FG fails to pay whistle-blower who exposed secret $223m NNPC account
The Office of the Attorney-General of the Federation is currently enmeshed in a scandal after refusing to pay a whistle-blower (name withheld) his N1.8bn commission for exposing an account with $223m (N80.2bn).
Several documents made available to our correspondent by a source in the AGF’s office, showed that the whistle-blower approached the AGF, Abubakar Malami (SAN), in June 2018 and informed him of an account named, ‘NNPC Brass LNG INV. Fund’ with number 1750027157 domiciled in Skye Bank (now Polaris Bank).
The bank was said to have failed to remit the money to the Central Bank of Nigeria in contravention of the Treasury Single Account policy of the Federal Government.
Bank documents showed that the account was opened with the sum of $328, 998, 818.24 on May 31, 2014, at the Asokoro branch of the bank
According to statement of account obtained by The PUNCH, about $50m was transferred from the account to the account of the National Security Adviser domiciled in the account of the Central Bank of Nigeria on May 8, 2014 while Col. Sambo Dasuki (retd.) was still the NSA.
Several documents made available to our correspondent by a source in the AGF’s office, showed that the whistle-blower approached the AGF, Abubakar Malami (SAN), in June 2018 and informed him of an account named, ‘NNPC Brass LNG INV. Fund’ with number 1750027157 domiciled in Skye Bank (now Polaris Bank).
The bank was said to have failed to remit the money to the Central Bank of Nigeria in contravention of the Treasury Single Account policy of the Federal Government.
Bank documents showed that the account was opened with the sum of $328, 998, 818.24 on May 31, 2014, at the Asokoro branch of the bank
According to statement of account obtained by The PUNCH, about $50m was transferred from the account to the account of the National Security Adviser domiciled in the account of the Central Bank of Nigeria on May 8, 2014 while Col. Sambo Dasuki (retd.) was still the NSA.
Investigations further revealed that after the
Muhammadu Buhari-led government began the full implementation of the TSA and
ordered that all government funds in commercial banks be transferred to the
CBN, the aforementioned account continued to operate.
It was learnt that when the Bank Verification
Number initiative was introduced and Maikanti Baru was appointed as the Group
Managing Director of the NNPC, 14 persons (all NNPC officials) were listed as
signatories to the account in contravention of banking practices.
Some of the names of signatories include: NNPC
GMD, Maikanti Baru, with BVN 22169280709; NNPC Group General Manager, Babatunde
Victor Adeniran, with BVN 22144631650; Head of Marketing, Mele Kolo Kyari, with
BVN 22206528997; and Group General Manager, Research and Development,
Surajudeen Bolanle Afolabi with BVN 22215178271.
Others include, Managing Director, Nigerian
Petroleum Development Company, Yusuf Shimingah Matashi with BVN 22272006629;
NNPC Secretary, Chukwudi Ogonna Momah, with BVN 22144111468; Group General
Manager, CSR, Ohi Alegbe with BVN 22232395310; and Group General Manager, Group
Insurance, NNPC, Modupe Bammeke with BVN 22190602006.
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Upon reporting the matter to the AGF, the
whistle-blower was said to have been referred to the Special Investigation
Panel and briefed them on his findings.
He subsequently accompanied officials of the panel
to the bank where top officials were arrested and made statements.
Members of the bank’s board were also invited by
the panel where they were said to have complained that transferring all the
money to the CBN in one fell swoop would affect the bank negatively and pleaded
for the option of paying in instalments.
After playing his part, the whistle-blower signed
a bond along with the AGF which was witnessed by Ladidi Mohammed, the Head,
Asset Recovery and Management Unit at the AGF’s office.
A copy of the bond dated June 14, 2018 which was
obtained by The PUNCH stated in part that, “any recovered amount from N5bn and
above attracts a flat/definite reward of two and a half per cent of the
recovered sum.”
It further stated the commission shall become due
and payable to the whistle-blower ‘within 30 days’ of the receipt of the
recovered/looted funds by the Federal Government and payment shall be made to
the designated/nominated account provided in writing by the whistle-blower.
Checks by The PUNCH revealed that $30m was
transferred from the said account to the CBN in three tranches on March 1, 2019,
March 6, 2019 and April 25.
It was, however, learnt that 11 months after the
agreement was signed, the Federal Government had failed to give the
whistle-blower any money.
In a letter signed by the whistle-blower’s lawyer,
Aliyu Lemu, which was addressed to the AGF, the whistle-blower lamented the
failure of the government to honour the agreement.
He threatened to sue the Federal Government if he
was not paid his commission within seven days.
Recalls that the Minister of Finance, Zainab
Ahmed, boasted last week that the Federal Government had recovered N605bn
through the whistleblower policy.
However, checks by our correspondent showed that
whistle-blowers were not always paid on time.
It was reported in 2017 that the Economic and
Financial Crimes Commission had recovered $43m, £27,000, N23m from a house in
Ikoyi which belonged to the National Intelligence Agency.
However, it was only after pressure from the media
eight months later that the Federal Government was compelled to pay the
whistle-blower the sum which had been forfeited several months earlier.
The acting EFCC Chairman, Mr. Ibrahim Magu, had a
few months ago lamented the slow pace at which whistle-blowers were getting
their commission and how it could undermine the success of the policy.
Punch
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