An investigation into the alleged disappearance of assets seized by
the Abdulrasheed Maina-led Presidential Task Force on Pension Reforms
has been opened by the Senate.
They had reportedly been kept in the custody of the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC).
The upper legislative chamber took the decision following the
adoption of a motion by Senator Emmanuel Paulker (PDP, Bayelsa State).
Paulker, chairman of the committee investigating the botched
reinstatement and promotion of Maina, alleged that the top echelon of
the EFCC and others shared some 270 properties that included exotic
houses and hotels.
The senator said his committee got wind of the matter following
submissions by government officials connected with the reinstatement
saga.
Consequently, he requested the Senate to expand the scope of the
committee’s investigation, with a view to unveiling persons involved in
the scandal.
“For this alarming revelation, sir, this committee requests the
Senate to expand the scope of its investigation on Maina by extending it
to the management of assets recovered by him and handed over to the
EFCC before his removal as chairman, Presidential Task Force on
Pensions, in 2014 and by so doing, extend the duration of the
assignment,” Paulker requested.
Without dissent, the chamber granted his request.
Senate President, Bukola Saraki, said the committee must do
everything possible to unveil the perpetrators and report its findings
in four weeks.
“This is a very serious matter and large-scale corruption going on in
a forbidden place. We just hope that it remains at the realm of
allegation and not as presented,” he said.
The Paulker-led committee had in the last two weeks held closed-door
sessions with the Attorney General of the Federation (AGF) Abubakar
Malami, Minister of Interior, retired General Abdulrahaman Dambazzau and
Chairman of the Federal Civil Service Commission, Mustapha Sulaiman.
It sought to determine their alleged roles in Maina’s reinstatement
to the Federal Civil Service, three years after he disappeared from the
public over alleged mismanagement of pension funds.
In a deposition submitted to the committee, Malami disclosed that
recovered property in EFCC custody disappeared. The AGF handed over the
13-page document dated November 14, 2017 to Paulker in person.
“The re-looted properties include real estate and motor vehicles. One
of the said properties is worth N1 billion and was given to a prominent
lawyer at a give away price of N600 million. The property was recovered
from Dr. Shaibu Teidi. Teidi was a former Director of Pensions Account,
Office of the Head of Civil Service of the Federation, before he was
removed and prosecuted in 2013 by the EFCC.”
Source Guardian Newspaper.
No comments:
Post a Comment