The Code of Conduct Bureau has reveled that there is evidence that the
Senate President, Bukola Saraki, while in office as governor of Kwara
State between 1999 and 2007, obtained huge bank loans and paid back the
loans with funds belonging to the state.
The bureau revealed that Saraki used the bank loans running into
billions of naira to acquire landed assets in Lagos, Abuja and London.
The Bureau said it gathered the information from the Economic and
Financial Crimes Commission which had conducted investigations into
various petitions against Saraki between 2010 and 2012.
The CCB’s position is contained in a counter-affidavit deposed to by one
of its operatives, Peter Danladi, in opposition to a fresh motion filed
by Saraki to challenge the validity of the 13 counts of false assets
declaration instituted against him before the tribunal.
Danladi stated, “That I was informed by Mr. Yahaya Bello, an operative
of the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission in our office on March
14, 2016 at about 11am and I verily believe him that:
“The EFCC received various petitions against the defendant/applicant
between 2010 and 2012 alleging acts of corruption, theft, money
laundering etc.
“The EFCC conducted its investigation of the various petitions and made
findings which showed that the defendant/applicant abused his office
while he was Governor of Kwara State and was involved in various acts of
corruption as the governor of the state.
“The defendant/applicant borrowed huge sums of money running into
billions from commercial banks, particularly Guarantee Trust Bank and
used the proceeds of the loan to acquire several landed properties in
Lagos, Abuja and London while he was Governor of Kwara State.
“As against the defendant using his own legitimate income to defray the
loan, he took public funds running into billions from Kwara State
Government and lodged same in several tranches and in cash into his GTB
account in GRA, Ilorin, Kwara State.
“The defendant/applicant’s account officer in GTB confirmed that the
defendant/applicant gave him several cash in government house to lodge
into the account and in some occasions, the defendant sent his aides
from government house to give him the cash for lodgment into his
account.
“When EFCC submitted its report to its legal department and the Federal
Ministry of Justice, the Federal Ministry of Justice formed the opinion
that the offences revealed from the investigation, particularly as they
relate to the properties acquired by the defendant/applicant while he
was Governor of Kwara State and various monies sent into his various
accounts outside Nigeria can be better investigated and prosecuted
through the Code of Conduct Bureau and Tribunal.
“The Office of the Attorney-General of the Federation then sent the
findings and the evidence gathered during investigation by the EFCC as a
complaint to the Code of Conduct Bureau for investigation and that the
operative of EFCC would collaborate with the officers of the bureau for
effective investigations.”
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