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General News of Saturday, 23 January 2021

Source: thenationonlineng.net

Buhari’s ex-aide Obono-Obla, two others charged with diverting N19.9m, forgery

File photo: Court File photo: Court

A former Special Assistant on Prosecution to President Muhammadu Buhari, Okoi Obono-Obla, and two others were arraigned on Friday before a High Court of the Federal Capital Territory (FCT), Apo, Abuja on a 10-count charge by the Independent Corrupt Practices and other related offences Commission (ICPC).

Arraigned with Obono-Obla, who Buhari suspended as Chairman of the now-disbanded Special Presidential Investigation Panel for the Recovery of Public Property (SPIP), were his (Obobo-Obla’s) Senior Assistant, Special Duties (Protocol), Aliyu Ibrahim, and the Managing Director of ABR Global Petroleum Resources Ltd, Daniel Omughele.

Obono-Obla was accused of conspiring with the others to divert N19,994,185.00 meant for the furnishing of SPIP offices.

Obono-Obla was also accused of forging his academic credentials.

They pleaded not guilty to the charge, following which their lawyers – Paul Erokoro, SAN (for Obono-Obla), Abel Ozioko (for Ibrahim) and Emmanuel Okere (for Omughele) prayed the court to grant them bail on liberal terms.

Lawyer to the prosecution, Samuel Ipinlaiye, said he would prefer the defendants are not remanded in custody in view of the current coronavirus challenge.

Ipinlaiye withdrew his earlier objection to the defendants’ bail application but prayed the court to grant bail on terms that would ensure that the defendants are available to stand trial.

Ruling, Justice Olukayode Adeniyi granted each of the defendants bail in the sum of N1 million with a surety who must not be below the rank of director in the service of either the Federal Government and any of its agencies or the FCT and any of its agencies

Justice Adeniyi ordered Ipinlaiye to retrieve the defendants’ international passports already deposited with the ICPC and hand them to the Registrar of the court.

The judge adjourned till March 17 for the commencement of trial.

Erokoro told journalists after the court session that his client was just being victimised.

He noted that the Nigeria Police Force (NPF), another agency of the Federal Government, plans to re-arraign Obono-Obla on Monday before another High Court of the FCT in Kwali on similar alleged offences.

In the charge marked: CR/922/2020, the ICPC accused Obono-Obla, Ibrahim and Efe of conspiring in 2018 to confer an unfair advantage on Ibrahim.

The prosecution said they “diverted the sum of N19,994,185.00 received by SPIP through its contractors from the Nigerian Deposit Insurance Corporation (NDIC).”

It added that the sum, meant to furnish SPIP offices, was “diverted to the personal account of Aliyu Ibrahim, using proxy companies, without furnishing the said SPIP offices as proposed to the NDIC”.

Ibrahim was, in count three, accused of using his position “to confer unfair advantage” on himself by diverting the money into his account using proxy companies without furnishing the SPIP offices as proposed to NDIC.

The alleged offence contravenes Section 26(1)(c) and punishable under Section 19 of Corrupt Practices and Other Related Offences Act 2000.

In count four, Obono-Obla was accused of dishonestly using as genuine, “a Mary Knoll College, Ogoja General Certificate of Education, Ordinary Level, May/June 1982 (GCE) Statement of Result for Ofem Okoi Ofem with candidate No: 09403/247 showing an O’Level credit (6) score for Literature in English”.

ICPC said he used it as “part of the five O’Level credit requirement for you to study Law for the 1985/86 academic session in UNIJOS (the University of Jos) when you had reason to believe that the document (GCE), the basis upon which you were admitted to study Law in UNIJOS, was forged as you never sat for the English Literature examination for May/June 1982 GCE”.

Obono-Obla was, in count five, accused of making false document around November 1985, regarding the GCE certificate.

The alleged offence is contrary to sections 366 and 363 and punishable under Section 364 of the Penal Code.

ICPC said, in count six, that Obono-Obla, around July 2018 in Abuja, as SPIPC Chairman “failed to attend/honour an invitation” by ICPC for an investigation, contrary to Section 28(1)(a) and (6) and punishable under section 28(10) of the Corrupt Practices and Other Related Offences Act 2000.