
The men caught with the money
The
EFCC has been accused of being too hasty at disclosing cases �prior to
the completion� of investigation following a matter involving Union
Bank.
One of Nigeria’s oldest financial institutions, Union Bank, on
Friday night admitted ownership of a large consignment of cash which
anti-graft operatives said they intercepted at the international airport
in Enugu, a report by Premium Times has revealed.
Recall that the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission had yesterday announced in a statement that two men were arrested at Akanu Ibiam International Airport with a combined cash of $2.8 million (over N1 billion at N360 a dollar).
The agency said the suspects mentioned their affiliation to Union Bank and Bankers Warehouse, a cash-in-transit contractor.
The anti-graft office said it was investigating the recovery as money laundering.
But Union Bank strongly denied wrongdoing, saying the practice was
standard in the banking industry and its contractors were licenced by
the Central Bank of Nigeria.
In a string of tweets directed at the EFCC on Friday night, Union
Bank criticised the anti-graft office for being too hasty at disclosing
the development to the public, “prior to the completion” of investigation.
PREMIUM TIMES learnt on Saturday from Tony Orilade, a spokesperson
for the EFCC, that the money was intercepted at about 7:00 p.m. on
Thursday, and it came barely a few weeks after operatives recovered
about N940 million from a Lebanese and another $370,000 at Lagos
Airport.
Mr Orilade said the EFCC made concerted efforts to get Union Bank
to corroborate accounts of the suspects, but was frustrated for nearly
24 hours.
“We made serious efforts to get Union Bank officials in Enugu
and other parts of the country to confirm details of the money, but
there was no one ready to cooperate with us,” Mr Orilade said. “We
then decided to count the money before the suspects and took it to the
CBN in Enugu where it was deposited and records taken.”
Mr Orilade said as of 4:00 p.m. Friday, Union Bank representatives
had not come around to claim the money or ask about their staff members
arrested.
“It was after we released a statement to the media that they started calling and making noise,” the spokesperson said.
It was not immediately learnt whether Union Bank or Bankers
Warehouse has reached out to the anti-graft office to sort out the
matter.
Mr Orilade said the agency was unconvinced by Union Bank merely claiming ownership of the money on Twitter.
“Investigation is ongoing, which might prompt prosecution or no prosecution,” the EFCC chief said.
“But we would like to let Nigerians know that when we see anything
close to infringement of the law, we do not leave anything to chances.”
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