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top former Deputy Managing Director of the Nigerian National Petroleum
Corporation is in a serious mess over his role in the stealing of $153
million from the corporation. The Economic and Financial Crimes Commission may declare wanted a
former Deputy Group Managing Director of the Nigerian National Petroleum
Corporation, Ben Otti over his role in the stealing of $153million by a
former Minister of Petroleum Resources, Diezani Alison-Madueke.
Otti served as Director of Finance and Accounts at the NNPC and is
believed to have played a huge role in the stolen money. The commission
believes he is central to the investigation into the $153m that was
allegedly diverted from the account of the NNPC by Alison-Madueke, in
2014.
According to Punch, a report by the Nigeria Extractive Industries
Transparency Initiative had, in 2014, noted that the NNPC and its
subsidiary, the Nigerian Petroleum Development Company, failed to remit
$4.7bn and N318.2bn to the Federation Account.
Just last week, a Federal High Court in Lagos had gave an order
that the $153m, which was allegedly kept by some bank executives, be
temporarily forfeited to the Federal Government.
An EFCC source revealed that the Managing Director of Fidelity
Bank, Mr. Nnamdi Okonkwo, received the money from Otti sometime in 2014.
The detective said, “When we arrested Okonkwo last year, we
were informed that Otti was the one who brought the money to Okonkwo on
the instructions of Diezani.
“We have been looking for Otti for several months but he seems
to be out of the country. We believe he might be in London, where
Diezani is. He is aware that we are looking for him.
“If he refuses to show up, then, we may have no choice but to declare him wanted.”
In a nine-paragraph affidavit filed in support of the anti-graft
agency’s ex parte application for the forfeiture of the $153m, an EFCC
investigator, Moses Awolusi, had claimed that the anti-graft agency
discovered, through its investigations, how sometime in December, 2014,
Diezani invited the Fidelity Bank boss to her office, where they hatched
the plan of how a cash sum of $153,310,000 would be moved from the NNPC
to Okonkwo to be saved for Diezani.
Diezani it was gathered gave the banker instructions on how the
money was to be diverted. Diezani instructed the banker to ensure that
the money was “neither credited into any known account nor captured in any transaction platforms” of Fidelity Bank.
Awolusi said Okonkwo accepted and implemented the deal, leading to the movement of $153,310,000 from the NNPC to the bank.
He said two former Group Executive Directors of Finance and
Accounts of the NNPC, B. O. Otti and Stanley Lawson, helped Diezani to
move the cash from the NNPC Headquarters, Abuja, to the headquarters of
Fidelity Bank in Lagos.
Awolusi said in a desperate bid to conceal the source of the money,
Okonkwo, upon receiving it, instructed the Country Head of Fidelity
Bank, Mr. Martin Izuogbe, to take $113,310,000 cash out of the money to
the Executive Director, Commercial and Institutional Bank, Sterling Bank
Plc, Lanre Adesanya, to keep.
He said the remaining $40m was taken in cash to the Executive
Director, Public Sector Accountant, First Bank, Dauda Lawal, to keep.
The investigator said out of the $113,310,000 handed over to
Adesanya, a sum of $108,310,000 was invested in an off balance sheet
investment, using Sterling Asset Management Trustees Limited.
He said the $108,310,000 was subsequently changed to N23,446,300,000 and saved in Sterling Bank.
The investigator said the EFCC had also recovered another $5m out
of the money kept with the MD of Access Bank Plc, Mr. Herbert Wigwe.
A source revealed that the EFCC board will meet in the next two
weeks to decide the fate of the bank executives who were allegedly
involved in the fraud.
Some of the bank heads, who were arrested by the EFCC last year
include Okonkwo, Wigwe and the Sterling Bank boss, Mr. Yemi Adeola.
The Executive Director, Public Sector Account, First Bank, Dauda Lawal, was also investigated.
A source at the EFCC said, “In two weeks’ time, the court will
decide if the forfeiture of the $153m will be permanent. Once we can
secure victory, the next step is for the EFCC board to meet.
“It is the board that will determine the fate of all the bank chiefs that have been indicted.”
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