Tag: Yahaya Bello

  • Yahaya Bello: Court adjourns to June 13 for arraignment

    Yahaya Bello: Court adjourns to June 13 for arraignment

    A Federal High Court, Abuja has asked the former Governor of Kogi, Yahaya Bello, to appear in court for his trial.

    Justice Emeka Nwite, in a ruling, held that even if an arrest warrant issued against him was illegally obtained, the defendant (Bello) should still show up in court.

    The judge had, on April 23, fixed today (May 10) for the ruling on the ex-governor’s application to set aside the arrest warrant against him.

    The judge had on, April 17, issued an arrest warrant to EFCC for Bello’s arrest.

    The order was made after the lawyer who appeared for EFCC, Rotimi Oyedepo, SAN, moved the ex-parte application to the effect.

    But Bello’s counsel, Adeola Adedipe, SAN, on April 23, prayed the court to set aside the arrest warrant against their client.

    He canvassed that the arrest warrant had become unnecessary since their lead counsel, Abdulwahab Mohammed, SAN, had accepted the service of the charge on behalf of the ex-governor.

    He argued that the arrest warrant order, having been made before the charge ought to be set aside suo motu (on its own accord, without any request by the parties involved).

    Read Also: Yahaya Bello: Lawyers drag EFCC chairman to UN, UK, threatens visa ban

    The senior lawyer argued that contrary to Pinheiro’s submission that the ex-governor must be in court first before any application could be entertained being a criminal case, he said the anti-graft agency also made an application on April 18 after the warrant arrest was issued to EFCC on April 17 and that the court granted it.

    The lawyer submitted that the arrest warrant was issued in favour of the EFCC by the court in violation of fair hearing to their client.

    According to him, the complainant made an application for substituted service on 18th day of April after the arrest warrant had been issued on 17th day of April and today, my noble lord granted it.

    “The court must satisfy itself that the defendant (Bello) will not be prejudiced in fairness if the warrant of arrest continues to hang on his neck, having been made before service of the charge contrary to Section 394 of ACJA,” Adeola argued.

    He argued that justice should be a three-way traffic; that is, justice to the prosecution, the defendant and the public.

    He said for Bello to appear in court, he must have the notion that he would get justice.

    Adedipe also argued that the EFCC was an unconstitutional body because its establishment was not ratified by the 36 states of the federation.

    He said that for the EFCC to become a constitutional body, the 36 states of the federation must ratify the law establishing it as against the current position, that the EFCC Establishment Act was unilaterally ratified by the Federal Government.

    He, therefore, asked the judge to vacate the arrest warrant against the former governor.

    But Pinheiro vehemently opposed the application.

    The appropriateness of the siege on Bello’s residence by operatives of the Commission about two weeks ago had elicited a heated debate across the country, particularly with the realisation that there had been a restraining order against such action, which had not been vacated as of the time of such action.

  • Alleged N80.2b fraud: I will produce Yahaya Bello in court on June 13, says lawyer

    Alleged N80.2b fraud: I will produce Yahaya Bello in court on June 13, says lawyer

    …court accused lawyer of goading ex-Kogi Governor to ignore order for his appearance

    Lawyer to the immediate past governor of Kogi State, Yahaya Bello, Abdulwahab Mohammed (SAN) promised on Friday, May 10, that his client would appear in court on June 13 in respect of the 19-count charge money laundering charge filed against him by the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC).

    In the charge, the EFCC accused Bello of laundering about N80.2 billion belonging to Kogi state.

    On Friday, Mohammed gave the assurance to produce Bello on Friday after a Federal High Court rejected his application for a stay of proceedings in the case pending the determination of an appeal by the EFCC in relation to a contempt proceeding initiated before a Kogo High Court against the Chairman of the EFCC.

    Mohammed said his client was not afraid to attend court to attend to the charge against him but was afraid and scared of being killed because of the information that he got.

    “Our client is not afraid to attend court in respect of the charge. But, he fears for his life, by the information he has. He is afraid and fears for his life. Will the complainant not arrest him when he comes to court? This is one of the issues,” Mohammed said.

    Justice Emeka Nwite expressed discomfort about the position of Mohammed, wondering if Bello was the first ex-governor to be invited after office by the EFCC on allegations of corruption.

    “Is he the first ex-governor to be invited by the complainant? Is the EFCC q killing machine? An accused person is presumed innocent until proven otherwise. We are in a democracy. We all have to respect the rule of law and be law-abiding,” the judge said.

    He accused Bello’s lawyers of encouraging him to ignore the court and disregard its order, by fueling him with false claims

    Justice Nwite expressed disappointment about the conduct of Bello’s team of lawyers, noting that they have continued to wrongly advise their client.

    The judge also agreed with the lawyer to the EFCC, Rotimi Oyedepo (SAN) that Bello and his client were trying to take the court for a ride.

    Upon realising that the court was unwilling to indulge the defendant, Bello’s lawyer, who earlier claimed not to know his client’s whereabouts, promised to locate him and sure he attended the court on the next date.

    Read Also: Yahaya Bello: Lawyers drag EFCC chairman to UN, UK, threatens visa ban

    “He will come to court. We assure the court that he will come. We only need time to reach him. We don’t know where he is at the moment,” Mohammad said.

    Following the defendant’s lead lawyer, Justice Nwite adjourned till June 13 for arraignment.

    In an earlier ruling, Justice insisted that his court’s order made on April 17 for Bello’s arrest and production in respect of the money laundering case still subsist.

    Justice Nwite, in a ruling, held that Bello’s continued refusal to attend court and his frustration with the efforts of the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) to execute the arrest warrant was disrespectful of the court.

    The judge held that the court would not entertain the applications filed by Bello unless he appeared in court and pleaded to a 19-count of money laundering charge brought against him by the EFCC.

    The judge also rejected the request by Bello’s lawyer, Abdulwahab Muhammed (SAN) that further proceedings in the case be stayed pending the determination of the appeal by the EFCC in relation to a contempt case before a High Court of Kogi State, sitting in Lokoja.

    Justice Nwite said: “I must state that the deliberate refusal of the defendant (Bello) to make himself available is solely to frustrate the arraignment and prevent the court from proceeding further in this matter as it is only after the arraignment that the court’s jurisdiction over the matter shall be properly invoked.

    “What I am trying to say is that the refusal of the defendant to make himself available in this criminal trial under the guise of having a pending application is an attempt to frustrate this honourable court and make it practically impossible for the court to assume jurisdiction over this criminal trial.

    “The accused person is required to be present for the commencement of proceedings, which included an arraignment even if the defendant has an objection or any application before the court.

    “In deference to court, he ought to make himself present in person. He cannot sit in the comfort of his house, and elect not to come before the court, when he is very much aware, through his counsel, that the matter is coming up for arraignment.

    “This goes to show that the defendant has no respect for this court and he is taking the court for granted, Justice Nwite said.

  • Yahaya Bello: Lawyers drag EFCC chairman to UN, UK, threatens visa ban

    Yahaya Bello: Lawyers drag EFCC chairman to UN, UK, threatens visa ban

    Some legal practitioners have dragged the Chairman of the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC), Olanipekun Olukoyede to the United Nations, United Kingdom and other international nations.

    At a briefing on Friday in Abuja, the lawyers accused the EFCC boss of flagrantly disregarding valid court orders and breaching the constitutional rights of Nigerians. 

    Emmanuel Agada said the team has already begun measures to institute visa ban on Olukoyede should he continue to trample on the rights of citizens as he allegedly did to former Governor Yahaya Bello.

    Agada said that the lawyers were also considering blocking international funding and support to the EFCC should Olukoyede continue on this path.  

    The statement reads: “As young lawyers, we envisage a judiciary where justice is not only done but manifestly seen to be done. It is in our patriotic quest to always pursue ventures that guarantee an independent judiciary that dispenses justice without fear nor Favour that we formed this civil society of lawyers. 

    “It is in the pursuit of this mandate that we have written to the United Nations High Commission For Human Rights, the United States of America, through its embassy in Nigeria, the United Kingdom, through its Nigerian embassy and the European Union as bastions of democracy and Human Rights to investigate the flagrant disregard of a valid Court Order and breach of constitutional rights of Nigerian citizens by the EFCC chairman, Mr. Olanipekun Olukoyede and caution him. 

    Read Also: BREAKING: Alleged N80.2b fraud: Court insists on Yahaya Bello’s appearance

    “As you know, we have already written to Mr. President who has started on a good trajectory and began to enjoy the massive support of overwhelming majority of Nigerians, to call the EFCC chairman in order not to allow his desperation to use the institution to pursue political objectives to bring this administration to public odium and opprobrium. 

    “In our petition to the above mentioned bodies, we were strong in our call for the EFCC chairman to be cautioned and should he continue to disregard Court Orders and Injunctions, and trample on the rights of Nigerian citizens, the way he did against former Governor Yahaya Bello, a comprehensive and total Visa Ban must be implemented and international organizations who support the commission via funding must be enjoined to stop forthwith until the commission purges itself of every unconstitutional approach in exercising their constitutional mandate. 

    “We are aware that the Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights (OHCHR) provides expertise, guidance and support to UN human rights teams. These teams have recorded huge success in many countries through coordinated human rights sustainability initiatives. It is why we have called for their intervention to help strengthen our institutions and safeguard human rights and dignity of Nigerian citizens.

    “Nigerians must begin to take hard decisions to shape our country and its institutions for the better. We must not allow individuals to corrupt the very institutions that brought so much reprieve when corruption ate deep into the very fabrics of our existence. 

    “Our main objective as lawyers is to push for the respect of the judiciary and stronger institutions whose mandate will never be dictated by political or social affiliations.“

  • BREAKING: Alleged N80.2b fraud: Court insists on Yahaya Bello’s appearance

    BREAKING: Alleged N80.2b fraud: Court insists on Yahaya Bello’s appearance

    A Federal High Court in Abuja has insisted that its order made on April 17, for the arrest and production of ex-governor of Kogi state, Yahaya Bello still subsists.

    Justice Emeka Nwite, in a ruling on Friday, May 10, held that Bello’s continued refusal to attend court and his frustration with the efforts of the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) to execute the arrest warrant were disrespectful of the court.

    Read Also: Joe Ajaero, Yahaya Bello, bedroom horrors of father of six

    Justice Nwite held that the court would not entertain the applications filed by Bello unless he appeared in court and pleaded to a 19-count money laundering charge brought against him by the EFCC.

    The judge also rejected the request by Bello’s lawyer, Abdulwahab Muhammed (SAN) that further proceedings in the case be stayed pending the determination of the appeal by the EFCC in relation to a contempt case before a High Court of Kogi state, sitting in Lokoja.

    Details shortly…

  • Joe Ajaero, Yahaya Bello, bedroom horrors of father of six

    Joe Ajaero, Yahaya Bello, bedroom horrors of father of six

    I have just been acquainted with a father of six who flees from the bedroom to the bathroom almost every night, his wings dropped and his spirit depressed because his doctors appear unable to help him. You may wonder: What have Labour Leader Joe Ajaero and former Kogi Governor Yahaya Bello got to do with nightly failure of Romeo and Juliet affairs in another man’s bedroom? It is all about stress in the Nigerian economy which is making almost everything, everywhere, comatose.

    When doctors cannot readily tell the cause of a medical problem, they say it is Psychosomatic (in the mind) and of Idiopathic (unknown) origin. My new acquaintance said he had been told this for months and wondered if two proprietary plant medicines he read about in one of my Facebook posts (@ johnolufemi kusa) could be of any help to him. These medicines have exciting names. I am not going to dwell on them today beyond saying that they are Long Jack and re-fire. Long Jack appears designed for overcoming limping and Re-Fire for reloading of the rifle for another fire work.

    About two weeks ago, a woman in her 50s had a stroke which defied all the popular trappings of hypertension, blood clots, calcifications in the brain, atherosclerosis, diabetes etc. Just about then, a father of six, four of them of his gender, said he had lost so much steam he seriously felt concerned for his marriage. He has not hung his boots, but his libido was on the canvass, his turgidity virtually gone and he despaired a lot in the bedroom. Even when he managed to try to prove he had not become a cold fish, he soon discovered to his dismay his body was merely responding to urinary urgency.

    Once he was done with voiding in the small room, he was flat out. This man said, that being unable to help him so far, his hospital visits have begun to bore his doctors. This may very well be one of those psychosomatic problems doctors say have idiopathic origins when they cannot track them beyond the mind.

    For understandable reasons, I have played down the language and anxiety of this man, and I have begun a conversation with him. As many men face similar sexual tribulations in the bedroom, I will share some of our discussion here, before I move on to what I said I suspected may be the outset of a new season of psychosomatic diseases in the making. Can our friend be under stress…psychological, financial, environmental (air pollution, noise etc), food poisoning (additives, heavy metals, estrogen from poultry egg, chicken and cow milk), bedroom terrorism (when a  dis-satisfied wife  bravely strikes the sharp edge of the  knife with her knuckles) etc?

    Read Also: ‘Cybersecurity levy to tackle crimes, terrorism’

    We cannot avoid stressors and their triggers.  A marriage may not be a bed of roses that is made in Heaven. House rent, like school fees or feeding allowance, may be a problem. One’s job may constantly be on the line. What of the upkeep of old parents, of other family obligations? How well are the children fairing educationally? Is Madam a nagging wife? Literally speaking, there are a thousand and one obstacles a man must overcome everyday when he is on his feet before he retires to the bedroom at night, especially if the couple shares one room. There may be nothing wrong coming under stress once in a while, and for short periods. Mother Nature had provisions for that. Different organs make and pour what we may call anti-stress chemicals into the blood circulation that are right for the occasion. 

    Additionally, our bodies are wired with two major  nervous systems which originate in the brain  from about 100 billion nerves cells called neurons.The first is the Central Nervous System (CNS). The second is the peripheral nervous system (PNS). The CNS, which comprises the neurons and the  spinal cord, controls our voluntary actions, such as sitting, talking, standing, running, boxing, walking etc.The peripheral system branches from the spinal cord into all tissues and organs, bringing signals or messages from the brain and taking feedback from them to the brain. This system subdivides into the Sympathetic Nervous System (SNS) and the Parasympathetic Nervous System (PSNS). Together, they form the Autonomic Nervous System (ANS), which is parallel to the CNS. None of us would be alive or able to do anything without our nerves.

    Many of us know little about the ANS. It deals with activities we cannot control such as digestion, breathing, detoxification, immunity, libido and sexual response etc. As stated earlier, the ANS sub divides into the (a) SNS and (b) PSNS. The latter two are crucial for overcoming the havoc of stress. The SNS really sympathises with us. When we are terrorised, it provides us with the  “Fight or Flight” fuel  or energy, and courage. We confront a  gun-man if we have the guts, or flee from him. The SNS shuts down digestion, urination, libido, causes anorexia nervosa (an eating disorder), while its quickens the heart and enlarges blood vessels to supply the muscles with more blood, glucose and oxygen for “fight or flight”. In the bedroom, we can admit inadequacies and, like a man, face the consequences. One woman’s poison is another’s meat. There will always be someone whose standards we surpass.

    Mother Nature does not intend the SNS to be at work for too long in any condition, otherwise some havoc may arise.  Do the Police stay on perpetually in a household they came to free from armed robbers? The SNS is expected to soon give way to the PSNS. This is the cleaner of the rubbish outcomes of a “war”. Unfortunately for many persons, the SNS stays on at work for too long, causing damage. One organ we should always pity and rescue from the stressors is the Adrenal Gland. There are two of them. One is located at the top of each kidney. The Yoruba say Ohun to ba oju ba imu (That which affects the eye, affects the nose).  Among others reasons, the  adrenals exist for removing stress from the system. Thus, they produce stress hormones for this purpose. In their work, they are like the shock absorbers of a motor vehicle. When the vehicle is driven over bumpy roads for too long, the shock absorbers wear out or are damaged.

    Similarly, the adrenals may become overworked, weakened, fatigued and burnt out. In this situation, the brain decides whether to let the ravaging go on and kill the system or to call in reinforcement for the adrenals so the system can go on living. The brain always decides on the side of life. It mobilises Sex Hormonesfrom the genitalia for conversion into stress hormones to save the adrenals and ours live.

    This saves the system from further ravaging via stress, but leaves the genitalia without Libido, Turgidity – two important elements of all of male sexual virility. What happens to men in this regard also happens to women. How to use diet and nutritional plant medicines to overcome the loss of sex hormones and other causes of the libido challenge will be our next conversation.

    Other triggers

     Our friend is now aware he has to tackle stress and other triggers or causes of erectile dysfunction (ED), which may include hormonal imbalance, heavy metal toxicity, blood circulation blockages between the heart and the penil shaft, and nervous system redundancy, among others.  Regarding hormonal imbalance or low levels of testosterone, the male hormone, some men have more of the female hormone, estrogen and prolactin, in their bodies than their wives or spouses have in theirs. This may be because they are under- producing testosterone from inadequate dietary or nutritional support for their testes or because they eat more of foods produced with agricultural estrogen inputs such as poultry eggs, chickens, cow milk or cheese. The feed of the chickens is fortified with estrogen to make them lay eggs almost every day by over stimulating their ovaries. This is unnatural.  The same is done to cows for their milk. The estrogen enters the egg, chicken flesh and the milk and the cow meat. Even women who consume much of such stuff may easily become estrogenated, that is suffer from hormonal imbalance, period pains, pre-menstrual syndrome and infertility.

    The bodies of many of us are laden with heavy metals such as mercury, lead, and cadmium from food, water and air. We do not use nutrition to remove them. Omo ina ni a n ran si ina, the Yoruba say (it is the child of the fire we send after fire). Heavy metal poisoning may cause cancer. It may also impair nerve function.  If a man sees a nude woman beside him, and the eyes dutifully tell the brain and the brain sends out the relevant messages for necessary action, what would happen if the hormones and the nerves cannot perform their functions? Their involvement is critical to success in the four-stage response to resolution. Even if the heart beats faster with excitement and pumps out more blood to fill the penile shaft and  cause erection and turgidity with staying power, but the blood vessels are blocked and gradually shut down on the way due to inadequate nerve flow, isn’t all the effort a waste of time? All these and more were discussed with our friend. In later conversations when he would be advised of dietary and other measures that should make him overcome the challenges, the foregoing should help his condition. So will a discussion of the The Second Chakra and yet another quantum energy medicine support.

    Ajaero, Labour, Yahaya Bello and the rest of us

    This subhead is an offshoot of the headline above. What business do Joe Ajaero and Yahaya Bello have in the bedroom travails of a father of six?

    Actually, that was the question in my mind until I remembered how political stress almost mangled the brain of an airline passenger heading from Lagos to Abuja just before May 19, last year. Like someone in stupor, he rose from his sit, yelling at other passengers: “What are you people doing here when Tinubu is about to  be sworn in as President?” Even today, it is apparent that many persons still cannot accept that Tinubu became the President of Nigeria, in which case they may be undergoing psychosomatic affliction from an unrelenting SNS.The 2023 general elections were about the hottest and most dangerous in Nigeria’s history from  several parameters. We barely had respite in the first year after inauguration of Bola Ahmed Tinubu as President. It would appear, that, from now on, the stage is being set for the General Elections campaigns of 2027 even  if the electoral umpire has not flagged it off. 

    Joe Ajaero

    There is no doubt, any more, that he is gunning for President, Vice President or Governor if he misses the President. His weapon is the firestorm economy and the belief of many workers that they need a mountainous salary driving in bus loads to get by.  They do not wish to learn from the lessons of Nigerian history that more money does not necessarily solve money problems. Accordingly, Joe Ajaero is pressuring the Federal Government to pay the least paid worker N615,000 every month. That is a whole lot in a minimum wage basket. I guess everyone knows the least paid worker in Nigeria is the Messengers (Office Assistant/Janitor/Cleaner). Karl Marx may have been right when he said Religion is the opium of the masses.

    Today, I guess he would say Money is the opium of the masses. Is religion not merely their access road to miracles, which would bring money? If the messenger and cleaner earn N615,000 every month, how much will a General Manger or a Director or the Chairman agree to earn?

    The poor are likely to flock after castles that are built in the air for them as Paradise on Earth.  Joe Ajaero has told us of how a family of four persons, for example, can hardly survive on N615,000 a month as Living Wage for the least paid worker.  He made serious blunder, though in his analysis which many persons who should stop  and correct him have let go, and this is what I wish to do.

    Minimum wage

    This wage is for the secondary school leaver who is employed as a cleaner, messenger or clerk. He has no family. He is aged between 18 and 20 and looking forward to higher education. He is, therefore, like a bird of passage in a work place, who is just looking for something to do so that he or she is not idle – the idle hand is the devil’s workshop

    In 1969, I came out of Higher School Certificate (HSC) in one year of a two-year programme. In  January of 1970, I took a book seller’s job with Odusote Book Store on  Herbert Macaulay Street, Ebute- Metta, Lagos, on the minimum wage of 16 Nigerian Pounds a month.  In March 1971, the following year, I took a trainee Sub- Editor’s job with the Daily Times on 36 pounds a month.  The university Arts graduate earned 60 pounds and the Science graduate 72 pounds.

    In 1973, the Naira replaced the Pound as Nigeria’s currency.   In 1974, the oil boom brought Nigeria’s minimum wage to N60 a month. I do not remember how much I earned then, but life was so good that, on my savings, I sent myself to the University of Nigeria, Nsukka for three years. Some of my colleagues were business inclined and made more money from side hustle. I groomed my professional skills to earn more than the university graduates. I graduated from the university in 1977 and earned N180 a month in National Youth Service.  From this, I sent N5 home every month to each of six persons, kept myself and bought shares in some  Nigerian companies. When I was building my house from my gratuity in the latter part of the first decade of 2020, I sold half the shares of one company for N1.5 million to raise money for the roof.

     Back to the daily…

    By December 1982 when I resigned my job as Deputy Production Editor, my annual salary was N7,000 and my  housing allowance was N4,500. As Assistant Editor of The Guardian newspaper, one month later in January in 1983, my annual salary rose to N11,000 and the housing to  N7,500. I bought a plot of land immediately from the difference. The fresh or greenhorn university graduate was on N4,274 yearly pay.  Money wise, Nigeria was a more peaceful country in those days.

    I tell this story to expose one serious flaw in Joe Ajaero minimum wage campaign. 

    •Youngsters who have just left school and are living with their parents, being fed by them and clothed  by them, are the Minimum Wage persons. Their jobs are messengers and cleaners. They have no serious skills to offer. They have responsibilities over no one. The minimum wage is sometimes too much for them that they have substantial savings from it. At Odusote Book store, I opened a saving account with the then Cooperative Bank of Western Nigeria.

    •A married man with four children who is on minimum wage is a Sluggard in the race of life. This type of man must be over 35 years.  He must have begun work at about age 20. How did he spend 15 years stagnant without acquiring skills that would help him to move on and upward? Did I not upscale my book seller skills within one year? Would I have been able to earn higher, save money and send myself to the university if I didn’t? There are many Nigerians whose stories are more fascinating than mine.

    Joe Ajaero should teach stagnant members of the NLC how to upscale their life rather than asking society to stuff their pocket with humongous salaries. His minimum wage dream will cause job losses, terrible inflation, loss of foreign investment, social mayhem, stress, and many a bedroom problem.

    Yahaya Bello

    He is 48 and an embarrassment to the campaigners for young persons to take over the country. An institution of state accused him of stealing money when he was a Governor of Kogi State and invited him for questioning. Rather than oblige investigation of his records, Yahaya Bello went into hiding and had to be declared a wanted man. Now, he is indirectly trying to say  President  Tinubu wishes to get him out of the way of 2027 polls. Fighting back, he says Labour Party’s Peter Obi won the Presidential election in Kogi State but he, as Governor, rigged it in favour of Bola Tinubu.

    Yahaya Bello should know this is volatile statement for which he may go to jail if he has no proof beyond reasonable doubt because his conduct is capable of disturbing public peace and releasing many stressors into an already delicate polity.

  • EFCC Vs Yahaya Bello: Agency needs to follow rule of law, says former AGF Aondoakaa

    EFCC Vs Yahaya Bello: Agency needs to follow rule of law, says former AGF Aondoakaa

    Former Minister of Justice and Attorney General of the Federation, Michael Aondoakaa, has advised the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) to follow due process in its handling of the investigation of former Kogi Governor Yahaya Bello. 

    Giving a background into the ongoing controversy, Aondoakka noted that the EFCC had made an error by including Bello in a charge relating to events predating his tenure as Governor and  it was on the basis of this and other antecedents Bello approached the court to enforce his fundamental human rights.

    The former Minister, who spoke on Arise TV on Thursday, said, “There was an error in the Charge by the EFCC. He was being roped there because he was Governor but they referred 2015 conspiracy for him. In 2015, the man said I was not even a Governor. I was a Governor in 2016.

    “That was the premise on which he went to enforce his fundamental human rights before a state high court. The State High Court and Federal High Court have concurrent jurisdiction to enforce fundamental human rights.”

    He said the controversy around the whole issue was unnecessary and advised the EFCC to follow the rule of law.

    According to the Benue-born former AGF, once charges are in court, the agency is no longer in a position to arrest. 

    “Once charges are in court, it is no longer the agency that will arrest, it is the court that will issue Summons against Yahaya Bello. And if he doesn’t appear, the EFCC will ask for a bench warrant to bring him to come and answer charges. 

    “But in the subsequent order, the court said because of your antecedents, you should file charges in a court first. The court will then serve Yahaya Bello to come and appear. But don’t arrest him, don’t detain him. I think it is a very fair judgment,” he noted.

    The former Justice minister pointed out that there was a provision to appeal a judgment if an institution deemed it as unfair.

    “The position of the law is this: it is not for me or anybody or any agency to interpret a judgment of the court. Where you see that the judgment of the court is unfair, you go on appeal. Luckily, the superior court, the Court of Appeal saw this problem and …created a fast-track system. The rules specifically made it easier for EFCC or any organisation to approach the Court of Appeal. Filing of briefs is only 14 days. Filing of Respondent’s brief is 10 days, reply is five days. So the whole trial on such Appeal can only be about one month and judgment will be given,” he explained. 

    Read Also: Yahaya Bello: Appeal Court grants EFCC’s Exparte Motion for stay of proceedings, fixes May 20 for hearing

    He gave an example of how he adhered to the rule of law on principle while he was AGF and followed due process in a particular case involving former Governor Orji Kalu, even when he had sympathy with the EFCC. 

    He said the issue of restraining order was about protection and the Judiciary, not about an individual. 

    The former Minister said: “The issue of having restraint is not because of the person. It is not about Yahaya Bello. Yahaya Bello is not above the law. But the institution, the Judiciary. We protect. 

    “I had a similar situation when I was a Minister of Justice involving Orji Kalu. Of course Orji Kalu got orders and EFCC felt strongly they should arrest him. Well, I had sympathy with them but I followed the law. I said, look, there is a court order, go and vacate the order, and they went to vacate the order.”

  • EFCC and fleeing White Lion

    EFCC and fleeing White Lion

    Ordinarily, for the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) and indeed other anti-corruption agencies, the fear of a mere mortal who christens himself the ‘White Lion’ of Kogi State, the political entity he presided over for eight years like a feral beast with neither conscience nor compassion, ought to be the beginning of wisdom. But alas, what have we seen ever since Mr. Yahaya Bello formally quit office in May last year and handed over to his minion and irredeemable stooge, Usman Ododo? The EFCC has turned out to be the lion-hearted and the self-styled white lion, Yahaya, no more than a feeble-hearted rat on the run for fear of having to answer questions the anti-graft agency has raised as regards the expenditure of over 80 billion Naira under Bello’s watch in the confluence state, one of the most richly endowed with natural and human resources in the country, yet whose long-suffering people are the most pathetically immiserated. 

    When he assumed office in a legally questionable manner following the death of the winner of the 2015 governorship election in the state, Prince Abubakar Audu, before the result of the poll was announced, Bello incessantly harped on the fact that he was the youngest governor in the country. He was a little above 40 at the time he became governor. But his performance during his eight-year tenure has proven, once again, that age cannot be the sole criteria for determining suitability for elective office. While you have many dynamic, gifted, focused, and result-oriented youth holding their own creditably in leadership positions in both the public and private sectors, there are also many who, like Bello, are hungry for public office but lack the discipline, character, vision, integrity, and capacity for the industry that such offices demand. Bello is surely the poster boy for this category of indolent and mentally vacuous youth.

    It is difficult to understand why Bello is creating so much needless drama and hysteria over his invitation to respond to allegations against him by the EFCC, which was acting within the bounds of its statutory responsibilities as stipulated by valid laws of the country. What exactly is so special about this ex-governor that he presumes himself to be above the law? I recall that after handing over to his successor, Mr. Babatunde Raji Fashola (SAN), on Tuesday, May 29, 2007, the former governor of Lagos State and now President of Nigeria, Asiwaju Bola Tinubu, honored the EFCC’s invitation to clarify issues as regards the management of the finances of the state during his 8-year tenure. He reported at the EFCC headquarters in Abuja in the morning and left late at night after responding to questions by the commission’s interrogators on major contracts awarded by his administration and sundry matters. We can also all recall how a former governor of Ekiti state, Mr. Ayo Fayose, promptly reported himself to the EFCC after he left office and till date still has a case filed against him in court by the agency.

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    A former governor of Anambra State, Mr. Willie Obiano, also reported to the EFCC when he left office and is currently facing charges in court. Neither Fayose nor Obiano has been denied their liberty pending the determination of their cases in court. Under our laws, an accused person is presumed innocent until proven guilty. What then is Yahaya Bello running away from? Is it that he has confirmed himself guilty of the grave allegations against him and is thus seeking refuge in technicalities of the law with the aid of unscrupulous judicial officers who are trying to prevent anti-graft agencies from discharging their duties as stipulated by statute? Why should the Kogi State High Court give judicial orders that in reality seek to bind the EFCC from pursuing the cause of justice in the Yahaya Bello affair? This is not the first time that the courts would give blanket orders preventing anti-graft bodies from investigating and prosecuting politically exposed persons who lose their immunities once vacating office as governors. The case of Peter Odili, a former two-term governor of Rivers State, is an example. It is inexplicable why an injunction issued by a court restraining anti-graft agencies from investigating and prosecuting Odili if need be has remained unchallenged and the ex-governor continues to enjoy what can only be described as judicial immunity over two decades after leaving office and losing his constitutional immunity.

    In seeking to bring Yahaya Bello to book in accordance with the laws, the EFCC is not just performing its statutory functions; it is also acting on behalf of the hapless and helpless people of Kogi State who remain bound to poverty despite the stupendous natural and mineral endowment of the state. The giant strands that could have been taken in Kogi had the amount of N80 billion allegedly misappropriated by the Bello administration been invested in infrastructure, qualitative social services, and poverty alleviation can be best imagined. The many analysts, pundits, and civil society activists, some of them accomplished professionals, who have gone on radio and television as well as in the pages of newspapers to defend Bello and excoriate the EFCC surely have no idea of the degree of suffering the majority of people were subjected to during the ex-governor’s tenure, the squandered years of the locusts.

    Neither the workforce of the Kogi State public nor those of the state’s local government service ever received their full statutory stipulated salaries during Bello’s tenure. Most of the critical roads across the state are dilapidated or totally eroded. The state remains one of the least secure in the country and yet some professional associations of journalists offered him awards for his imagined accomplishments in the area of security. It was these kinds of dubious recognitions that encouraged Bello to think that he was more than qualified to contest for the presidency of Nigeria, a misbegotten venture that cost the state’s treasury billions in local and foreign currency all in the pursuit of a megalomaniac’s delusional fantasies. Beyond raising questions as regards whether or not the EFCC followed due process in seeking to arrest the ex-governor, most of those who have spoken out vehemently and vociferously in his support have paid scant attention to the grave allegations for which the anti-graft agency wants to interrogate the fabled white lion.

    Of course, Bello is only one example of persons of mere moderate means who become stupendously wealthy after occupying ‘lucrative’ public offices such as state governor. Their suddenly acquired riches cannot be traced to any productive enterprise, special or unique natural talents or endowments or investments that add value to the public good. One of the sources of the immoral accumulation of wealth by state governors is the security vote. This is a humongous amount that, for inexplicable reasons, is shielded from public knowledge and is neither audited nor accounted for. While security is very critical and requisite amounts of funds must be allocated to ensure the safety of lives and property within given jurisdictions, shrouding the security vote in secrecy and making it immune to audit screening actually undermines the security of the polity. This is because, in reality, most governors simply convert such funds to their private purposes and their respective jurisdictions remain as unsafe and insecure as ever.

    As the famous author of the classic, ‘Black Man’s Dilemma’, the late Chief Areoye Oyebola, a radical journalist and social critic, scathingly put it in a 2012 publication titled ‘Grave Issues Nigeria must Tackle’, “To millions of Nigerian workers who wallow in abject poverty, sickness and hunger, especially the lowest paid workers in the public and private sectors who earn starvation wages of N18,000 and below per month, will regard the recent disclosure by Transparency International that N241 billion per annum was expended on Security Vote in 2017 as very sad indeed. This unconstitutional illegality called security vote which was transferred by the Military Government to the civilian rulers who joyfully accepted it…has provided a direct way of looting massive public funds by Nigerian rulers without any accountability or sanctions whatsoever.”

    Another means of illicit material accumulation by governors in Nigeria is the alleged hijacking and diversion of local government funds. Indeed, it is alleged that it is in this area that much of the funds allegedly misappropriated by Yahaya Bello came from. It is perhaps no surprise then that the ex-white lion chose and imposed as his successor, the current Governor, Usman Ododo, who was Auditor General of Local Government under Bello. The underfunding of local government councils has been identified as a critical factor in the continued poverty, decay, and underdevelopment of grassroots communities across the country. Yet, if their potential and trapped energies are unleashed, the grassroots can play invaluable roles in helping to actualize the possibilities of Nigeria in the direction of greater productivity, self-reliance, and prosperity.

    The EFCC Chairman, Mr. Ola Olukoyede has been accused in some quarters of being overly emotional at a press conference organized by the commission to state its position on the Yahaya Bello affair. Others contend that he had subjected Bello to what they describe as a media trial. But it is noteworthy as a guest analyst put it on a TVC programme that the EFCC Chairman had, until the Bello affair, not held any press conference since his assumption of office. He cannot therefore be said to be in pursuit of publicity and self-glorification. But the commission could understandably not stand idly by when Bello’s horde of mostly paid defenders were running rampant particularly in the electronic media, peddling falsehoods in a bid to muddy the waters and portray the former governor as a victim of harassment and unjust persecution. The EFCC obviously had to prove that it had concrete allegations necessitating the ex-governor to defend himself.

    In any case, Mr. Olukoyede had given a foretaste of the passion he was bringing to the job when he was screened by the Senate before his confirmation. On that occasion, he had told the Senators that a survey he conducted between 2018 and 2020 revealed that the taxpayers lost $2.9 trillion to contracts and procurement fraud alone in those three years. The amount, he noted, was enough to pay for the construction of at least 1000 kilometers of roads, and 200 standard tertiary institutions and educate about 6000 children from tertiary to tertiary levels at N16 million per child. In his words, “For Nigeria to earn a reputation for transparency and accountability, there must be a collective decision that, indeed, corruption must be eliminated.  We must build an international reputation in transparency and as an agency I can investigate even the Senate President because we must call a spade a spade, we must look at evil and call it evil, no matter who is involved”. It is a good thing that so far President Tinubu has not sought to influence the operations of the agency as Yahaya Bello so obviously wanted. It is critical that the President maintains this stance.

  • Yahaya Bello: Appeal Court grants EFCC’s Exparte Motion for stay of proceedings, fixes May 20 for hearing

    Yahaya Bello: Appeal Court grants EFCC’s Exparte Motion for stay of proceedings, fixes May 20 for hearing

    The Court of Appeal has granted an exparte motion for stay of proceedings filed by the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) against the contempt proceeding commenced by former Kogi Governor, Yahaya Bello, against the Chairman of the Commission, Ola Olukoyede. 

    The Court of Appeal, presided over by Hon. Justice Joseph O.K. Oyewole, consequently granted the EFCC’s application to serve the processes in the Appeal by substituted means on the former Governor. The Court consequently adjourned the hearing of the motion on notice to May 20, 2024. 

    The EFCC boss who was summoned to appear before the Kogi State High Court on May 13, 2024, to show cause why he should not be committed to prison for disobeying the Orders of the court, had appealed the Ruling of the trial Court and sought a stay of the proceeding of the Court. 

    The EFCC boss is facing a contempt charge for carrying out “some acts upon which they (the EFCC) have been restrained” by the Court on February 9, 2024, pending the determination of the substantive Originating Motion. 

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    Justice I. A. Jamil, delivering a ruling in Suit No: HCL/68M/2024 and Motion No: HCL/190M/2024, ordered that “the said act was carried out by the Respondent (EFCC) in violation of the order, which was valid and subsisting when they carried out the act. That same act of the Respondent amounts to Contempt. 

    EFCC operatives had laid siege on the residence of the immediate past Governor of Kogi State, Alhaji Yahaya Bello, as early as 8am on April 17, 2024, with a bid to arrest him, despite a court order restraining them from taking such action,  pending the determination of the Originating Motion. 

    Justice Jamil’s order was based on a motion ex-parte filed by Yahaya Bello through his lawyer, M.S. Yusuf, Esq, where he prayed the court 

    for an order to issue and serve the Respondent (EFCC Chairman) with Form 49 Notice to show cause why Order of committal should not be made on Olukoyede.

  • Yahaya Bello and the orchestra of rented activists

    Yahaya Bello and the orchestra of rented activists

    By Mike Kebonkwu Esq

    The call for public accountability and fight against corruption is a call for a revolution; it is not going to be like a walk in the park. Successive governments have failed because it became politicized and selective. Sometimes, the masses take sides with the oppressors because of poverty as he is expecting palliative and handouts. Therefore, Nigerians do not see the fight against corruption as their own fight and sometimes view it from ethno-religious prism. Public officers hardly distinguish between their personal estate, wallet and public till because there is no institutional checks and balances. For someone to serve in public office for just 8 years and acquire personal private jet calls for thorough examination of our value system and public ethics; especially when those public office holders are given chieftaincy titles and national honours. This is the reason for the uncontrollable haemorrhage and bleeding of the economy with attendant youths’ unemployment and insecurity. 

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    If we are to succeed, the fight against corruption must be led by the mass of the people and the youths who have been at the receiving end. Public office holders have fleeced this country enough and if there is going to be a change, we have to start now. The fight must be driven with an eye on transformation and not politically motivated and targeted on political adversaries and opposition. The fight need not be led by a saint or an angel because we do not have one in our political firmament. It must be driven by someone with a sense of mission to change the ugly narrative and image of our country that has taken a battering in every part of the globe where security men subject Nigerian citizens to humiliating screening and search, looking for drugs in our intestines, and trailing us as cyber criminals; even the best of our professionals of eminent distinction. 

    Mr Yahaya Bello, the immediate past executive governor of Kogi State, has been in the news lately for the wrong reasons and is now a fugitive running away from the law. He was aided by his successor and minion, the incumbent governor of Kogi State to evade arrest at his home in Abuja, the Federal Capital Territory.  Yahaya Bello has always been melodramatic; almost histrionic. His political odyssey and the vehicle with which he came to the Lugard House in Lokoja was also not so ennobling. His two-term tenure as governor typifies impunity, corruption and abuse of power. He is also a characterization of the Nigeria political class. 

    Kogi State incidentally has also produced very youthful political comedians in their exuberance in the mode of Yahaya Bello, who arguably was one of the youngest governors. There are many Yahaya Bellos cooling off in the National Assembly and among other public office holders. It will take a revolution to make public officers embrace the rule of law and accountability because of weak institutions and poor law enforcement that is laced with corruption. Something tells me that the President and Commander-in-Chief, Bola Ahmed Tinubu, has the gravitas to lead the fight if only we can support him, whatever misgivings about his past.

    The anti-graft agency, the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC), has come under scathing criticism in the manner and dramatization of the arrest of the former governor, which may not have been quite professional. But the question that should agitate our minds is whether the agency is statutorily empowered to arrest and investigate alleged corrupt public officers and even search for evidence. What is disturbing is that some rights activists and civil society organizations (CSOs) are turning it into a cash cow for pecuniary consideration by organizing protests seeking for justice for Yahaya Bello. These elements and media influencers are fixated on form rather than content and ignoring the weighty allegations against Yahaya Bello.  

    I saw some placard-carrying lawyers on the social media, assuming they are indeed lawyers, at the Supreme Court protesting for Yahaya Bello. The protest was not for the rule of law; it was made up of hired and rented crowd and sponsored jobbers wearing white shirts and dark suits. The same is true of the Lagos protests, dropping names of respected activists just because an agency of government is going after one thief amongst many. These same activists did not protest when Abdul Ningi was suspended by the National Assembly for blowing the whistle on alleged budget padding; to them it is not a worthy cause. They have never protested against insecurity, mass killings and abductions across the country.

    Another issue of concern is the role of the incumbent governor of Kogi State who used the paraphernalia of his office to facilitate the escape of his political benefactor and godfather in an unprecedented case of obstruction of justice. We should not engage in the wrong fight to demoralize the anti-graft agency. We should insist that they must go the whole hog. Our institutions should be strengthened; this is the reason why we advocate for strong institutions and not strongmen in running official bureaucracies. There should not be selective justice; the fight must be holistic and be extended to cover every person without discrimination or political affiliation and standing. The saying is not true that it takes a thief to catch a thief! It takes someone who is diligent and ready to make history to pursue altruistic goals to develop the society and build new men and people; his past notwithstanding. We should be prepared and ready to open the book for those people who are still revelling in their loot because they continue to find safe haven and immunity in public offices and the national assembly. 

    The role the security operatives attached to both the former governor and the incumbent with EFCC operatives in the entire drama was absurd.  They threw professionalism to the winds because they are protecting politically exposed persons. It has exposed poor training and orientations and lack of professionalism, which have become characteristics of our security agencies.  For a chief executive of a state to behave like the governor of Kogi State also shows the  calibre of people that dominate the political space who feel that the reason they are in office is for self-aggrandizement and display of impunity. We have executive governors of states and public officers who, the moment they assume public office, trash the rule of law and draw new codes for themselves and behave like emperors.

    Nigerians should not be deceived by social media influencers and activists driven by pecuniary reasons to embark on campaign to protect thieves and wreckers of our economy.  Again, how on earth will a court of law and a judge expounding justice issue an order that an individual should not be arrested, investigated or prosecuted on weighty allegation of corruption committed while in public office?  It is simply absurd!  The National Judicial Service Commission should also rise up to the occasion and do its duty and sanction judges who give political judgment to show Nigerians that it is not going to be business as usual again.  We forget that individuals and governments will come and go but the state remains, and so laws should not be targeted to protect or harm an individual but for the protection of the state and society. We should also be ready to hold the anti-graft agencies like the EFCC accountable after all the drama and media show if they fail to come with tangible evidence and do diligent prosecution.  Proper ethical codes must be drawn and followed by government agencies and institutions. We should stop canonizing thieves and gangsters in political gab; naming streets and roads after those with questionable and integrity deficit. We should bring our leaders to account and save our country from international odium where our national passport is perceived as identity for cyber criminals, drug barons and political thieves. There must be public accountability and anyone who aids and facilitate graft in public office should be identified and dealt with in accordance with the law. It is to this end that Yahaya Bello’s case must be diligently pursued and prosecuted.  The agency should also gather steam to identify all the Yahaya Bellos who are currently enjoying office at the National Assembly as safe haven. To the rented activists and those parading as CSOs, they should bury their heads in shame if they find their own interests coinciding with the oppressors.

    • Mike Kebonkwu Esq writes from Abuja

  • The Yahaya Bello I know

    The Yahaya Bello I know

    By Nafisat Bello

    In her 2018 TED Talk edition titled “The Danger of a Single Story,” Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie warned against one-sided narratives, incomplete stories and biased delivery of events and issues. She said such breeds ignorance and makes people misconstrue isolated events as the norm just as they misconstrue individual shortcomings as negative traits of the whole.

    The multiple-award winning writer and novelist continued by sharing the story of how the wrongful notions she got from childhood misled her into wrong conclusions and how she overcame them as events unfolded in her evolution.

    It is easier to destroy than to build. It takes months and years of hard work, resilience, patience and sacrifices to achieve a solid reputation for an individual, institution or organisation. But it does not cost people anything to rip everything apart and this can be done within seconds with just a half-truth that borders on a topic which the majority are emotional about.

    Former Kogi Governor, Yahaya Bello has been in the eye of the storm over allegations of financial malfeasance made by the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC). While the anti-graft agency can be said to be after Bello in line with its mandate to rid Nigeria of corruption, the ex-governor has been receiving unprecedented criticisms as if pronounced guilty by a court of competent jurisdiction.

    Since Bello’s travail started, several divergent comments have been made online. Among those vocal are the supporters of politicians who lost out in the ex-governor’s succession process. Some are ethnic champions and jingoists who believe their tribe should have produced Bello’s successor. They see an enemy who stood in the way of the fulfillment of their pipe dreams.

    While this article is not in any way arguing that Bello is innocent of the allegations leveled against him, it is the court that will tell us that in the fullness of time. But since the media is supposed to be a free marketplace of ideas, and in a conversation like this, all narratives and angles should be out there for people to read and for the sake of posterity.

    I can’t say people who believe Bello was a bad leader are wrong. They are of course entitled to their perspectives, but what I saw and my encounter with the governor formed my opinion about his kind of person. I interacted with Alhaji Bello a couple of times, and studied his personality, principles and idea of modern governance not only expressed in his words but also in projects, policies and programmes.

    At a meeting with my boss and a colleague, Bello cut the picture of a man in power who remembers his past friends, respects others and treats women with utmost courtesy. The latter was confirmed by the special way he treated women, children, youths and the vulnerable, like People Living with Disabilities (PWDs) while in office.

    During a research on the performance of some states, I studied the activities, challenges and successes of the Bello administration, management of the economy, battle with insecurity, reforms in civil service, education and health, infrastructural development, women and youth empowerment, political aspiration as well as a strong interest in the welfare of PWDs.

    We visited Lokoja where the gigantic flyover along Ganaja junction caught our attention. We saw secondary schools that looked like university campuses in Adankolo and other parts of the capital. Driving through Osara to Okene back to Ajaokuta then to Itobe, Idah, Ugwolawo and Anyigba, we saw good health facilities – general and teaching hospitals. The Reference Hospital in Okene is world class.

    At Osara, we saw the Confluence University of Science and Technology built from scratch and the College of Health Science in Idah, which got full accreditation under Bello. In Anyigba, apart from the infrastructural upgrade at the Prince Abubakar Audu University (PAAU), students were happy being in school when universities were shut nationwide during the long ASUU strike.

    We were in Ejiba (Yagba West LGA), host community of Kogi Confluence Rice Mill, one of the biggest rice mills in Nigeria. The mill constructed at over N4 billion is located on 800 hectares, produces 50 tonnes of rice per day and creates over 6,000 jobs. We saw some of the 100 tractors procured under Bello and distributed to farmers across the 21 Local Government Areas.

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    Again in Lokoja, we equally notice the remodelled Revenue House, which grew the state’s monthly Internally Generated Revenue (IGR) from N350 million to N1.3 billion. Some officials and aides spoke glowingly about Bello’s characteristics, including a no-nonsense attitude to work, targets and timelines, clear vision and attention to details.

    On return to Abuja, we developed 47 articles which make up “Yahaya Bello: 47 Narratives on a Change Agent” presented to him on his 47th birthday in June 2022. A gender inclusivity campaign of his administration also won a SABRE Award at the Conference of African Public Relations Association (APRA) in Lusaka, Zambia in 2023.

    Contrary to the inaccurate notion in certain quarters, Bello did not go into Lugard House and left without adding value to the life of Kogites. While the EFCC must be allowed to carry out its constitutional duties, the governor must also be allowed to insist on fundamental human rights which he is entitled to. The two parties should, however, abide by the law.

    _Nafisat Bello, a media practitioner, writes from Abuja_