The Senate on Thursday began the probe
of the Chairman of the Code of Conduct Tribunal (CCT), Mr. Danladi Umar
over allegations of corruption.
The
probe followed the presentation yesterday of a petition to the
parliament by Senator Obinna Ogba (Ebonyi Central) by a group,
Anti-corruption Network signed by one Ajaso I. Ajaso.
After
the presentation, Senate President Bukola Saraki referred the petition
to the Senate Committee on Ethics, Privileges and Public Petitions,
mandating it to report its findings to the Senate in two weeks.
Although
details of the petition were not made available to journalists, the
Senate’s probe of Umar is not unconnected to Saraki’s trial at the CCT
for false assets declaration in 2003.
Umar
has come under pressure in the last two weeks following reports of an
investigation carried out by the Economic and Financial Crimes
Commission (EFCC) in 2014 into allegations made by a retired Comptroller
of Customs, Mr. Rasheed Taiwo, that the CCT chairman demanded N10
million as bribe from him to quash a case against him.
Also
on November 6, a non-governmental organisation (NGO) – Registered
Trustees of Mission for Peace and Development Initiative – filed a suit
at the court seeking to compel Umar to vacate his position as chairman
of CCT.
The suit also sought to
compel the EFCC to carry out the instruction of a former Attorney
General of the Federation and Minister of Justice, Mr. Mohammed Adoke
(SAN), to prosecute Umar for allegedly collecting a bribe of N1.8
million through the bank account of his personal assistant, Abdullahi
Gambo.
The alleged N1.8 million bribe was part payment of the N10 million Umar was purported to have demanded from Taiwo.
Umar, CCT, EFCC and the AGF were listed as first to fourth defendants respectively.
Among
the exhibits attached to the suit were the photocopy of the cheque with
which a bribe of N1.8 million was allegedly paid to Umar through Gambo;
the statement by Umar himself where he admitted meeting privately with
the petitioner in his (Umar) office at the CCT premises; statements made
by his PA; Umar’s bail application; and a letter to former President
Goodluch Jonathan by the two other members of the tribunal, among other
exhibits.
The group, in its
originating summons filed on its behalf by Chief Mike Ozekhome (SAN),
asked the court to order Umar to hands-off the trial of any Nigerian,
having confessed to corruption and admitted meeting with the accused
person standing trial before him, in the absence of the prosecution and
court officials.
The plaintiffs also
wanted the court to order the CCT to halt further sittings or
proceedings against accused persons brought before it, or currently
standing trial before it until it is reconstituted to exclude its
present chairman.
While fielding
questions from journalists on whether the probe would not be
misconstrued as a vendetta against the CCT chairman who is currently
trying Saraki, Senator Ogba said people have the freedom to say what
they pleased, but Senate would not be deterred from carrying out its
lawful duties.
Source: ThisDayLive
No comments:
Post a Comment