Tag: scam

  • EFCC disclaims recruitment scam adverts

    EFCC disclaims recruitment scam adverts

    The Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) on Monday dissociated itself from scandalous adverts on employment from the commission.
    This is contained in a statement signed by the Head, Media and Publicity of the Commission, Mr Wilson Uwujaren, made available in Abuja.

    According to the statement, the scam was to mislead vulnerable Nigerians and tarnish the reputation of the commission.

    It stated that “the EFCC wishes to alert the general public about the activities of some unscrupulous elements who have cashed in on the plan by the Commission to recruit more personnel to defraud unsuspecting job seekers.

    “In recent weeks, some unscrupulous online portals have featured advertisements supposedly from the EFCC, inviting applicants for employment into the service of the Commission.

    “The Commission wishes to dissociate itself from these advertorials.”

    The statement added that the platform where the fake advertorial was made is http://forumng.com/ng/forum/279564/nigeria-efcc-recruitment.

    It added that the EFCC recruitment was still a proposal and would announce it on major dailies, as well as the official website of the Commission — http://www.efccnigeria.org, or through proxy and online portals.

    The statement further advised the populace to report to the designated security agencies in situations of fraudulent means of employment.

  • Like a scam

    Like a scam

    •Was National Hospital, Abuja, hoaxing or merely horsing around when it booked a surgery it could not perform?

    It ought to be the number one public hospital in Nigeria. Situated right in the heart of the Federal Capital Territory, the National Hospital, Abuja (NHA) which began operation about 16 years ago, is a specialist facility that boasts some of the best medical professionals — Nigerians and expatriates.

    According to the hospital’s website: “Our strength lies in the use of state-of-the-art technology in a clean, conducive and patient-friendly environment, using highly skilled and motivated staff who see their employment here more as a vocation than a bread basket.”

    It is on account of the foregoing that we are taken aback by a recent report in a national newspaper in which a housewife accused the NHA of an action that could pass for a scam.

    In the report, one Mrs. Stella Adepegba had accused the NHA of charging her the sum of N50,000 for a surgery procedure it had no immediate capacity to carry out. According to Mrs. Adepegba, she had visited the hospital in May and after many weeks of evaluation she had been slated for hysteroscopy procedure on June 25, 2015. On this day, she was made to pay the fee and thereafter, wheeled into the theatre for the operation.

    However, after waiting in the theatre for hours without any sign that the procedure would begin, it took a technician who happened by to inform her that the hysteroscopy machine had been dysfunctional for over two years and was yet to be repaired as far as he knew. The technician was indeed bemused that she was billed for the procedure in the first place.

    He further revealed to her that another patient had paid for the same treatment two years earlier and had been parading the hospital for so long. In fact, she was made to visit every month to find out whether the machine had been repaired. Up till last June, she neither got treated nor was a refund made.

    In like manner, Mrs. Adepegba who said she was shocked by the ‘treatment’ she received at a premium national health facility like the NHA, requested for a refund since June 29. But as at last week, she was yet to get a positive response; instead, she was being given the run-around.

    “Since I submitted the letter (June 29), the National Hospital, Abuja, has refused to refund the money. My husband… went to their finance department, and they said they could not find the letter again. He also made a written complaint to the Chief Medical Director, but the money has not been refunded till date. This made me to conclude that the hospital has been scamming Nigerians by collecting money for medical procedures it lacked the capacity to do”, Adepegba lamented.

    ‘We aver that it is not enough to merely make a refund to the patient/victim, if indeed her story were true. The NHA is a major national institution and a medical one at that where matters concern life and death. The hospital’s management must investigate this issue thoroughly and ascertain whether there are other cases in other departments’

    Not even the communications unit of the hospital has a plausible response to the allegations above. The unit merely acknowledged awareness of the matter and noted further that, “the finance department has been directed to fast-track the refund of Adepegba’s money.”

    We aver that it is not enough to merely make a refund to the patient/victim, if indeed her story were true. The NHA is a major national institution and a medical one at that where matters concern life and death. The hospital’s management must investigate this issue thoroughly and ascertain whether there are other cases in other departments. It must make full and proper restitution. Beyond, that, it must also ensure that patients who have been denied medical attention as a result of this seeming official chicanery are availed due medical attention.

    NHA management must take into cognizance the fact that it may be held culpable, should the medical conditions of these diagnosed but mismanaged patients go awry. They will not stand exonerated until the now-delayed proposed procedures have been successfully carried out.

    Finally, the NHA would need to straighten its processes; it would need to manage its dented image and reclaim its face over this matter, wouldn’t it?

     

  • Oshiomhole: Jonathan’s agric revolution a big scam

    Oshiomhole: Jonathan’s agric revolution a big scam

    Edo State Governor, Adams Oshiomhole has criticised the much touted agricultural revolution of former President Goodluck Jonathan’s administration, describing,  it as a big scam. The nation, he said, is still import-dependent on rice and other foods.

    Speaking with The Nation, Oshiomhole accused the past government of frittering away over N800billion on waivers for rice millers and others. The past government, he added, also killed local rice production and made agriculture unattractive.

    “The agriculture revolution was one of the advertised achievements of President Goodluck Jonathan but we have since realised that it was purely a scam on us. It is also a policy contradiction where a government will give waivers and support importers to import what can be produced locally, thereby putting its own people out of business while enriching other nations. Local manufacturers that produce locally are punished. Unfortunately for us, rice millers imported rice without even paying duties, as a nation we should not be seen to be importing what is locally produced. Where then is the success story in the sector? Agriculture is not about bow-ties and designers suits but hard facts that cannot be uncontroverted.”

    According to him what the rice millers are practicing is known as dumping in international trade. He accused them of importing all manner of things both the good and the expired and dump it on the people whose government failed to protect due to corruption and maladministration.

    Oshiomhole also called for the immediate discontinuance of fuel importation, urging President Muhammadu Buhari to ensure the refineries are made to produce to local capacity.

    He commended local entrepreneurs such as the President, Dangote Group, Alhaji Aliko Dangote who he said though received waivers on VAT posed on local production of rice and cement.

    On the planned revitalisation of Edo Cement Company at Okpella, he regretted that previous wrong policy of the People Democratic Party caused the ownership of the plant to change three times because rather than locally producing cement the company was importing the product.

  • The oil subsidy scam

    Former Governor Rotimi Amaechi recently said one of the reasons that caused a friction between him and former President Ebele Jonathan was his opposition to subsidy to petrol importers that ballooned from N300 billion a year  to N1.9 trillion. Amaechi was acting on behalf of the governors of the country then  as leader of the informal association of governors  forum. Dr. Jonathan by this time had been pocketed by the cabal of corrupt petrol traders who were also funding generously the PDP and enriching those in the corridor of power . The then president apparently realized at a point that there was something odd in a country spending more money on petrol subsidy than on development and wanted to do something about it. This led him to increase the pump price of petrol but did not have the backbone to resist public outcry  and quickly reduced what he had been advised as the true price of gasoline. The hostility of the public arose from their perception of the rampant corruption in the country. People felt they were not prepared to make sacrifice while the number of private jets was increasing daily. The president himself celebrated this as an index of prosperity  in the land where Nigeria’s rebased GDP gave us the appearance of a rich country and rich people. His so-called coordinating minister of the economy was everywhere alluding to this manufactured achievement of economic prosperity to the discomfiture of the ordinary citizen. Stories were told of washermen, carpenters, garbage collectors being asked to fill forms that they were petrol importers and being subsequently paid billions of naira as subsidy. Young children of party bigwigs became billionaires overnight.

    This jamboree went  on for years until the country nearly went bankrupt following low price of crude oil in the world market forcing the corrupt government to shine some light on the oil imports sector. It found many  people culpable and made some noise and took some people to court including party top dogs or their children but it was all motion without movement for no one has been convicted  neither has money been recovered. To make matters worse, some of the people involved also ruined some of the country’s banks  while the huge foreign reserves Obasanjo left was drawn down on  subsiding this corrupt fuel importation. This  is how we got to this juncture of broken down four refineries and huge importation of refined fuel  which is an embarrassing situation for an oil producing country. The subsidy guzzlers were not interested in functioning refineries. They also never thought of selling the refineries  as part of their market driven economic reforms. Obasanjo had gotten private  operators interested in buying some of the run down refineries but they preferred the so-called annual  turn around contracts award  for the refineries. As usual these contracts went to party hacks who knew nothing about refineries. Instead of calling on those who built the refineries to rehabilitate them they gave the contracts to traders who simply pocketed the huge amounts given them while making some donations to the ruling party. They did this annually with impunity damning the people especially those with conscience to protest or go to hell.

    Now change has hopefully come and we hope and pray that things will change for the better. President Buhari has cautiously said he will not rush to take a decision on oil subsidy. He said he will study the situation first. But it is clear from the several studies done and advice by experts and friendly countries and development partners that that the oil subsidy and the oil sector generally constitute the bedrocks of corruption in Nigeria. We cannot be talking of fighting corruption while dilly-dallying on the oil subsidy issue. If the president does not strike while the iron is hot, subsidy beneficiaries with their enormous resources will mobilize to ensure the failure of its removal. Surprise is a well known military strategy and this president with his huge goodwill  should make up his mind quickly. Besides in the last two months, most Nigerians have been buying fuel at deregulated prices ranging from 100 to 130 naira a litre. If this is the price to pay to release money going into subsidy for development we should be prepared to pay it. Imagine what two or three trillion naira that was being spent for subsidy by the Jonathan government  can do for the development of this country. Delaying a decision on this issue may haunt us in the years to come especially if this government allows the oil oligarchs to mobilize against subsidy removal. The right policy is deregulation. Let the market determine the right and correct price of gasoline and let all who feel they can make profit engage in fuel importation and sell all the refineries at give away price to oil companies engaged in oil production in Nigeria or if they are not willing to buy  them, sell them to those who can run them but certainly not party people and preferably to foreign investors and I repeat at a give-away price of even a dollar provided the buyers promise to put them back into oil refining.

  • EFCC quizzes NAFDAC boss for seven hours over contract scam

    For about seven hours, the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) yesterday interrogated the Director-General of the National Agency for Food and Drug Administration and Control (NAFDAC), Paul Orhii.

    The DG was quizzed on issues bordering on alleged abuse of office and award of contracts.

    It was learnt that a former director of Finance of NAFDAC provided enough evidence to the EFCC on the abuse of the contract system in the agency.

    According to a highly-placed source in the commission, Orhii arrived for questioning at 9am before he was taken to an office to meet with a team of investigators.

    The source said: “The DG of NAFDAC was invited to respond to issues against him. These allegations have to do with alleged abuse of office, favouritism and mismanagement of resources.

    Our investigators also quizzed Orhii on award of contracts and supply of items by companies in which he has interest.

    “The seven-hour interrogation requires that Orhii should provide certain documents including contract papers, minutes of tender board and payment vouchers.

    “We are likely to release him on administrative bail to enable him to source all the evidence.”

    Responding to a question, the source added: “We may also invite some directors and management staff of NAFDAC for interaction.

    “Some of these top management staff, especially a former Director of Finance, have volunteered to testify on the rot in NAFDAC.

    “We will give equal opportunities to all including a few ones alleging that the Director-General was being framed up.

    “So far, investigation is still at the preliminary level. Orhii has been given administrative bail accordingly.”

    The Media Unit of the EFCC confirmed the grilling of the NAFDAC DG.

    A former Finance Director, Ademola Mogbojuri had openly accused Orhii of mismanaging the agency.

    Mogbojuri said: “The truth of the matter is that the DG is quite reckless with spending.

    “Before he joined the agency in 2009, the annual total revenue of NAFDAC was about N2.5bn and he met around N600m in the account. Now, the total internally generated revenue is about N9bn and the agency owes about N5bn in debt.”

    But the NAFDAC DG told reporters in Abuja that the allegations against him were false.

    He accused the former Director of Finance of sabotage.

    He said: “I will rather leave this agency than to allow such impunity to continue”.

    “For me, I would rather collect a loan from the banks to execute my projects. If I know that equipment in the laboratory has broken down, when I know that is where my money is coming from. So, when you refuse to collect a loan when the equipment is broken down, how do you generate revenue to run the agency?”

    “When compared with its United States (U.S.) counterpart, it is by prudent management that we are owing N5 billion. If you compare our budget with that of U.S. agency, we should be spending close to N400 billion a year. And as I said, the law allows us to generate and spend ‘user fees’.”

     

  • NLC leader: Fuel subsidy is a scam

    NLC leader: Fuel subsidy is a scam

    Though he leads a troubled house, Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC) President Comrade Ayuba Wabba does not allow that to affect his vision for the congress. According to him, labour must regain its bite to live up to its billing as workers’ representative.  In this interview with TOBA AGBOOLA, the  comrade-presidentspeaks on a wide range of issues, including the economy, perennial fuel scarcity, subsidy and restructuring of parastatals. 

     

    How is labour contending with the high rate of unemployment and naira devaluation, among other issues?

    First, we are aware of the daunting challenges, especially in our economy and in our social life which have brought a lot of dislocation to our members. We are obviously aware of that and part of our responsibility is to effectively respond to some of these challenges so that our immediate constituency and the larger society would not be at the receiving end of those policies.

    It is true that our currency has been devalued over time due to the fallen price of crude oil which is our major source of revenue, and this has also affected the revenue accruing to government. This has invariably affected the provision of social services and developmental processes. We are mindful of this that is why for every challenge in life, there must be an alternative solution.

    As I said at an earlier event, we have constituted a committee of experts that is working on alternatives to some of these challenges; in fact the report is ready.

    What is labour’s position on petroleum products pricing and the perennial fuel scarcity?

    Yes, incessant increases in the pump price of petrol have been with us for over three or four decades. I am not sure the argument has changed, from what I used to know in the 80s, that has been advanced as reason for shortage or hike in the cost.

    Therefore, it is an irony and it should be a concern to all of us that despite the fact that we are one of the Organisation of Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) that God has blessed enormously with this resource, the issue of managing it has become a problem. First, our inability to refine petroleum products for our domestic use, 40 years down the line, is an issue of mismanagement.

    Recently, I read about a proposition made by the Independent Petroleum Marketers Association of Nigeria (IPMAN), because they are also part of the problem and they have said, yes the subsidy issue is false. They have said that clearly and that they are now ready to buy crude products, refine them outside the country and bring them back even at a lower price.

    Those are issues and information that would interest all of us.

    You’ve just mentioned fuel subsidy. What is your take on it?

    It has been established over time that the issue of subsidy in Nigeria is false. Months before the election, those issues came into play. You remember before Yar’Adua came in, this issue came to play because it’s the same money they use to prosecute the agenda of the election.

    Now preceding the 2015 elections, the same issue had come to play, it’s for us Nigerians to unite in one force and agree. In fact in my view, the issue of subsidy is even questionable, that we need to first interrogate and agree if there is subsidy or not. That case needs to be established, but in the interim I agree with you, Nigerians should not be allowed to suffer and therefore the new government must of necessity put up their thinking cap and see how in the short-term, we will get out of this quagmire.

    Government must make fuel available at a price that is reasonable, so that Nigerians will not be made to suffer the ills of the system. No doubt this is not about few marketers who have taken all of us for granted. In that recent press release issued by IPMAN, they claimed that there is no subsidy anywhere and therefore this claim, or request for over N200 billion, doesn’t exist. Therefore it’s a scam and I think that should be a concern to all of us.

    What action are you contemplating in response to the matter?

    As organised labour, we will be willing to confront these issues headlong. In fact, we are going to revive our monthly discussion and interaction on major policy issues where we will bring experts to debate and that will allow us to have a firm position on how to respond to these issues, but I think what is playing out is also good for us.

    The information clearly will make any government that wants to take any hasty decision to be weary of the fact that the issue of subsidy is a scam and therefore that issue must be addressed first, before you think of either removal of subsidy or not.

    In fact, the information we have, goes beyond lamentations, because in some of the instances we were told even the ones we refine locally, what they do is to put them on ship and come back and say they are imported products and therefore you should pay subsidy on them. So what are you talking about subsidy, it’s just about rhetorics. People are using the rhetoric of subsidy to confuse all of us and continue to benefit from a system that is not working.

    It’s for all of us to come together and agree and give direction that this issue should not continue, few people should not continue to benefit from the system to the detriment of all of us because its artificial scarcity. Why is it that when you go to the outskirts of town, you find fuel?

    So it’s not about unavailability, no, it’s about people also taking us for granted, the fuel is available. A guy that I was interrogating when I saw the government’s response, said they have sufficient strategic reserves. The first statement we asked is whether we have now abandoned the issue of having strategic reserve, they said they have products in abundance; therefore the issue is few marketers holding all of us to ransom.

    Government must find the will to address the issue squarely, what may be delaying our engagement is because you need those key principal officers of government to be on board so that you can engage them. You can’t engage ghosts because for now there are no structures in place. So who do you engage?

    We don’t also want a situation where our action would also compound the issue and bring more hardship to Nigerians, so the issue of withdrawal of services certainly will not be an option.

    The issue is how you confront these challenges headlong to bring about solution; those are the challenges and I am sure we are ready to tackle them.

    From the team we have at NLC now, when you talk of experience, various sectors and key unions that are actually solid, not those that are standing on one leg, we have them in good number to galvanise whatever support we require from Nigerian workers to be able to respond to whatever policy that is being churned out.

    There are indications that this administration may take drastic measures, such as merger of parastatals, to streamline the civil service. This might result in job losses, how will you handle the challenge when it crops up?

    The issue of merger of parastatals, we have made our position very clear because to me that would also be a contradiction to the policy of this present government. They have promised to create three million jobs annually through public works and therefore it will be a contradiction for you to make people to lose their jobs while on the other hand you are trying to create jobs.

    Our employment market in Nigeria is saturated because there is no worker today that would not have more than 10 dependants. I as a person, I know I have more than 10 dependants, or people that have graduated but they are not employed so they depend on me for their means of livelihood. Once you take away that, you are also compounding the social security system in our country. That will not be a better option.

    Secondly, it will also be at a cost because any worker you are severing, you don’t only pay his benefit, you also pay him severance package, so that will be a cost and am not sure they have counted the cost, it’s still mere speculation and we are going to advance these reasons to defend such issues.

    You are aware of the issue of the National Identity Management Commission (NIMC), they have disengaged over 4000 staff, three years down the line, no worker has been paid. In fact part of our engagement is also to engage the process; we have already given them a notice that we will also engage the process and seal off that place, government must find money to pay those workers because it’s not their making for them to be exited from service. They have families to feed, they have worked for a period of years, they are entitled to their benefits but these benefits have not been paid.

    We are not in a jungle, therefore those are issue that am sure cannot fly when we put it side-by-side the facts of the issue. Why do you think the implementation has been delayed till now, it’s because there are a lot of intricacies in it, that is why even the government that set up the committee couldn’t implement the report till date, so I think that is one of the murky areas that should be addressed and government should be very cautious in implementing such reports, we are not the problem.

    Workplace improvement seemed to be the focal point of this year’s International Labour Oganisation (ILO) conference. Tell us how labour centres in Nigeria contributed to discussions at the 104th ILO conference?

    Globally, labour has a standard and part of why we are here is to look at what is the global best practice in terms of decent work agenda, in terms of occupational health and safety, remuneration, application of standards even in terms of collective bargaining.

    That is why we have ILO conventions specifically 87 and 98 which set standards for how labour issues will be discussed, so part of why we are here is to align ourselves to the best global practice in terms of responding to some of those challenges and therefore it’s not a wasted effort for all of us to be here.

    What was your major focus or area of interest at the just concluded ILO conference ?

    We are here to sharpen our skill and also fit into the global system of managing labour and Industrial Relation issues. So basically we are beneficiaries of these process and it’s also a tripartite system where you have employers and the government participating in this process and therefore all of us must conform ourselves to what we refer to as international global practice in labour and trade union administration.

    So part of our take home from here, you also realise that most of our members have participated actively in all the four committees. For instance, I have participated effectively in the Committee on Application of Standard. We have made several interventions.

    I know some of them have participated on the Committee on SMEs; the one on the Formalisation on the Informal Economy and that of Social Protection.

    One issue we can take home from here is the fact that we have sharpened our skills to engage those challenges, because we are not also isolated as Nigeria. Those challenges facing the global economy are also what affect other countries.

    In the same global world, some other countries are talking of reviewing their wages because they also need to empower the workers, those are some of the take home for us and they advanced good reasons why that should take place, because those issues are global issues. What drives development across the world is the labour component.

    Labour creates the wealth through industrialisation and therefore those are issues. As a country we need to queue into that if our quest for development and transformation is anything to go by.

    We must then go back to the basis of creating that wealth through meaningful employment and through making our industries, and work by industrialisation policies.

    Those are some of our take home from this ILO conference and certainly it’s going to give us an edge in addressing some of these challenges.

    How do you intend to return labour movement to its glorious era, given your campaign promise of returning to the founding principles of the movement?

    I think we have actually tried to capture the challenges; there is no gain saying the fact that in terms of prestige, there is drastic change in the way workers perceive NLC over the past few years. This is basically because of the fact that we have not been able to engage a lot of policy issues that have direct bearing on the well-being and welfare of workers and even the citizenry. This substantially has affected our prestige before our members and I think as a member of a very reputable union, this is not an issue we can just gloss over, it is a challenge. When you look at the issue of the economy, I think over the past decades, we have been on top of it, there is no economic issue government will contemplate that NLC has not had its own position whether for or against such policy.

    We are going back to this basic, that is, our founding principle which is to represent only the interest of the workers. And I think for me, this is very key for us to earn the confidence of the workers because once you earn their confidence, you are also able to earn the confidence of the employers. So we are saying that once you make a pronouncement you must be able to back it up with action and see to the conclusion of the issues.

    We are returning to the basics where the interest and only the interest of the workers will dominate our engagement with the government and even form the cords and basis of interactions with other social partners. The area I intend to galvanise and bring back, is the biting and confrontational aspect of the labour movement which is lacking now, when you make pronouncement, you must back it up with necessary action. We have responsibility to bring back the labour culture of representing the Nigerian workers.

     

     

  • 627m ‘scam’: AIG Mbu lied, says businessman

    627m ‘scam’: AIG Mbu lied, says businessman

    The Assistant Inspector General of Police (AIG) in charge of Zone 2, Joseph Mbu, has been accused of telling lies over the alleged torture and illegal detention of the Managing Director of Kafisto Oil and Gas ltd, Mr Uwem Antia and his business partner, Alhaji Suleiman Yerima by operatives of the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) and policemen led by DSP Ibrahim Dantoro.

    Yerima said they were tortured and detained for 80 days illegally by EFCC and policemen under the command of AIG Mbu.

    He also insisted that the foreign exchange business deal for which they were being persecuted were legitimate and in order.

    Yerima, who spoke with The Nation yesterday in Abuja, said he stood by his allegations against the EFCC and AIG Mbu.

    He released the photograph of Antia who was tortured and had his leg broken by policemen. He said amputation of the leg of Antia was being contemplated by the hospital.

    However, EFCC spokesperson Wilson Uwujaren said the allegations were not true, adding that they “amounted to tissue of lies from the pit of hell”.

    Uwujaren added: “EFCC does not have any torture chamber anywhere in the country. Have you ever seen any person saying he was tortured by EFCC? You are aware of our operations since you have been covering our activities, has any accused person said he was tortured or beaten by our men? By your closeness to EFCC at least you can verify from other sources, we don’t torture people.

    “I have told you that EFCC has nothing to do with the alleged torture of Antia, or Suleiman Yerima; if you choose to believe what they are alleging, well, I don’t have any thing else to say. However, if their alleged torture was from some where else, I don’t know, but certainly not from us. There is no iota of truth in it.”

    Mbu at a news conference in Lagos denied that his men tortured any accused persons. He described the allegation as false and mischievously concocted by the suspects to frustrate the ongoing investigations into their serial crimes.

    The AIG alleged that the officer in charge of the investigation, Ibrahim Dantoro ,was offered N50 million bribe to truncate the case, but he refused and informed the command about it.

    Yerima said Mbu was being economical with the truth, saying that as a well-trained police officer, if an accused person offered a bribe, the appropriate thing to do was for the police to set up the accused, collect the bribe and use it as evidence.

    Yerima challenged Mbu to disclose to Nigerians the people the bankers (Mr Dennis Ale and Gladys Aginwa of Standard Chartered Bank) are working for, adding that the AIG should establish whether or not the bankers delivered the  money to their clients.

    Yerima alleged that it was from Mbu’s men that he learnt that the N627 million belonged to former First Lady Dame Patience Jonathan.

    Yerima said the EFCC case referred to by AIG Mbu was transferred from Lagos to Jos on the request of a partner, Ibrahim Suleiman, saying: “I am happy I have only one case in Jos, but AIG Mbu should tell Nigerians how many cases have been instituted against him by innocent people across the country.”

    He said it was quite unfortunate that the EFCC and  Mbu would refer to him and Antia as serial fraudsters over a business matter that was yet pending in court, maintaining that as far as they were concerned, they remained innocent until the court says otherwise.

    Yerima alleged that his life and that of Antia were in danger, adding that he has petitioned President Muhammadu Buhari and security institutions in the country.

    “I am happy I have only one case in Jos, but AIG Mbu should tell Nigerians how many cases have been instituted against him by innocent people across the country”

     

  • BPE in N1.45b scam

    BPE in N1.45b scam

    A row has broken out in the Bureau of Public Enterprises (BPE) over the payment of N1.45billion legal and consultancy fees by the management.

    A lawyer got paid N950million for the liquidation of the Power Holding Company of Nigeria (PHCN) when the company had ceased to exist and  the Office of the Accountant-General of the Federation got N500 million for consultancy.

    The fees were paid contrary to the advice of the immediate past Attorney-General of the Federation, Mr. Mohammed Bello Adoke (SAN) and the Bureau of Public Procurement (BPP), The Nation learnt.

    Also, top directors of the BPE have been implicated in a job racket after 60 hands were hired a few days to the exit of the administration of ex-President Goodluck Jonathan.

    Most of the workers were said to be the children and relatives of the directors, contrary to the ethics of the agency.

    The pioneer chairman of BPE, the late Hamzat Zayyad, put a code of conduct which forbids any employee from hiring his or her relations in the agency.

    Investigation by our correspondent revealed that the curious legal fee of N950million was paid after a meeting of the National Council on Privatisation (NCP) was hurriedly convened by ex-Vice President Namadi Sambo on April 18.

    At the session, it was learnt that the NCP members were deceived into believing that the former AGF and the Bureau of Public Procurement  (BPP) had withdrawn their letters of objection to the payment of the N950million.

    A source said: “There is disquiet in BPE over the payment of N950million to a PDP lawyer to wind down PHCN. The payment was just unnecessary because the liquidation of the PHCN had been concluded since 2013. So, it was shocking to some members of the management that such a curious huge bill came for no service provided in 2015. We suspected that the payment was a slush fund to offset campaign expenses.

    “By the Power Sector Reform Act of 2005, the Federal Government had unbundled the National Electric Power Authority into 11 distribution companies and six generation firms. These were the companies we privatised in 2013. The PHCN then ceased to exist. There was no formal need to wind down PHCN in 2015 to the extent of paying N950million.”

    A source in the Ministry of Justice said: “By our records, the former AGF opposed the payment of the N950million as legal fees to the said lawyer because the liquidation of PHCN had long been completed.

    “Even the ex-AGF said assuming that the NCP was talking of nominal liquidation, the accruing legal fees ought not to be more than N50million.

    “The records are there for the administration of President Muhammadu Buhari to examine all the correspondences.”

    As the BPE was trying to wriggle itself out of the legal fee scandal, two fresh issues have caused tension in the agency.

    It was learnt that the management was shocked that another N500million was paid to the Office of the Accountant-General of the Federation for “consultancy service.”

    “They told us that the N500million was approved by NCP as consultancy payment to the Office of the Accountant-General of the Federation. There was no specific consultancy job given to the OAGF,” a director added.

    It was also learnt that about 60 workers, mostly relations of the top directors in BPE, were recruited three weeks to the end of Jonathan’s administration.

    The source said: “Out of the 60 new workers, 22 who had been casual workers for five years were retained when even there is no provision for casual jobs in BPE.

    “The directors shared the appointments without recourse to the Federal Character Principle. For instance, one brought his daughter, four also employed their children and another engaged his ‘wife’ or mother of his children.”

  • Burden of N8b currency scam on CBN, economy

    Burden of N8b currency scam on CBN, economy

    The banking system is notorious for keeping worn-out and smelly banknotes. Poor monetary policy decisions and abuses by Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) officials as seen in the ongoing N12billion currency scam trial involving 22 bankers are denting the regulator’s image, writes COLLINS NWEZE.

    Edith Okafor, a consumer goods distributor based in Lagos is worried that for the past four years, what she has been paid with worn-out banknotes from her customers. Some of the notes are so bad that her customers kept rejecting them as balance after transactions. In some of the occasions, the customers threw the banknotes back at her, saying they needed cleaner notes.

    Whenever Edith tried to reject the banknotes, the feedbacks from her customers are always the same: “I got this money from my bank or do you think I print money. Where do you want me to get cleaner notes?”

    Perhaps, the customers are right. Finding new banknotes is like finding a needle in a hay sack. Not until last week, when an alleged N8 billion fraud broke out did many people understood why there are much worn-out bank notes in circulation.

    Facing trial over what happened to the N8 billion are 22 bankers, including  six from the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) and 16 others from commercial banks.

    The CBN staff include: Patience Okoro Eye (Abuja), Afolabi Olufemi (Lagos), Kolawole Babalola (Ibadan), Olaniran Muniru Adeola (Ibadan), Fatai Yusuf Adekunle (Head, Security, CBN, (Ibadan) and Ilori Adekunle Sunday (Akure).

    The suspects, the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) alleged, stole and recirculated defaced and mutilated currencies, worth N8 billion. They are being tried at the Federal High Court, sitting in Ibadan, the Oyo State capital.

    The accused persons, according to the prosecution counsel, Mr. Rotimi Jacobs, instead of carrying out the statutory instruction to destroy the defaced currency notes as their duty demands, substituted the currency with newspapers neatly cut to naira sizes. The offence, as contained in a charge sheet read out to the accused persons is punishable under section 7(2) of the Bank Employees etc.(Declaration of Assets) Act, CAP. B1, Laws of the Federal Republic, Nigeria 2004.

    Former President, Chartered Institute of Bankers of Nigeria (CIBN), Mazi Okechukwu Unegbu, said he was not surprised at what the 22 bankers did because the ethics of the profession had gone down over the years.

    He said: “Why is it that Nigerians are spending dead notes but when you go to parties, you see crispy notes? It is because of corruption and the calibre of people managing the economy. The CBN is supposed to be managing the economy and ensuring that clean notes are made available to the people, but the reverse is the case. That tells you we are in a jungle country.”

    Unegbu said such unwholesome practices have made money management difficult.

    The ex-CIBN chief said the N16 million had been injected into in circulation as against the N8 billion that would have been added if the suspects had kept faith with the ethics of their profession in the discharge of their duty.

    According to him, every currency has a lifecycle which should be followed, and the expired notes must be destroyed, but the policy is being abused.  He said the suspect needed the support of bank staff to reintroduce the cash into the system adding that such temptations should be resisted by bankers.

    Unegbu said: “When I was in FirstBank, some fraudsters approached me to assist them circulate counterfeit currencies into the system. I was expected to mix the funds with genuine notes and circulate them into the market.

    “But I refused because we were taught not do such things. I don’t know how many bankers will resist such temptation today.”

    However, the scam never came as a surprise to Henry Boyo, who alleged that Nigerians take for granted even bigger fraud in the CBN.

    The economist said:  “It did not surprise me at all. It was expected. What is clear is that the CBN is fraught with fraud. Whether it is the intervention fund or monetary policy strategy, it is the more you look, the less you see,” he said.

    Boyo described as questionable the practice that allows the CBN to carry out regular mopping up of excess liquidity from the system, alleging that the apex bank mops up over N6 trillion every year and that the one for the first quarter has already been conducted, with N1.5 trillion taken off the system. Commercial banks were paid 10 to 15 per cent interests, leaving them with about N600 billion profit margin.

    Mr. Boyo alleged that the intervention funds, running into billions of naira, must also be investigated just like the Polymer notes scam.

    But, Brown Okorie, another economist, said the mopping up of excess liquidity in the system is the statutory function of the CBN, saying it’s a mechanism to bring down inflation and stabilise the exchange rate.

    Pointing out that the apex bank has several tools to control the inflation rate, he emphasised that the best option at the moment will be to reduce the excess liquidity in the system.

    “The CBN will look at the indicators and decide what tools to use to control the inflation rate, which will all be aimed at reducing excess liquidity in the system,” Okorie said.

    The Intergovernmental Action Group against Money Laundering in West Africa (GIABA) also reacted to the development. It said it has written to the CBN and the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) requesting to be updated on the scam.

    Head, GIABA Office in Nigeria, Timothy Melaye, told The Nation that the alleged fraud has dented the CBN image and that of the country, which is a signatory to the Financial Action Task Force (FATF).

    Melaye said: “Nigeria is a member of FATF and as a member, it should be above board in a matters regarding fraud, money laundering and illegitimate transactions.”

    The FATF is the global standard setting body for Anti-Money Laundering and Combating the Financing of Terrorism (AML/CFT).

    In its efforts to enforce greater compliance with acceptable international standards, the FATF, in collaboration with FATF Styled-Regional Bodies (FSRBs), undertake targeted review of countries/jurisdictions identified with strategic AML/CFT deficiencies with a view to protecting the international financial system from Money Laundering and Terrorist Financing (ML/TF) risks arising from such deficiencies.

    The FATF had in October, 2013, removed Nigeria from the list of countries identified as jurisdictions with significant deficiencies in their AML/CFT regimes.

    The global anti-money laundering body gave its countenance to Nigeria’s significant progress in improving its AML/CFT regime and noted that the country had established the legal and regulatory framework to meet its commitments in its Action Plan regarding the strategic deficiencies that the FATF evaluators had identified previously.

    Melaye called for more effective international cooperation, including exchange of information between competent authorities, conduct of joint investigations, tracing, freezing and confiscation of illegal assets.

    Saying that GIABA has been supporting the EFCC in fight against corruption, he urged: “The EFCC is getting the needed support from GIABA and we want the Nigeria government to provide the necessary financial support for the body do carry out its work more efficiently.”

    What experts are not sure yet, is whether the alleged fraud uncovered at the CBN will prompt the FATF to delist Nigeria from list of countries with AML/CFT compliant regimes.

    Former Executive Director, BankPHB, Richard Obire, said as a regulator, the CBN should be above board when compared with banks’ adherence to ethical banking standards.

    Obire said: “The CBN has to keep a responsible behaviour. If the accusations are established, it will be so unfortunate for the CBN. It is not something to expect at all from a banker, let alone the CBN. The apex bank needs to quickly restore the confidence of banks in their operations.”

    According to him, besides the CBN being the custodian of banking integrity, it needs to come out and assure the public on what it stands for, by getting to the root of the crisis by reviewing its oversight functions on its employees.

    Obire said the same severe sanctions should be extended to the six banks whose workers are allegedly involved in the scam.

    “The banks need to take same steps because they are inexcusable,” he said.

    The former bank director, said that by injecting N8 billion into the financial system, the alleged perpetrators had boosted money supply.

    “And as an import-dependent country, the floating money will be driving up demand for forex, and weakening the naira. If it is not chasing forex, the fund will be targeting other goods, and raising inflation”.

    He recalled that inflation has been on the rise since December last year, from seven per cent to 7.6 per cent in May.

    At the last Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) meeting mid-May, CBN Governor Godwin Emefiele disclosed that the year-on-year headline inflation crept upwards for the fourth consecutive month in April 2015. The inflation rate rose from 8.2 per cent in January to 8.5 per cent in March and further to 8.7 per cent in April.

    According to him, the increase in headline inflation in April reflected increases in both the core and food components. Core inflation rose to 7.7 per cent in April from 7.5 per cent in March, while food inflation increased to 9.5 per cent from 9.4 per cent over the same period.

    The CBN chief noted that the uptick in inflationary pressures, year-to-date, was largely traceable to transient factors such as high demand for transportation, food and energy, especially in the period around the general elections as well as the Easter festivities. He also noted the roles played by system liquidity and the pass-through effects of the recent depreciation of the naira exchange rate.

    Reiterating CBN’s commitment to price stability, Emefiele noted that given the already tight stance of monetary policy and the transient nature of the incubators of the current inflationary trend, which are outside the direct control of monetary policy, the space for maneuver remains constrained, necessitating the intervention of fiscal and structural policies to stimulate output growth.

    Equally, broad money supply (M2) increased by 1.80 per cent in April, over December 2014 level. When annualised, M2 increased by 5.39 per cent, but it remained lower than the growth benchmark of 15.24 per cent for the year.

    Both Obire and Unaegbu agree that the impact of the N8 billion cash fraud cannot be ruled out in driving inflation to its new heights. They believe that since the funds were reprinted and ploughed back into the system, the additional N8 billion fraud cash will bring the total cash to N16 billion, instead of approved N8 billion.

    Within the banking industry, there have also been reactions to the alleged fraud, which has shaken the financial sector to its roots.

    Head of Media at FirstBank Babatunde Lasaki said the transactions were done basically by CBN staff in collaboration with five employees in his bank.

    He said two of the employees had been sacked while the remaining three are helping the EFCC on the ongoing investigation.

    Lasaki said that it is after the true picture unfolds that the remaining staff if culpable may be dismissed.

    Also speaking, Head, Corporate Communications, Wema Bank Plc, Onome Odili, said the affected workers in her bank had been sacked long ago. Like Lasaki, she said the fraud is a CBN show and that her bank officials were brought in to implement it.

    An insider in Ecobank said the two affected officials left the bank, when they suspected that the crime had uncovered.

    Another insider in Access Bank said the two officials of the bank are involved are legacy staff from the defunct Intercontinental Bank. The source said the CBN should be blamed because bad notes submitted for destruction are kept in long queues for years with no action taken on them, giving room for abuse by staff.

    He said the banknotes would have been destroyed immediately and the fraud averted if the unit involved had been effective.

    The source said that some of the notes marked for destruction were still pending, five years after with nothing done and thereby creating room for abuse.

    Imma Okocha, a principal partner in Messrs Imma Okocha & Associates, said members of the public should demand for the real identity of the suspects.

    He said: “Could they have acted alone, or there are other top CBN officials involved. Are they being used as sacrificial animals because they are lower cadre staff?

    Okocha said the success of the case will depend on how well the evidence is gathered but believes that the police are likely to do a shoddy job.

    “You will find out that some principal witnesses may decide not to come to court because of their relationship with the accused persons. The Police are tactically known for spoiling cases, especially, where those in investigation are not additionally taken care of by the complaining party,” he stated.

    The lawyer said that until, further facts are released and people that took the case to court provide further evidence, otherwise the case may collapse.

    He said: “The boldness of this type of crime, shocks me. There is no doubt that this type of crime have been going on for a long time. They should look at what has been happening because they already have facts.”

    Okocha, however, admitted that an accused person, although knows he has committed the crime, do not necessarily need to plead guilty, but would want the prosecution to prove their case.

    CBN’s Director, Corporate Communications, Ibrahim Mu’azu, relived the events that led the management of the apex bank to hand over the suspects to the EFCC for prosecution.

    He said: “As soon as the bank’s internal investigations were concluded beyond reasonable doubt that some wrong doing had occurred, the affected members of staff who are middle-level officers were, depending on gravity of offence, either summarily dismissed or immediately placed on indefinite suspension on 21 October 2014, and all handed over to the EFCC for further investigation and prosecution.”

    Continuing, he said the CBN has also conducted a nationwide audit of all 37 branches of the bank and found that this was an isolated scheme at its Ibadan branch.

    He said the bank will continue to collaborate with the EFCC to ensure that affected CBN workers, as well as their accomplices in some commercial banks, is brought to justice.

    Mu’azu said the scam was discovered during a routine internal audit of the bank’s cash destruction activities in September 2014.

    He said the CBN Briquetting Panel, comprising of senior bank officials from the various branches, noticed some anomalies at the Ibadan branch and immediately reported this to the bank’s management.

    He said that on further investigation ordered by Emefiele, it was discovered that a systematic scheme, which had been on for several years, was being run in which mutilated higher denomination notes, originally meant for destruction, were swapped with lower denomination currencies. This practice known as interleafing, basically labels a box with a higher value than its true content.

    At the penultimate court hearings, it was discovered that the suspects acquired assets in Nigeria and Pretoria, South Africa.

    The EFCC arraigned the suspects on a 28-count charge, bordering on forgery, misrepresentation and self-enrichment before Justice Adeyinka Faji.

    In the charge, the EFFC said that the CBN staff conspired with the FirstBank employees to recycle the mutilated currency notes meant for destruction.

    The accused, however, pleaded not guilty to the charge. The accused persons are facing a 15-count charge ranging from conspiracy, abuse of office and stealing to false declaration of actual amount.

    The others have been accused of concealing of property, fraudulently acquiring assets in excess of their legitimate and provable income and causing economic adversity to the country.

    The court was told how the suspects acquired assets worth several billions of naira through fraudulent means, in excess of their legitimate income.

    The assets said to have been acquired were allegedly gotten by stealing N1.25 billion supposed mutilated currencies meant to be destroyed and taken out of circulation.

    The EFCC told the court that one of the accused, persons, Mr. Ayodeji Alase, had N134 million in one of his bank accounts.

    It (anti-graft agency) told the trial judge, Justice A.O. Faaji, that Alase, a primary six certificate holder, started work at First Bank as a guard before he was promoted to the position of a cash assistant.

    The commission’s lead prosecution counsel (Jacob), a senior advocate, also told the court that the accused had property worth hundreds of millions of naira.

    Alase, according to the anti-graft agency, has a duplex at Oluyole Estate in Ibadan, a shopping complex, a warehouse at Podo, a fenced plot at Dugbe, a block of four flats at Apeye, two plots of land and five-bedroom flat in other parts of the state capital.

    He was alleged to have a credit balance of N132 million in one of his bank accounts. The commission also alleged that Alase possessed a block of five-bedroom flat at Apete area of Ibadan and a supermarket at New Garage, Apata area of Ibadan.