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Nigeria Ready To Defend Edo Executions – Ashiru

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The federal government says it is ready to defend the recent execution of four convicts in Edo State, which ended a seven-year moratorium on death penalty in the country.

 

The minister of foreign affairs, Olugbenga Ashiru, gave the indication in Abuja on Friday at a consultative forum on the forthcoming review of human rights in Nigeria under the United Nations Universal Period Review, UPR.

 

Ashiru acknowledged that the executions in Edo would likely come up when the country appears before the UN Human Rights Council in Geneva this October for a periodic review of its human rights.

 

The June 24 execution in Edo had been criticised by the government of United Kingdom, the United Nations, UN and the European Union high representative, Catherine Ashton.

 

According to the top EU diplomat, the execution negates recent commitments repeatedly made by Nigerian officials, most recently in May, to maintain the de facto moratorium on executions.

 

Ashiru told reporters that the execution would not act as an impediment to “tremendous improvements” by government on human rights issues in the country. He reminded countries accusing Nigeria of human rights violations to remember that the criminal code was inherited from the ‘colonial powers.

 

The minister said state governments are autonomous in Nigeria and for the execution in Edo State, governor Adams Oshiomhole acted within the confines of the law.

 

“I agree that there was an unwritten code that we should have a moratorium pending the time when our Constitution is reviewed.

 

“But don’t forget that the constitution we follow is supreme but the criminal code that we use is still the same handed over to us by the colonial powers. So, until the statute books are reviewed, there is nothing anybody can do and I think the governor of Edo acted within his constitutional powers,” he said.

 

The minister recalled that the governor gave reasons why he signed the death warrants “because the circumstances under which the crimes were committed were really heinous and in itself a crime against humanity.”

 

Earlier, the minister told the forum reviewing the draft national report before its submission to the UN Human Rights Council not to be “apologetic” on the country’s stance on same sex marriage.

 

“We should not shy away to defend what is right, what is correct and what is in our Constitution,” he said.

 

He also told the forum to strongly defend the records of Nigeria’s armed forces on human rights.

 

“They have been tested and trusted and they have distinguished themselves in numerous peacekeeping operations across the world,” he said.

 

The solicitor-general of the federation, Abdullahi Yola, recalled that Nigeria underwent the first cycle of UPR in 2009 during which a number of recommendations were made to the country.

 

“Nigeria accepted 30 recommendations out of 32 and rejected recommendations 12 and 13 of UPR 2009 on same sex marriage and abolition of death sentence,” he said.

 

Bem Angwe, the executive secretary, National Human Rights Commission, said the country was conscious of its obligations to the international community under different human rights instruments.

 

“Our obligations to the international community will not be dictated by the dictates of particular nations. The obligations will be dictated by the dictates of humanity and what we as a people continue to agree and observe.

 

Participants at the two-day event include government officials, non-governmental organisations, civil society groups and members of the academia.

FCT Minister Demolished Estate To Benefit Lawmakers – Homeowners

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Owners of about 500 houses in Emmanuel Estate along Airport Road in Abuja have accused the minister of the Federal Capital Territory,FCT and the administration of demolishing their homes so as to reallocate the land to powerful Nigerians.

The owners of the houses told an Abuja High Court that the estate was demolished illegally and for no just cause causing untold hardship and losses running into billions of naira just so that the land can be allocated to federal lawmakers and other government officials.

At the resumed hearing of the suit filed by the home owners, their lawyer Chris Uche, invited the court to visit the demolished site after arguing over the survey map submitted by the town planners who admitted not visiting the site before, during and after the demolition.

 

The trial judge, Justice Danlami Senchi after listening to arguments and counter arguments adjourned the suit to Monday 1st July to enable parties in the matter visit the demolished site before fixing a judgment date.

 

The development control department of the Federal Capital Development Authority had embarked on the demolition of several estates, including Emmanuel Estate, early this year claiming that it did not have proper building approvals.

Spokesman of the department, Josephine Mudashiru said, “These structures do not have valid land documents or building plan approval. Announcements were made last year warning people not to patronize these fraudsters and at that time the estate had not been developed”.

 

However, the home owners in the estate insist that they saw FCTland approval documents on the land before they bought their houses. They claimed that they were told that the approval was revoked and that it had been given to members of the National Assembly for a new legislative quarters project.

Senate Investigates Missing $27 Million Nigerian Embassy Funds

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The Senate on Thursday began investigating the alleged disappearance of $27 million from the sale of Nigerian property in New York, according to a report by the News Agency of Nigeria, NAN.

 

A former permanent representative to the United Nations,  former ambassador to the United States and the incumbent have appeared before the Senate committee on foreign affairs in Abuja.

 

They are George Obiozor, ambassador to the U.S. (2004 to 2006); Joy Ogwu, permanent representative to the UN (2006 to 2007), and the incumbent ambassador, Ade Adefuye, who assumed duty in March 2010.

 

The probe followed a petition by Transform Nigeria Citizen Initiative, a non-governmental organisation, over alleged misappropriation of funds by the officials of the Nigerian Embassy in Washington D.C. The petition was signed by one Daniel Elombah.

 

Elombah had urged the Senate to investigate why the proceeds from the sale of some Nigerian government property in the U.S. between 2004 and 2007 were not accounted for.

 

“Available records showed that between 2004 and 2007, the Embassy of Nigeria sold four prime properties of the Nigerian Government located in Washington D.C and Maryland,” he said.

 

“It also commenced sale of a fifth property located in San Francisco, California.

 

“For the sale of those properties, the government of Nigeria retained the services of ECULAW Law Firm. Out of those sales, Nigeria realised the sum of 27 million dollars.

 

“All funds realised from these sales, except those set aside as fees, were remitted to the Embassy of Nigeria in Washington D.C,” the petitioner alleged.

 

He alleged that all the funds and transactions were duly confirmed in June 2007 by ECULAW Law firm when it met with embassy officials at the embassy premises in Washington D.C.

 

He alleged that instead of remitting the proceeds to Nigeria, the funds were lodged in M&T Bank Washington which he said the embassy used for other transactions and with which it had about three different.

 

“It was confirmed in clear terms that their bank was holding huge deposits comprising the proceeds of the sales of these properties”Elombah stated, adding that “this remained the position after Dr George Obiozor had returned to Nigeria upon completing his service in Washington.”

 

The petitioner alleged that the money was not repatriated home but left in the bank “partly because it yielded substantial monthly interests, which the embassy officials would never have to account for.”

 

Surprisingly, he said, the money disappeared without trace in March 2012.

 

“This became clear when the M&T Bank was forced to close the accounts of Nigerian Embassy and to terminate all banking relations with the embassy at the beginning of 2012,” he said.

 

According to him, since March 2012, no explanation had been given as to the whereabouts of funds which were in the bank accounts when the incumbent assumed office.

 

The chairman, Senate committee on foreign affairs, MatthewNwagwu, confirmed that the committee received the petition alleging embezzlement of funds in Nigeria’s embassy in Washington.

 

“There is a petition before the committee on the issue. We have the petition and we are taking it on the face value.

 

“We are giving this opportunity to the minister and ambassador to explain what happened. It is alleged that the resources were squandered by embassy officials.

 

“Ours is to give you a chance to address the committee, to tell us what you know about the administration and management of the fund within your tenure from 2004 till date.

 

Journalists were, however, ordered out of the committee room before the testimonies of the three envoys were taken.

Land Grabbing Traditional Ruler Dragged To Court

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Following the complaint launched by Denis Utsa against the paramount ruler of Giza in Keana local government area of NasarawaState, Sangari Umar and his wife Dorcas; another resident, TerkimbiLorfa, has accused the monarch’s wife of trespass and mischief at the Kadarko Area Court.

The www.icirnigeria.orghad reported on June 11 in the story NasarawaMonarch Entangled In Land Dispute Utsa’s complaints of threats by the traditional ruler whose wife allegedly encroached on his land.

In a suit filed by Terkimbi, he alleged that Dorcas brought some building engineers to build a house for her and in the process encroached on his plot of land.

He said further that when he confronted the engineers, the lady threatened to acquire his land by all means, boasting of her husband’s status as the paramount ruler of Giza.

Terkimba who likened his situation to that of the Utsa family said all efforts by the elders of the community to resolve the dispute proved abortive. According to him, Dorcas recruited her younger brother as a thug to beat up the chief of the clan and his own younger sister

He said that she acted the way she did because of the support that she is getting from her husband, the paramount ruler of Giza.

Our investigation shows that the land in dispute was occupied by a herbalist Ali Samu who built a hut on it. When he died, he was buried on the piece of land.  The herbalist, according to other residents was more or less a stranger in Kadarko but got the piece of land out of goodwill of the community.

However, since he died the land which should have returned to the community was left undeveloped until Sangari took it over to build a house for his wife who according to Tiv tradition has no place in her father’s house after marriage.
Meanwhile, the sitting which was scheduled to hold on June 25 has been adjourned to July 19 July to enable the court bring all parties before it.

INEC Staff Not Excluded From Prosecution – Jega

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In a bid to ensure transparency, free and fair election in 2015, the chairman of the Independent National Electoral Commission, INEC Attahiru Muhammadu Jega, has stated that any of the staff of the commission found guilty of rigging and other electoral malpracticeswill be prosecuted.

Jega who admitted the presence corrupt officials and staff in the commission gave this assurance at the official unveiling/public presentation of  strategic programme of action of INEC from 2012 to 2016 to political parties and electoral stakeholders in Abuja.

He said that no INEC official or staff is immune from prosecution adding that his assessment of what has happened previously showcased that few bad eggs were in the commission and have been quietly dealt with accordingly but not captured in the media.

“INEC officials are not immune to prosecution. In fact, since we came here, as a commission we have prosecuted INEC officials, probably it was not well advertised but we prosecuted INEC officials who have been found guilty of breaching established laws, rules and regulations; we have also quietly shown people the way out.”

“There were many people who were indicted for activities incompatible with the objectives and responsibility they were expected to bring to this job. We have retired people. We have dismissed people and asked people to withdraw their services. We have done a lot quietly and it is not something that really should have been advertised in our view”, Said Jega.

The  assurance given by INEC boss was prompted by various knocks given by chairmen of some political parties including SamNkire of the Progressive Peoples Alliance, PPA, Chekwas Okorie of the United Progressive Party, UPP, and Victor Umeh of the All Progressive Grand Alliance, APGA.

Umeh had called for a review of  adhoc staff recruitment by INEC, noting that their activities  posed great threats to the success ofINEC’s efforts in conducting credible elections.

He said that there are bad soldiers/policemen who forcefully change results or make things untidy and have never been reported byINEC, adding that these attitude taints the electoral body’s image.

“I don’t know if INEC staffs are immune to prosecution. Before now, they are the ones who give result sheets before elections. There are bad eggs who help to doctor results”, he said.

Nkire also emphasised the need to checkmate corrupt INEC officials whom had given it a bad image, while Okorie stressed the need to expedite action on the Electronic Voting System EVS, saying it would limit the mistakes of the commission.

Keyamo Has Authority to Prosecute Fani-Kayode – EFCC

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The Economic and Financial Crimes Commission, EFCC, has confirmed that Festus Keyamo Chambers has the authority of the Attorney General of the Federation to prosecute Femi Fani-Kayode, a former aviation minister, in relation to a money laundering charge.

In a letter dated June 27, 2013 and signed by Chile Okoroma, its acting director of legal and prosecution department, the Commission said Keyamo and his law firm have been instructed to handle the case since 2008 and that the firm has “diligently prosecuted the matter up to the supreme court and back to the Federal High Court”.

The letter titled “Legal Representation In Respect Of Charge No. Fhc/L/ 523c/2008: Between Federal Republic Of Nigeria Vs FemiFani-Kayode” was addressed to the chief registrar of the Federal High Court, Lagos, apparently in reply to questions raised over the matter by the court.

Justice Rita Ofili-Ajumogobia of the Federal High court, Lagos, Tuesday restrained Festus Keyamo from further prosecuting Fani-Kayode, until he is able to tenders a fiat from the Attorney General of the Federation authorizing him to do so.

The judge held that the prosecutor has shown no evidence of being delegated to prosecute the case, raising doubts as to whether or not Adoke had issued a fiat to the chambers of Keyamo.

The court’s ruling followed the contention raised by Ifedayo Adedipe, one of the counsels to the defendant, who on June 6 challenged the appearance of the prosecutor in the case.

Adedipe had argued that it was not clear whether Ahaotu, a lawyer from the Keyamo chambers was prosecuting on behalf of the federal government or the EFCC.

Going by the response of the EFCC, it is apparent that KeyamoChambers is prosecuting the accused on behalf of the commission and not the Attorney General and it is not clear if the judge who had insisted on a fiat from the Attorney-General will now consent to a continuation of trial.


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Fani-Kayode is standing trial on a 47-count charge of money laundering. He was accused of making transactions with fundsexceedingN500,000 without going through a financial institution.

The former minister is also alleged to have accepted cash payments of about N230 million.

Below is a copy of the confirmation letter sent by the EFCC:

“EFCC/EC/FHC/100/13

June 27, 2013

The Chief Registrar,

Federal High Court,

Ikoyi,

Lagos.

 

Dear Sir,

LEGAL REPRESENTATION IN RESPECT OF CHARGE NO. FHC/L/523C/2008: BETWEEN FEDERAL REPUBLIC OF NIGERIA V. FEMIFANI-KAYODE

Kindly be informed that since 2008, Mr. Festus Keyamo and his firm, Festus Keyamo Chambers, have been instructed to prosecute the above mentioned Charge on behalf of Economic and Financial Crimes Commission. They have since diligently prosecuted the matter up to Supreme Court and back to the Federal High Court.

We hope this will clear any doubt as to the authority of the firm to prosecute this matter.

Accept the assurances of our highest regard.

Thank you.

 

Chile Okoroma

Ag. Director, Legal & Prosecution Department

For Executive Chairman

 

CC:

1.     The Attorney-General of the Federation,

Ministry of Justice,  Abuja.

 

2.     Festus Keyamo Chambers”

FG Recovers 22.5 million Pounds Abacha Loot

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The federal government has recovered over £22.5 million allegedly stolen by the late  military head of state, Sani Abacha.

 

The Attorney General and Minister of Justice, Mohammed Adoke, said this on Thursday at the on-going ministerial platform in Abuja.

 

He said the money was recovered in 2011, from one Raj ArjandesBhojwani, an Indian national and associate of the late Abacha.

 

Adoke also said that the Principality of Liechtenstein recently confiscated the sum of €175 million from the Abacha family and associate companies iwhich his ministry ensure is equally repatriated.

 

“During the period under review, the ministry intensified its efforts to trace and repatriate Nigeria’s stolen assets abroad. In this connection, …our close liaison and negotiation with the Island of Jersey led to the recovery and repatriation of the sum of £22.5 million confiscated by the Royal Court of Jersey from Raj ArjandesBhojwani, an Indian national and associate of General Sani Abachaon account of his money laundering transactions from Nigeria,” the minister said.

Abuja Residents Groan Under New Transport Policy

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Hardship. Pain. Agony Long faces. Curses. These, are the fallouts of the new transport policy recently introduced in Abuja by the Federal Capital Territory Administration, FCTA.

 

The Minister of the FCT, Bala Mohammed, had promised that the new policy would ease transportation and movement in and out of Nigeria’s capital city, but since June 3 when it took effect, the impact on social and economic life, including schooling and civil service work, has been substantially negative.

 

Speaking through his senior special assistant on political matters and National Assembly, Usman Jibril Wowo, the minister promised that that “will make people move from the satellite towns to the city with ease and at a cheaper rate as the highest fare is N150 for people from Gwagwalada, Kuje and Zuba and as low as N50 for movements within the business district.”
But the experience of residents has been different. Rather, not only have transportation costs increased, movement for students, civil servants, traders and all other residents has become a problem so much so that schooling and academic life in the Federal Capital Territory, FCT, faces a major setback.

A teacher at the Pilot Science Primary School, Wuse Zone 5, S Truman, is among those who come into town from Kubwa, a satellite town, every working day. Before now, by 7.30am she would have gotten to school, ready for the day’s business. But not anymore.

 

Since early June when the new transport system commenced she has been coming late to school because getting a bus to town has become such a hassle.

 

But even more worrying is the impact students. According to her, many of them get to school late, sometimes past 10.00 am, and thus miss part of the morning classes.

 

Even for those who come early, because many of them have to wake up much earlier now and also face a hell of a time getting to school, a great number of them sleep for the most part of the morning classes.

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“In the past we used to punish students for late-coming but we find out now that if we are to punish them they may not be able to attend more than three lessons before the day is over and this will definitely affect performance,” she said.

The policy is also taking its toll on the parents as workers who have to commute from outside the city now report very late at work while some who cannot put up with the stress just stay at home.

 

For usually laid back civil servants, many have chosen to report at work only on specific days, sometimes only on Mondays or twice a week.

By 3:30pm-4:00pm in the afternoon, offices are nearly almost deserted as workers migrate to the parks to secure a good position on the queue and also to beat traffic, leaving their jobs to suffer.

 

The situation at designated terminals where the big buses are meant to move commuters in and out of the city is most pitiful during peak hours, usually early in the morning and between 3.00 pm and 4:00pm and is marked by long queues of commuters who are eager to secure a space in the limited buses provided by the government.

 

Commuters spend between 45 minutes and as much as two hours waiting at designated bus stop for these buses.

In spite of the queues which are meant to make the process of entering a bus orderly, there is still occasional pushing and struggling by the impatient or unruly, making the place rowdy and conducive for pickpockets.
Also, because of the huge numbers of passengers, the buses are overloaded with many standing in the aisles, thus leaving the journey prone to accidents. Some commuters have to stand all the way to their destinations.

 

At the Nyanyan Park, designated as terminus for moving commuters from the Karu/Nyanyan/Mararaba axis, passengers sometimes have to wait for two hours to get a bus. The scene is pitifully chaotic as thousands of commuters gather as early as 6.00 am in a bid to get a bus to town.

 

And the people are full of tales of woe and wonder how a representative government can foist such hardship on citizens.

 

Stanley Chukwu, a self – employee man, condemned the new system and believed that it is aimed at “punishing the masses”. He added that the cost implication of the policy is high as what he spends now on transportation has doubled.

 

He complained that the buses are restricted to particular routes and compelled to leave at a particular time.

 

Michael Chinonso, a civil servant and Mararaba resident lamented that the earliest time he has reached office since the commencement of the new policy is 9.00am. He noted that government has a lot to lose with the new policy as it has greatly affected productivity because workers resume to the office late and leave early.

 

Tony Oga, another civil servant who lives in Nyanyan said the policy is anti-people and complained of the high cost on commuters. For example, like many others, he now has to take two to three buses/cabs to work instead of one which means that he has to pay more.

 

He lamented that as things are now his salary would only be sufficient to pay for his transportation leaving him with nothing to cater for his other needs.

 

These are some of the realities of the two weeks old transportation policy in Abuja that has outlawed mini-buses from the city’s centre and inflicted greater hardship on residents.
Commuters are yet to adjust to the transportation plan and many do not see the plan working because it is defective and ill timed. The major criticism against the policy is that the FCT government has not provided enough big buses to move the huge population of workers who come into town daily from satellite towns that surround the capital city.

Abdullahi Baguda, a tailor who lives in Dutse Alhaji but who has a shop in Wuse area said that it was irresponsible of the government to rush into such a policy that would impact on many lives without adequately providing for alternatives.

“If you look at the queues and the number of the buses available, then you will see that this government is not serious. I do not think they planned the whole thing well or had the interest of commuters at hear when they came up with the idea,” he lamented.

Odiachi Josephine, a civil servant said the policy would have been a good policy if government had test ran its effectiveness and efficiency before its formal launch. This was a position amplified by Chinonso who suggested that government should have taken a cue from system in Lagos where privately owned buses are allowed to operate along with BRT.

Odiachi suggested that government should have a rethink on the policy and increase the number of the buses with effective logistics.

She observed that it has increased traffic jams as some commuters manage to go to office with their old moribund cars. Truly, traffic in and out of Abuja has worsened since the policy took effect. The traffic prone Abuja/Mararaba/Keffi road is worse off as commuters now spend up to two hours on the road, particularly after office hours.

Some commuters who are positive about the new transportation policy say with more high capacity buses available and an extension of the routes and terminals, the plan would prove more effective than it is now

Media Contest Opens for Best Reporting Of Infectious Diseases

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Health reporters in Sub Saharan Africa, along with those from Europe and the United States, can win $10,000 worth of international reporting trips by sending in stories on infectious diseases in a contest launched by the International Center for Journalists, ICFJ.

Stories can be on diseases such as AIDS, tuberculosis and malaria, which are the leading causes of death in low-and middle-income countries, claiming nearly four million lives every year and costing billions of dollars in lost productivity.

Preference will be given to multimedia feature articles or documentaries; investigative reports or explanatory stories and reports that use data, mapping and other digital tools to engage audiences.

Deadline for submission is August 1, 2013 and stories must have been published or broadcast between May 20 and August 1, 2013

Along with the story submitted, which must be in English or French, participants must write a 300-word proposal for international reporting trip to expand their coverage of infectious diseases annually.

The ICFJ will select a winner each from Sub Saharan Africa, Europe and the United States and results will be announced on September 15, 2013.

The ICFJ says that “an editor or manager at each of the selected news organizations will also earn a trip to Washington, D.C., to attend ICFJ’s 2013 Awards Dinner on Nov. 7, 2013.”

 

For more information of the contest click here

Again, Civil Servants Loot Pension Funds

Impunity Reigns as civil servants continue the pillage of pension funds

 

In spite of the trial of many of their former bosses for stealing billions, senior civil servants in the office of the Head of the Civil Service of the Federation, HOCSF, have again started looting pension funds meant for the payment of pensioners.

 

Like before, the civil servants who manage pension funds at the office of the HOCSF have employed a number of ways by which they pilfer pension funds, including the use of ghost and fake pensioners, awards of dubious contracts and embarking on bogus training programmes.

 

The new onslaught of looting in the pension office has affected the payment of pensions and gratuities to tens of thousands of retirees since November when a new team took over the administration of the funds.

 

The national chairman of the Association of Federal Public Service Retirees, Emmanuel Akinola Omoyeni, alleged that “Up to now, 80% of pensioners have not received their payments for November and December, 2012.”

 

In a protest letter written by the retirees to President Goodluck Jonathan seeking his intervention, signed by Omoyeni, they also allege that the arrears of about 4,000 pensioners which was approved by the disbanded Pension Reform Task Team, PRTT, for payment in November 2012 has also not been paid although money had been made available for the exercise.

 

Investigations by the www.icirnigeria.org showed that since November when a new team took over the administration of the pension office from the PRTT, officials have reverted to the old system employed in looting pensioners’ funds, using the same brazen tactics.

 

The former director of the office, Sani Teidi Shuaibu, and his deputy, Phina Ukamaka Chidi along with 30 others are before a Federal High Court in Abuja facing a 23 – count charge of stealing over N30 billion of the pension funds.

 

The new lords of the HOCSF pension office allegedly directing the looting now are V.A. Zafi, director of pension, Charles Wali, assistant director, pension accounts and John Atume, an accountant and internal auditor.

 

The first thing the new team did was to dismantle the biometric system developed by the PRTT which exposed the monumental pilfering that Shuaibu and others had perpetrated in the old order.

 

Through the nationwide biometrics conducted by the task team, it had been discovered that over 71,000 fake of ghost pensioners had been on the pension payroll and that officials had been collecting nearly one billion naira illegally monthly and pocketing it.

 

The Wali – led team, in order to revert to the old system, abandoned the database generated from the biometrics exercise by the task team and with which pensioners had been paid for months.

 

Insiders told our reporter that the task team did not do any handing over to any member of the new team and so they did not have anything to work with. But that was okay by them as it fit exactly into their plans.

 

What they did was to approach the banks through which pensioners were paid to collect payment schedules for as far back as June 2012.  Thus, all the retirees brought into the payroll between then and November have been excluded from payment.

 

At the time that the Wali team took over, the database showed that there were 129,000 genuine pensioners on the payroll of the HOCSF pension office.

 

However, the payment schedule of June 2012 obtained from banks had far less than that.

 

Sources in the pension office who are miffed by the return of the old system of looting told www.icirnigeria.org that Wali and others have made up the shortfall with fake pensioners.

 

That is what accounts for the non-payment since November of pension to thousands of retirees who had been on the payroll before. Their names have been replaced by fake pensioners.

 

A source in the HOCSF’s pension office said that officials there had been allocated the number of fake pensioners to contribute to the payroll and that senior persons have thousands of such ghost pensioners on the list now.

 

Even then, it appears that they want to take the looting to another level, apparently not satisfied with the number of fake pensioners they can add to the payroll.

 

Our sources said that the strategy the pension office bosses have adopted is to arrange for yet more persons to claim that they are pensioners who have not been captured in the payroll.

 

One official said that some of the persons being used to make such claims are the same crooks who were previously used before as ghosts to pad up the list of pensioners but were discovered and yanked off by the PRTT.

 

The pension office has so far claimed that there are some 10,000 pensioners who have lodged complaints of not being captured in the payroll. This claim, it appears, has got the head of service, Bukar Abba Aji, hoodwinked as he last week set up a 25 – member pension complaint resolution committee.

 

A statement by the director of press in the office of the Head of service, Tope Ajakaiye, said the committee was set up to resolve more than 10,000 complaints on pension payments and related issues.

 

Interestingly, and ironically too, the committee is headed by Zafi, one of the men behind the attempt to load the payroll with fake pensioners.

 

However, taking a cue from other pension thieves before them, these new rogues have also devised other means of dipping their hands in funds meant solely for payments to pensioners. One such method is to award bogus contracts to themselves through proxies.

 

Because the contract awards are fraudulent, payments for them are fraught with irregularities. For example payments for such contracts are made without going through normal auditing processes.

 

Also, in many cases, although the contracts are awarded to companies, payments are made into private accounts and when they are made to the companies’ accounts, they find their way back into the pockets of officials of the pension office.

 

In one such alleged bogus contract payment, the pension office claimed that it employed the services of a consultant, Consult and Capital Ltd, to “verify, reconcile and recover all trapped funds belonging to the OHCSF in distressed City Bank Plc and AFEX Bank”.

 

In a memo written by Wali on March 19, 2013, the director observed that the job which was contracted out to the consultant in 2010 had been concluded as he had recovered the sum of N806,741,771 previously trapped in City Bank and recommended that Consult and Capital Ltd be paid  of N80, 669,177.10 , being 10%  of the funds recouped.

 

However, it is alleged that the original agreement with the consultant was that he would be paid 5% of any funds recovered or N30 million or whichever of the two options is lower.

 

However, after finishing the job, it is alleged that the consultant was asked by Wali to jerk up his claim to 10%.

 

Ordinarily, in the civil service, when a contractor seeks upward review of the cost of a job, a committee is set up to review the request and make appropriate recommendation. But in this case no such committee was set up and no recommendation was made or followed.

 

All that the pension director did to effect the review was write a memo recommending that 10 % of the total sum recovered be paid to the consultant.

 

When our reporter spoke to the consultant, Olumuyiwa Yemi OyeniyI, he said he did legitimate business and only got paid for services he rendered. According to him, he never bargained or agreed to be paid 5% for the job, in fact, maintaining that he charged 15 % initially but was finally paid 10%.

 

” I never bargained for 5%. How could i? The money had been there for seven to eight years and they did not even know about it until I told them. So they could not have dictated terms to me,” he said.

 

However, contrary to Wali’s claim in his memo that the consultancy job was given out in 2010, Oyeniyi said that he got it in 2012.

 

He denied doing anything illegal or untoward, adding: “I am a Christian and a pastor. I would not even have given any bribe if they had asked.”

 

Another dubious payment made by Wali and Zafi is the sum of N90 million paid to the Nigerian Union of Pensioners, NUP.

 

In a memo raised by Zafi recommending the payment of the money to the union, he recalled that President Goodluck Jonathan had approved the payment of 1% check – off dues to NUP from November, 2012.

 

He also noted that the presidential approval was given after a meeting between President Jonathan and the leadership of the Nigerian Labour Congress, NLC, during which a planned strike by workers on the plight of pensioners was discussed.

 

Zafi said that one of the conditions given for calling off the strike was the restoration of the 1% check off dues to NUP. The assistant director, therefore, recommended the payment of N72, 282,686.92 being arrears of the 1% check off dues to NUP.

 

However, this was a well – orchestrated fraud, by which even President Jonathan was deceived.

 

First, the memo raised by Zafi recommended the payment of N72, 282,686.92 as 1% check off dues for five months to NUP. But the voucher raised and the cheque issued to the union was for N90 million, which is N17, 717,313.08 more.

 

More importantly, the President was not told that check off dues were not deducted from payments to pensioners and so nothing was due to be remitted to the pensioners’ union.

 

Before now, 1% was deducted from monthly pension paid to retirees. These checks off dues were then remitted to the NUP to help in administering the union’s affairs. However, the deduction of check off dues from pensioners’ pay was stopped last year after the task team discovered a huge fraud in the union. It was revealed that the leadership of the union had been diverting funds running into billions into private pockets.

 

In fact, it was discovered that the national president of NUP, Ali Abacha and the national secretary, Actor Zal, colluded with officials of the pension office to steal billions meant for pensioners.

 

The Economic and Financial Crimes Commission, EFCC, which investigated the matter has since dragged Abacha and Zal before the Federal High Court, Abuja.

 

The agency said that the three men stole a total of nearly N3 billion from pensioners’ funds. All the accused persons are out on bail while their trial continues.

 

However, it is the same corrupt leadership of the NUP being prosecuted in court for diversion of funds that the pension office of the HOCSF has paid N90 million with the President’s approval.

 

Pensioners believe that, like before, the money would not be used for the welfare or issues concerning them but would end up in private pockets.

 

Another strategy employed in stealing pensioners’ funds in the HOCSF’s office is by organising local and international training for staff. In many cases, the vouchers for the payments for the training programmes never passed through the audit department.

 

In a lot of cases, payments were made and vouchers raised long after that.

 

In one such training programme involving about 40 persons, officials collected payments to organise the sessions for five days but ended up spending only two days, pocketing the money for organising the event as well as stipends to staff for three days.

 

It was equally gathered that officials of the pension office also claimed that they were sending about 20 people overseas for training and collected sums running into several millions but the programme never held and no money was returned.

 

For these dubious payments, Wali and Zafi are alleged to use Atume, an auditor recently transferred to the pension office from the Federal Pay Office in Bayelsa.

 

He is the one who approved dubious vouchers that every other auditor refuses to clear. Although there are four or five persons who can sign vouchers, Atume’s signature appears on most of the vouchers approved for payment, many of them questionable.

 

Sources in the office said that when he just resumed and did not have the official audit stamp of the office of the HOCSF, Atume used the one he brought from his former office in Bayelsa until he was cautioned.

 

Pension funds administration in Nigeria came under close scrutiny last year with the discovery of monumental looting in the pension unit of the office of head of service and the police pension office.

 

While Shuaibu and other former officials of the HOCSF’s pension office are being prosecuted for stealing over N30 billion, at the police pension office, a former director who became a permanent secretary and others are being tried for pilfering over N40 billion.

 

Those being tried at the Federal High Court, Abuja include Abubakar Kigo, former director in the pension office and permanent secretary, ministry of Niger Delta; Esias Dangabar a retired director; Ahmed Wada, former deputy director, PPO, now director in the ministry of sports and Abdullahi Umar, deputy director.