There were indications on Thursday that
former Nigerian leaders, traditional and religious leaders from across
the country were listed as beneficiaries of the $2.1bn arms funds in the
final report of the Presidential panel which probed military contracts
from 2007 to 2015.
It was gathered that the report, which
had been submitted to President Muhammadu Buhari, recommended the
retrieval of undisclosed sums of money from some indicted persons, while
in some cases, it recommended their prosecution.
A highly-placed security official, who
spoke on condition of anonymity because of the sensitivity of the
matter, said some former Heads of State, were listed as having received
various sums of money from the Office of the National Security Adviser
under Col. Sambo Dasuki (retd.).
The source added that a prominent
northern traditional ruler was provided funds from the NSA’s office for
the monarch’s coronation.
Giving further insights into what some
of the funds were used for, the source explained that some were spent to
pay the medical bills as well as travel expenses of some of the
ex-leaders, who had to travel abroad to seek medical help for
undisclosed aliments.
In one of the most notable cases, the
report stated that the ONSA shouldered the cost of the medical trips of
one of the ex-Heads of State to Germany.
The source added, “The list of beneficiaries from the ONSA under Col. Sambo Dasuki is very long.
“The list comprises very prominent
Nigerians, including former Heads of State, many traditional rulers from
the North and the South.
“Several religious leaders from the two dominant religions in the country also got funds from the ONSA.
“A former President of the country, who
was sick, was flown out of the country to Germany for medical treatment.
In fact, the former ONSA paid for the three trips the former leader
made to Germany.”
It was learnt that the prosecution team
was opposed to an open trial of Dasuki as this could result in
disturbing revelations on how the $2.1bn under probe was disbursed.
The arms panel also established that the
procurement processes adopted for the purchase of military hardware
were arbitrarily and generally characterised by irregularities and
fraud.
The highly-placed security official said
the panel had interrogated some of the indicted officials, serving and
retired officers, and some contractors.
We learnt that the Federal Government would soon make public the final report just like it did with the interim report.
Barely three months after he assumed
office in 2015, Buhari inaugurated a 13-man panel to probe procurement
of arms and related military contracts between 2007 and 2015.
The panel had submitted two interim reports, where several serving and retired military officers were indicted.
Those indicted in the first two reports
included Dasuki; a former Chief of Defence Staff, Air Chief Marshal Alex
Badeh (retd.); two former Chiefs of Army Staff – Lt. Gen. Azubike
Ihejirika (retd.), and Lt. Gen. Kenneth Minimah (retd.) – and ex-Chiefs
of Air Staff, Air Marshal M. D. Umar (retd.), and Air Marshal Adesola
Amosu (retd.).
Others indicted were Maj. Gen. E. R.
Chioba (retd.), AVM I. A. Balogun (retd.), AVM A. G. Tsakr (retd.), AVM
A. G. Idowu (retd.), AVM A. M. Mamu, AVM O. T. Oguntoyinbo, AVM T.
Omenyi, AVM J. B. Adigun and AVM R. A. Ojuawo.
Among those also indicted were AVM J. A.
Kayode-Beckley, Air Cdre S. A. Yushau (retd.), Air Cdre A. O. Ogunjobi,
Air Cdre G. M. Gwani, Air Cdre S. O. Makinde, Air Cdre A. Y. Lassa and
Col. N. Ashinze.
Several contractors, former ministers
and government officials are currently being prosecuted for the roles
they played in the disbursement of the funds.
In one of the interim reports, the panel
said, “The procurement processes were arbitrarily carried out and
generally characterised by irregularities and fraud.
“In many cases, the procured items
failed to meet the purposes they were procured for, especially for the
counter-insurgency efforts in the North-East.
“A major procurement activity undertaken
by ONSA for NAF was that concerning the contracts awarded to Societe D’
Equipment Internationaux Nig. Limited between January 2014 and February
2015. NAF awarded 10 contracts totalling $930,500,690 to SEI Nig. Ltd.
“Letters of award and End User
Certificates for all the contracts issued by NAF and ONSA respectively
did not reflect the contract sums.
“Rather, these were only found in the vendor’s invoices, all dated March 19, 2015.”
A statement credited to the presidential
spokesman, Mr. Femi Adesina, had said the Ode-led panel “comes against
the background of the myriad of challenges that the Nigerian Armed
Forces have faced in the course of ongoing counter-insurgency operations
in the North-East, including the apparent deficit in military platforms
with its attendant negative effects of troops’ morale.”
He added, “The committee will
specifically investigate allegations of non-adherence to correct
equipment procurement procedures and the exclusion of relevant logistics
branches from arms procurement under past administrations, which, very
often resulted in the acquisition of sub-standard and unserviceable
equipment.”
It was not clear on Thursday if the
Economic and Financial Crimes Commission had received a copy of the
report or not, which was said to contain a list of those for further
investigation and prosecution.
The spokesman for the EFCC, Wilson Uwujaren, said he did not have information on the subject.
When asked if the commission had received the report, he simply said, “I don’t know.”
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