Managing Director of a leading Nigerian commercial bank has been
detained by the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission, EFCC, for
allegedly helping former Petroleum Minister, Diezani Allison-Madueke to
launder $115 million cash.
The bank chief executive was taken into EFCC custody three days ago for
presiding over the receipt of such huge cash and helping to distribute
it to beneficiaries two days to the last general elections. The bank CEO
is said to have violated extant law by not reporting the receipt and
warehousing of the cash to the Nigerian Financial Intelligence Unit,
NFIU, as required by law. Diezani is said to have summoned the bank
chief to her Abuja home and told him to prepare to receive foreign
currency running into billions of Naira from four companies and to
convert it to Naira and pay them to designated beneficiaries on her
behalf.
A day after the instruction from her, four companies stormed the bank
with various amounts of cash and were promptly received by the bank. A
breakdown of the funds given by the EFCC shows that Actus Integrated
paid in $17,884, Northern Base Gas Company, $60m; Midwestern Oil and
Gas, $9.5m; and Laitan Adesanya, $1.35million. Diezani on her part,
allegedly lodged $26 million cash into the same account same day.
It was learned that shortly after paying in the cash, Diezani’s son,
Ugonna, approached the detained MD and furnished him with the list of
beneficiaries of the cash as instructed by his mother. Vanguard was told
that although the detained bank chief complained that he would not have
enough time to cash in Naira to effect the immediate distribution of
the money as instructed by the then minister, she asked him to use every
available cash to pay the beneficiaries and use the Dollar as
collateral.
A top official of the commission confirmed to Vanguard last night that
the man had made useful confessions to operatives. The source did not,
however, say when the bank official would be charged to court or if he
would refund the money to the government. Diezani could not be reached
for comments last night. What's your take on this?
Source: Vanguard
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