono-Obla, as reported in the media accused the acting chairman of the EFCC, Ibrahim Magu, and the ICPC chairman, Ekpo Nta, of insubordination. Specifically, he alleged that the two heads of anti-corruption agencies had refused to submit to the attorney general (or is it his National Committee on Prosecution), the case files of more than 35 high profile former governors and senators under their investigation.

    Obono-Obla who clearly came across as a proxy of the attorney general not only suggested reporting the EFCC and ICPC chairmen to the Presidency but equally threatened sanctions against them. Even more troubling is the introduction of subtle blackmail in Obono-Obla’s tone by suggesting that the non-submission of the files by the ant-corruption agencies “caused a setback to the anti-graft campaign of the federal government” and had led to the loss of some high-profile cases in court recently.

    It is reassuring that Obono-Obla, being a critical stakeholder, is worried about the flagging of the anti-corruption war of the Buhari government. Obono-Obla was appointed by a President who wants his fight against corruption to succeed perhaps more than any other policy. The President rightly or wrongly sees the EFCC as presently constituted perfectly suited to lead the onslaught against corruption. That is why despite the rejection of Ibrahim Magu by the Senate on two occasions, President Buhari insisted that the EFCC chairman remains his only choice to head the anti-corruption agency.

    The earlier, aides of President Buhari understand this position and work towards cooperating rather than weakening the choice of the President at EFCC, the better for all of us in terms of winning this war against a well-fortified enemy. It is interesting to note that the week Obono-Obla, on behalf of the attorney general, lashed out at Magu requesting for more than 35 files from the EFCC, was the same week the Senate voted against splitting the office of the attorney general from the minister of justice; it was the same week that the Senate within a record one week passed the National Financial Intelligence Unit (NFIU) Act into law seeking to remove it from the EFCC.

    More than anything else, the dirty politics within the executive arm apparently to force Ibrahim Magu out of the EFCC, for whatever reason, is responsible for the loss of steam in the fight against corruption. While it is all too easy to blame the Senate for truncating Magu’s confirmation, the Department of State Security, (DSS) provided the fuel with which the Senate used in lynching him.

    Now, the attorney general, using Obono-Obla as a proxy, is literally asking for the keys to the EFFC building because that is what submitting the requested files means. Yes, EFCC must report to the attorney general and seek clarifications where there are doubts but this whole idea of requesting for the files of high profile politicians under investigation triggers something quite ominous in the land. The last attorney general who made similar demands on the EFCC was Michael Aondoakaa under the presidency of Umar Musa Yar’Adua.

    By the time Aondoakaa finished with his abracadabra, Chief James Ibori, the former governor of Delta State, had escaped justice in Nigeria only to be convicted in a foreign country to the shame of our judiciary and the EFCC. Granted, the attorney general and Obono-Obla may have noble reasons for requesting EFCC to hand over files of high profile politicians under investigation for prosecution, but can they vouch for everyone in their team including their own staff that information will not be traded this time around? And mind you, in two years’ time, another general election is due and politicians are getting ever so desperate.

    There is no doubt that Obono-Obla is passionate about fighting corruption and wants successful prosecution of suspects in court. Indeed, he publicly speaks forcefully about this. Yet sometimes without knowing it, we sabotage the very projects we pursue with our own hands. Obono-Obla has been here and everywhere throwing his weight around; he is constantly getting on the nerves of his colleague lawyers who disagree with his viewpoint; he goes about castigating judges for taking sides with ‘corrupt people’ in explaining some of the losses the government has suffered in the courts. If he thinks this attitude helps in the anti-corruption war, he is dead wrong.

    What will help though is to use his committee to strengthen the EFCC; not by making himself a willing tool in an orchestrated plan that may end up undermining EFCC operations.

     

    • Ugboajah, a policy analyst, writes from Abuja.