• EFCC And Yahaya Bello’s Hide-And-Seek Game – Independent Newspaper Nigeria

    Efcc and yahaya bellos hide-and-seek game independent newspaper nigeria - nigeria newspapers online
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    The Economic and Finan­cial Crimes Commission (EFCC) may have with re­cent events, proven to those who never believed in its abilities to properly prosecute financial fraud offenders without bias, that it has outlived its usefulness. An anti-graft agency that seems only out to diligently hunt and pros­ecute small fries while bungling high-profile cases involving men and women of means certainly can­not provide the much desired check on economic and financial crimes that hold this nation hostage.

    At the outset of the agency, inci­dentally under Nuhu Ribadu, who is the current National Security Adviser to President Bola Ahmed Tinubu, there were at least some attempts to prosecute high-pro­file cases. Even though it was ar­gued that ex-President Olusegun Obasanjo and succeeding presi­dents after him, have been using the agency to persecute political enemies but it was still not hopeless as it currently is.

    Last week, the EFCC treated Nigerians with a befuddling spec­tacle; a spectacle that has left its op­eratives sounding incoherent and laughable as they tried to explain what is clearly shameful conduct and an unforced error.

    The EFCC has never disap­pointed those who insist that the anti-graft agency is only a lap dog used by the government to hunt those who have fallen out of favour with the government.

    For instance, while the EFCC has held the former governor of the Central Bank, Godwin Emefiele, for over a year now, does the EFCC want us to believe that Emefiele could possibly have carried out all of those atrocious conducts while in office alone without the consent of the approving authority at the time? Was Emefiele’s actions in of­fice without the approval or knowl­edge of the government? Yes, his conduct in office was crazy, to say the least, but was he alone and the only one person with such scandal­ous conducts in Muhammadu Bu­hari’s eight years of misrule? Or is the EFCC just doing this as punish­ment for Emefiele’s transgressions against the government of the day?

    The current hide and seek game between the EFCC and a former Governor of Kogi State, Alhaji Yahaya Bello, got to a crescendo, when the former who had been de­clared wanted by the EFCC walked into the premises of EFCC on Sep­tember 18 and walked out trium­phantly. He was in their premises and walked away in a manner that simply suggested that the EFCC was only doing what it knows how to do best – media trial.

    Not a few doubted its prepared­ness to prosecute this case. Easily the most celebrated story on var­ious media platforms, including social media in recent months or thereabouts, it has been around the failure of the EFCC to arrest and bring to trial the immediate past governor of Kogi State, Alhaji Ya­haya Bello.

    The initial impression was that the erstwhile Kogi governor may have sneaked out of the country, but the reality is that the governor all the while has been in the country and yet the EFCC wants the world to believe that his whereabouts could not be traced.

    The commission had been up­dating Nigerians on efforts being made to get the former governor into its net. A notice posted on the commission’s official Facebook page in April, 2024, had declared him wanted in connection with the alleged case of Money Laundering to the tune of N80,246,470,089.88. With the recently filed charges, it has increased to about N110 billion.

    All the commission could offer on the reason it allowed a man it had declared wanted as a fugitive of the law, was that Bello’s so-called surrender was an antic to garner public sympathy and evade due process.

    The anti-graft agency main­tained that Bello’s visit to its head­quarters with a retinue of aides and a sitting governor was why he was rebuffed.

    “To date, Bello is yet to take his plea in the alleged N80.2 billion money laundering charges pre­ferred against him before Justice Nwite. His invasion of the corpo­rate headquarters of the commis­sion with a retinue of security details, hand-to-hand cahoots and carriage with a sitting governor having immunity, unwarranted media blitz, scripted sleight of hands unknown to the public and other backend intelligence avail­able to the commission, compelled a tactical rebuff of his touted sur­render offer.” Chai EFCC!

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    The same EFCC that allowed a man it declared wanted with the In­terpol walk away because the man came to its garage and did not do proper filing or documentation pro­cess on arrival at their premises, again mobilised its men to Bello’s home, firing gunshots and causing unnecessary unrest and again after the show of shame left the premis­es without their long sought-after suspect.

    According to the agency, no Nige­rian, no matter how highly placed, was expected to come for an invi­tation in a convoy of vehicles and with Governor Usman Ododo and some dignitaries. To this end, the agency pointed out that Bello came with grandeur which is contrary to its procedures.

    On October 16, 2018, when for­mer Governor of Ekiti State, Ayo­dele Fayose, reported at the EFCC office in Wuse, Abuja, the current FCT Minister, Nyesom Wike, and others were with him. Yet, he was taken into custody and detained. Also, in 2014, when the DSS invit­ed the former FCT Minister, Nasir El-Rufai, Rotimi Amaechi who was then Governor of Rivers State, and Chris Ngige, a serving Senator, were among those who accompa­nied him.

    This same EFCC now under Ola Olukoyede is telling Nigerians that because a governor accompanied Bello they let him leave, only to invade the Kogi State Govt House in Asokoro, Abuja, in the night, shooting sporadically, looking for the same Yahaya Bello.

    The EFCC’s Director of Public Affairs, Wilson Uwujaren, was to offer the same reason on a televi­sion interview, where he said Bel­lo was not genuinely prepared to surrender himself, contrary to his public claims.

    Uwujaren emphasised that Bel­lo’s actions were inconsistent with someone genuinely seeking to coop­erate with the commission.

    What was the motive of EFCC re­fusal to take in a suspect who came on his own volition and interrogate him, detain him and to take him to court? The EFCC also has the power to take his statement in the presence of his lawyers and grant him administrative bail pending ar­raignment. Since the case is coming up the following week, the EFCC should have taken Bello’s state­ment, granted him administrative bail and asked him to come back, at the least, for crying out loud!

    Uwujaren had pathetically said, “The appropriate place of surren­der would be before Justice Emeka Nwite of the Federal High Court, Abuja, before whom his legal team had undertaken to produce him to answer to the 18-count charge of money laundering preferred against him.

    This clearly is an all-time low for the EFCC and it’s shameful.

    To also think that this same EFCC is again enmeshed in anoth­er scandal over its handling of the allegations made by Martins Vin­cent Otse, also known as VeryDark­Man, who claimed that the EFCC dropped money laundering charges against cross dresser Idris Okun­eye, popularly known as Bobrisky, after receiving ₦15 million.

    Perhaps, the EFCC does not real­ise that as an organisation, it’s now perceived as a toothless bulldog or at best one that barks at small fries only.

    The agency, if it must continue to exist, must spare us these she­nanigans and public spectacles that often end in an anti-climax. All the high profile cases of the commis­sion with media hype begin and end where it all begins, the media.

    If the primary assignment of EFCC is to fight economic and fi­nancial crimes, then it has failed thus far. This is not only because it has dissipated so much energy chasing small crimes while most of its high profile cases have either gone without closures or have been trailed by allegations against its op­eratives.

    Uwujaren and his EFCC know that they simply flunked it and can never be convincing to themselves or to Nigerians. It was a rather shameful outing for which it must be prepared to not repeat if it must earn the respect of the people as well as justify the taxpayers’ money voted to it annually.

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