THE Economic and Financial Crimes Commission has arrested the Director
of Finance of the Goodluck Jonathan Campaign Organisation, Senator
Nenadi Usman, for allegedly receiving N2.5bn from the Central Bank of
Nigeria.
A top official of the EFCC, who confided in The PUNCH, said the former minister was arrested on Thursday in Abuja.
All funds that came from the Presidency during the campaign were believed to have come through Usman.
Usman,
who is also a former Minister of State for Finance, had been on the
radar of the EFCC for several weeks but she travelled out of the country
on March 13, 2016 thereby stalling investigations.
According to
impeccable sources at the anti-graft agency, N4bn was transferred from
the account of the CBN into a mysterious account known as the Ministry
of External Affairs Library.
The mysterious account was believed to
be a conduit put in place by the Office of the National Security Adviser
on the instructions of the Presidency.
From the mysterious account,
N2.5bn was said to have been transferred to the company account of Usman
while N140m cash was allegedly paid into her Zenith Bank account with
number, 1000158311, domiciled in 7 Kachia Road, Kaduna.
The said transfer was said to have taken place in January 2015, during the build-up to the last presidential election.
The
PUNCH had reported in March that Usman, on the instructions of a former
Chairman of the Peoples Democratic Party Board of Trustees, Chief Tony
Anenih, transferred different sums of money to several individuals and
interest groups during the build-up to the last general elections.
Usman
allegedly transferred money to several persons through the bank account
of a company, Joint Trust Dimension Nigeria Limited.
Through the
said account, the Director of Publicity of the Jonathan Campaign
Organisation, Chief Femi Fani-Kayode, received N840m.
According
to the documents sighted by our correspondent, the money was deposited
into Fani-Kayode’s Zenith Bank account, Maitama branch with account
number 1004735721 on February 19, 2015.
EFCC sources said a former
Secretary to the Government of the Federation and the National Chairman
of the Social Democratic Party, Chief Olu Falae, received N100m through a
company, Marreco Limited, where he is chairman.
The fund was credited into the company’s United Bank for Africa Plc account number 1000627022.
About
N320m was also paid into the bank account of the Goodluck Support
Group, an association of over 100 pro-Jonathan groups headed by
Jonathan’s Special Adviser on Political Affairs, Prof. Rufai Alkali.
However,
many of the recipients of the money said they did not know that the
funds emanated from the CBN as they were told by Usman that they were
sourced privately.
A detective at the EFCC described Usman’s arrest
as a breakthrough, adding that she would be able to shed more light on
the controversy.
He said, “A lot of people who received money
during the campaign claimed to have received money from Nenadi Usman.
Since she was in charge of funds, she will be able to list the names of
those who collected money and if the money was approved by Jonathan.
“There
is no part of the constitution which gives the CBN the right to fund a
political party. Usman must therefore tell us why the CBN gave her
money.”
It was gathered that the former Finance Minister was being
interrogated at the EFCC headquarters as of the time of filing this
report.
Meanwhile, the EFCC has also traced N316m to the company
account of the Permanent Secretary, Federal Ministry of Labour and
Productivity, Mr. Clement Iloh.
Our correspondent learnt that
Iloh was currently in the EFCC custody as part of investigations into
the fraud at the Nigerian Maritime Administration and Safety Agency
under the leadership of the immediate past Director-General of the
agency, Mr. Patrick Akpobolokemi.
A reliable source in the
anti-graft agency told our correspondent that the N316m was traced to
Iloh’s company account domiciled in Zenith Bank in contravention of
Civil Service Rules.
The Civil Service Rules Part I, Fifth
Schedule, Section 2 (b) of the 1999 Constitution of the Federal Republic
of Nigeria provides that, “A public officer shall not, except where he
is not employed on a full-time basis, engage or participate in the
management or running of any private business, profession or trade, but
nothing shall prevent a public officer from engaging in farming.”
The
source, who did not want his name in print, said the permanent
secretary was undergoing interrogation at the Lagos office of the EFCC
as of Wednesday.
The detective said N14.1m was traced to Iloh’s bank account from NIMASA.
He
said, “In the course of investigating the Technical Committee for
Ratification of MLC of NIMASA, we traced about N14.1m from NIMASA’s
account to a company account belonging to Clement, Bob and Associates
domiciled in Zenith Bank. Upon investigations, we found out that the
account belonged to the Permanent Secretary at the Ministry of Labour
and Productivity, Dr. Clement Iloh, who is the sole signatory.
He is being investigated because we traced N316m to a company belonging to him.
“The
name of the company is Clement, Bob and Associates. Investigations
revealed that Iloh is a signatory to the account which is domiciled in
Zenith Bank.”
It was learnt that although NIMASA is not under the
supervision of the Ministry of Labour and Productivity, the ministry is
concerned with relations between workers and employers.
Last
year, Iloh as the permanent secretary headed the ministry for several
months in the absence of a minister, overseeing labour matters at
NIMASA.
The source stated that the EFCC traced some money from what he called ‘maritime lab
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