Indications emerged at the weekend that the 27-man task force
investigating the $2.1billion arms procurement scandal under the former
National Security Adviser, NSA, have traced a whopping sum of N1trillion
to the accounts allegedly owned by four EX- service chiefs.
The
$2.1 billion is an amount budgeted for procurement of arms by the
immediate past administration to fight the Boko Haram insurgency in the
North East.
A highly placed source at the Economic and Financial
Crimes Commission, EFCC, told Nigerian Pilot that the task force
investigating the arms deals in conjunction with the financial
intelligence unit of the EFCC found about N1trillion of the missing
money in the accounts of four former service chiefs. The money was
allegedly paid into the military officers’ accounts domiciled in four
new generation banks.
The source further said the affected
service chiefs would soon be invited to explain all they know about the
money found in their bank accounts as well as their involvements in the
arms deals.
The former service chiefs were those in the Air Force, Navy and Army.
Apart
from the Service chiefs, it was further gathered that more retired and
serving military officers are also being investigated by the anti-graft
agency and those found culpable would be invited for questioning.
For
instance, the source explained that, “The commission has traced
N400million to the account of a serving security operative. The shocking
discovery was made just before the New Year.
“Efforts are still
being made to trace other transactions. The motive is to go after some
of these funds that are in private accounts.”
Recently, the EFCC
picked up a serving Colonel and a German citizen in connection with the
ongoing investigation into arms procured.
Sources said the duo are currently detained in connection with the training of 750 Special Forces in Belarus in 2015.
Another
top operative of the commission said the commission had written to the
Defence Headquarters and heads of the three services of the Armed Forces
for the release of some personnel needed by the anti-graft agency to
shed light on their roles in the arms procurement deal.
The
Defence Headquarters had repeatedly said the present administration
would not tolerate corruption, which it noted had slow the development
of the country.
The Acting Director, Defence Information,
Brigadier General Rabe Abubakar, told our correspondent on phone that
the military was fully in support of the Federal Government’s campaign
against corruption.
In a related development, Nigerian Pilot
gathered that the EFCC would next week invite nine prominent
northerners, who were mentioned in a letter which a former chairman of
the Peoples Democratic Party, PDP Board of Trustees, Chief Tony Anenih,
wrote to the anti-graft agency.
Anenih had in the letter
explained how he shared N260millio paid into his account by the Office
of the National Security Adviser, ONSA during the tenure of Col. Sambo
Dasuki (retd.).
He alleged that he gave N63million to a group
coordinated by a former Special Assistant to former President Shehu
Shagari, Alhaji Tanko Yakassai.
But Yakassai said he only got N53million not N63million from Anenih as alleged and that he used it for official purposes.
Yakassai
said, “The amount being bandied about is not what was given to me. It
is true Chief Anenih gave the committee of eminent persons, which I
headed some funds for our assignment. The money being quoted is not what
we received.
“The committee of nine persons, which I led, was
given an assignment to reach out to traditional rulers on the need for
them to ensure peaceful elections in their domains because there was
tension prior to the 2015 general elections.
“We went round 18
states and Abuja where we met two persons in each of the states we
visited. We started with the Sultan of Sokoto. We could not meet with
traditional rulers in Gombe because on the day of our visit, Boko Haram
attacked the town and there were reports that they were targeting the
Government House, where we were at that time.
“The money the
committee received was for logistics, such as transport and
accommodation. We wrote a report after our assignment, which started on
January 14 and ended on February 15, 2015; the records are there.”
The
elder statesman said he was prepared to defend the activities of the
committee when required to do so, stressing that the committee performed
its assignment creditably and transparently.
Efforts to get
response from the EFCC did not succeed as at the time of filling this
report as calls to the mobile phone of its spokesman, Wilson Uwujaren
was not picked.
http://nigerianpilot.com/2-1bn-arms-probe-n1trn-found-in-4-ex-service-chiefs-accts/
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