How AGF cleared me of bribery – Danladi Umar, CCT chair
The Chairman of the Code of Conduct Tribunal, Danladi Umar on Wednesday said, contrary to the claim by the Senate President, Dr. Bukola Saraki, the Attorney-General, the Federation and Minister of Justice, Mr. Abubakar Malami, had cleared him of the alleged bribery levelled against him.
Umar said this in response to
Saraki’s lawyer, Mr. Ajibola Oluyede, while arguing the Senate President’s
motion asking the tribunal chairman to disqualify himself from further
presiding over the trial.
Oluyed anchored the motion on the grounds that there would
be a likehood of bias in Umar’s handling of the trial because he remained under
investigation by the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission for bribery.
The Chairman of the Code of Conduct Tribunal, Danladi Umar |
Oluyede said the tribunal chairman
would be subject to the control of the EFCC since the anti-graft agency was the
body that allegedly brought Saraki before Umar for trial.
Umar, however, said he had been
cleared of the allegation by both the EFCC and the AGF.
He recalled that upon a petition filed
against him before the House of Representatives over the bribery allegation,
the AGF (Malami) appeared before a committee of the House and told the members
of the committee that he (Umar) had been cleared.
Umar said, “A group called
Anti-Corruption Network wrote a petition against me at the House of
Representatives. The House committee invited me and I went there three times
but the petitioner did not come. I told the committee that what I think should
be done and I said if it were to be court, when the person who filed a case
refuse to come, the court will strike it out. But the chairman said, let’s give
them another time.
Why did he not strike it out and
decided to continue to wait for the petitioner?
“I went there just because of the
respect I have for the institution. I am a law abiding citizen, that is why I
went there three times abandoning all my works here.
“They invited the AGF. The AGF went
with a copy of the letter of the EFCC and he said by virtue of that letter,
nobody could compel him to prosecute me on the basis of that the letter stated
that the allegation was based on mere suspicion.
“On the basis of that, he said he
will not prosecute me. As the chief law officer, he decides who to prosecute
and to stop to prosecute anybody.”
The Federal Government is prosecuting
Saraki before the CCT on 13 counts, including allegations of false asset
declaration, which he allegedly made while being Kwara State Governor between
2003 and 2011.
Oluyede maintained while arguing his
motion on Wednesday that the June 24, 2014 letter by the then EFCC chairman,
Mr. Ibrahim Lamorde and which was addressed to the then AGF, Bello Adoke, did
not exonerate him of the bribery allegation.
He added that the then AGF had
minuted on the letter asking the EFCC to proceed to prosecute the tribunal
chairman and the other suspects.
Oluyede maintained that the other
report of investigation issued in March 2015 did not also clear the tribunal
chairman.
He said it would require the AGF
office to issue another letter overriding the earlier directive to the EFCC to
go ahead with the prosecution of Umar and his co-suspect, before the tribunal
chairman could be said to have been cleared.
He insisted that in as much as there
was no fresh letter by the AGF expressly stating that Umar had been cleared of
the allegation, “the legitimacy of the proceedings (Saraki’s trial) is in
question.”
The lead defence counsel, Chief Kanu
Agabi (SAN), excused himself from the proceedings shortly before Oluyede moved
the application on Wednesday.
Agabi, who though admitted that he
only became aware of the application after Oluyede had filed it, said he had no
problem with the motion being moved on behalf of the defence team.
Referring to the altercation that
happened between the tribunal chairman and Oluyede during the previous
proceedings, Agabi sued for peace among the parties to the case and between the
parties and the tribunal.
He took his leave after advocating
peace.
But Oluyede who picked up the
microphone as soon as the lead defence counsel left, said in his opening
argument on the motion that it was Agabi who advised the Senate President
to file the application.
He said, “Paragraph 15 of the further
affidavit confirms that it was, in fact the lead counsel, Mr. Agabi, that
advised the defendant to bring this application before the tribunal in the
interest of justice.
“The submission of counsel, no matter
how esteem that counsel is, does not and is not allowed to be considered as
constituting evidence.
“Even if it was true that the lead
counsel was not aware or did not even consent or approve it for reasons of
conflict, it is immaterial because any counsel that is briefed by a party to a
proceeding is entitled to act in accordance to the instruction of his client.”
But the lawyer prosecuting Saraki on
behalf of the Federal Government, Mr. Rotimi Jacobs (SAN), said the
investigation of the bribery scam had been concluded by the EFCC and that the
culpable person had been charged to court.
While opposing the motion, he
described as absurd the prayer asking Umar to disqualify himself from the
trial.
He said it was absurd that Saraki who
was already charged with criminal offence insisted on remaining a senator and
asked to be allowed to keep performing the duties of the Senate President while
asking the tribunal chairman who was merely investigated and exonerated to
disqualify himself from performing his constitutional duties.
Punch
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