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Senate panel asks IGP to compel CAC boss to appear before it in 24hrs

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Apparently piqued by the refusal of the Registrar General of Corporate Affairs Commission, Garba Lawal
to honour invitation for the third time, the senate panel on finance has asked the Inspector General of Police to compel his appearance before it within 24 hours.

The committee’s Chairman, Sani Musa could not hold his displeasure as he has to involve the police.
Lawal was expected to appear to defend the Commission’s 2024 budget, but some financial discrepancies were spotted by the Committee in the book of accounts submitted to it and needed further clarifications, a development that may have scared the CAC boss from appearing before the panel.

The four senior officials of the Corporate Affairs Commission having confirmed several letter of invitation by the Clerk of the Senate Committee on Finance could not explain the registrar’s refusal to appear before the panel.

Before Senator Musa’s remark, Senator Ifeanyi Uba called for punitive measures against the RG to serve as deterrent to others.

See also  Mambilla & Manifestations of Malfeasance

Senator Bello Mandiya representing Katsina South Senatorial District expressed frustration at the Lawal’s disdain for the Committee, wondering what he was hiding that makes him to be so afraid.

He said: “Thank you Mr Chairman, I am Senator Bello Mandiya representing Katsina South Senatorial District.  I think, it’s disrespect by the Registrar General of the Corporate Affairs Commission to shun this Committee for the third time. 

“Even the President and Commander-in-Chief of the Federal Republic of Nigeria appeared before us to present a budget. 

“Who is Registrar General of CAC that cannot appear before us?”

Reacting, Senator Abdul Ningi advised the CAC officials not to come back without their boss, urging them to let the CAC face the heat and explain how they spent money in the agency.

Ningi said: “Mr Chairman, it is imperative to understand where they are coming from that this is not the first time they are appearing before the Committee.

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“There was a deliberate discussion with you that there were discrepancies in revenue generation and expenditure by the Corporate Affairs Commission and we said, the Registrar General should be here. 

“Yet you are here and you probably told him that you can do the job.  Even if you can do the job, this job is not for you please.  Don’t take the bullet that is meant for him”.
“In his ruling after reactions by the Committee members, Sani Musa said: “With all sense of humility, the Corporate Affairs Registrar General has disregarded this Committee.

“Distinguished Colleagues, Corporate Affairs Commission was present when we treated MTEF/FSP and the Director of Finance were here.  We saw discrepancies and we told you to go and come back. 

“You have your book keepers; you have your records and we asked you to go and tidy up and report back, but you never did.

“I have cause to tell the Secretariat to send you a letter, you appear here.  When you came, you said the Registrar General just fell ill, I excused you expecting you are going to come back with documents requested. 

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“You Know what the financial regulation of this country is.  I had cause to tell the Committee Secretariat to write you again and you are here without the Registrar General

“You are the custodian of finances of the Corporate Affairs Commission and there are discrepancies. 

“How many entities are registered in this country.  How many?  How much were you reporting there and you are taking us with levity.

“I am invoking Section 89(2) mandating the Inspector General of Police to compel appearance of the Registrar General of the Corporate Affairs Commission before the Senate Committee on Finance within 24 hours.”

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Mambilla & Manifestations of Malfeasance

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***The Agunloye trial is based on criminalisation conspiracy to avoid liabilities. 

About three months ago, precisely on the 16th of July 2024, the Truth and Justice Group based in London, UK, observed in its article titled “Contracts, Crimes and Criminalisation of Mambilla” that the Agunloye trial was based on criminalisation conspiracy. We observed then the National Assembly of Nigeria was seeking to find the way out of the Mambilla stalemate and may inadvertently open the lid on the multiple contracts and crimes surrounding Mambilla, laying bare the criminalisation tool, initiated by the administration of former President Buhari, which tool is being employed by the Federal Government of Nigeria with a view to evade liabilities at the International Arbitration Panel in France. We are still waiting to hear what the Senate of the 10th National Assembly of a country with estimated 200 million population beleaguered with multiple national grid collapses has set out to do. 

It is noteworthy that we have received several reactions from Nigeria attesting to the innocence of the former Minister, Dr. Olu Agunloye and noticed that most of the commentators resorted to the efficacy of prayers to extricate their man. However, it would be better if family members and friends of the embattled former Minister overlay the much-needed prayers with data and details of the processes and procedures of the trials in Nigeria and the arbitration in France. We all need to get better understanding of the Mambilla Malfeasance in its totality and only associates and family members of Dr Agunloye and justice minded individuals that can be trusted to take this task. This is why we are making a quick recap of current position of the Mambilla Malfeasance and Nigeria’s struggle to avoid liabilities for its impurities and impunities. It is to remind the public of the need to understand the details and to urge them to stand firmly for justice and truth.

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For most part of this week starting from 21 October 2024, the FCT court under Mr. Jude Onwuegbuzie will allow the Defence to the cross-examine the former GTBank official, who is now a staff member of Jaiz Bank. After this, EFCC will continue its prosecution with “evidence” and more witnesses and when it closes its case, Agunloye will start his own defence, and thereafter, the judge will rule. 

In the meantime, in Nigeria, the Agunloye’s defence team quickly spotted, from the onset, that the case was of a political nature not based on legalistic foundations and that this needed to be tackled urgently. It, therefore, has striven very hard to steer the court away from handing out its planned kangaroo judgement programmed to be delivered in February or March 2024 as an adjunct to the Statement of Defence of the Federal Government of Nigeria (FGN) at the International Arbitration in France.

So far, EFCC is still battling with its first Prosecution Witness out of the seven listed, and the judge is being constrained to show less brazen bias. The defence is also awaiting the Appeal Court judgement on the case filed in respect of significant bias exhibited by the court and the challenge of EFCC on its competence to prosecute not in accordance with its Enabling Act and in non-compliance with a Supreme Court ruling. If the Appeal Court rules in Agunloye’s favour, the case under Mr. Jude Onwuegbuzie in FCT Court, Apo will be quashed and reassigned to another court to start from scratch. 

In the meantime, in France, the Federal Government of Nigeria (FGN) is cruising at full steam on the criminalisation strategy and making the former minister, Dr. Agunloye the central figure and the core of the statement of defence of the FGN at the Arbitration. The former President Obasanjo personally sent a signed testimony dated 17 July 2024 which said, “even though the contract limit was N25 million, the former minister awarded a N780 billion contract without permission” and that he (Obasanjo) “did not find out until twenty years after”. The former president Muhammadu Buhari also personally testified in a document dated 21 September 2024 about his own role in re-awarding the Mambilla Hydroelectric Power Project to another contractor. And recently, in October 2024, Nigeria’s sitting President Bola Tinubu, acting through his lawyers, sent in a rejoinder to the Arbitration Panel which claimed that Dr. Agunloye “awarded a contract of $6 billion or N780 billion in 2003 illegally.” Strangely the Mambilla contract awarded by Agunloye was no longer being treated as a Build, Operate and Transfer (BOT) which carries no cost to the FGN, but as a procurement contract at a whopping sum of N780 billion. This is not true. Agunloye awarded a BOT contract. The President Tinubu’s embarrassing claims also included: “the findings of EFCC’s investigations have shed a new light on Dr. Agunloye’s behaviour making it now clear that the 2003 $6 billion award was prompted by corruption.” This is false, but it exposes the President of the Federal Government Nigeria and his lawyers as pre-empting Justice Jude Onwuegbuzie and announcing his expected judgement in the trial of Dr. Agunloye before his Court in Abuja. This portends grave dangers as the President has already quoted the yet to be delivered judgement in a trial that has not commenced beyond presenting the first Prosecution Witness; and has proceeded to present such in a formally signed official document at the International Arbitration Pannel in France to evade liabilities for impunities. 

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The Federal Government of Nigeria under President Bola Tinubu, through its lawyers, is also claiming that although it could “establish only three payments to Agunloye in 2019, totalling N5m for the 2003 contract of N780 billion, there must be other payments that have not been uncovered and insinuated that his children have bought expensive houses in the US”, citing the house of Mr. Jide Agunloye (Agunloye’s son) in Monroe, Connecticut, USA and alluding to it as a “proceeds of corruption”.  The lawyers in France are advising Mr Jide Agunloye to sue the Nigerian prosecutors at the Arbitration Panel since his house in Monroe was acquired through a 30-year mortgage in 2007 and he still has 18 (eighteen) more years to pay on the mortgage while the Nigerian prosecutors called it “proceeds of corruption” in October 2024.

The Lawyers and Arbitration Panellists in France are wondering why the former minister Agunloye is being kept out of the Arbitration if he is indeed so central and critical to the case being made by the Federal Government of Nigeria. It is, however, evident that Agunloye is being deliberately kept away from the Arbitration even though his name and activities are all over in the Statements of Defence and Counter Claims of Nigeria. He is being held in Nigeria, where his passport has been seized by the government, and awaiting pre-determined kangaroo judgement as blurted out by the sitting Judge in one of his rulings on petty motions, and now being bandied around by the President’s lawyers at the International Arbitration in France. 

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We are in full agreement with a prominent statesman and senior advocate of law who concluded that all these melodrama and manoeuvres through criminalisation and the associated “scapegoat-isation” are no more than the antics of corrupt leaders to avoid liabilities at the Arbitration for fraudulent activities in the power sector over the last twenty-five years and for unethical actions by the government under their watch.

Dr. Anthony Ibrahim,

Truth and Justice Group

Camberwell Green, London. UK

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Empowering Girls Affected by Conflict on International Day of the Girl Child

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In a significant event marking the International Day of the Girl Child, Tonye Marclint launched a project dedicated to empowering and mentoring young girls impacted by armed conflict.
This initiative, funded by the Building Blocks for Peace foundation as part of the Young Peacebuilder Fellowship, took place at the Durunmi IDP camp and brought together 50 girls for a day filled with mentorship and skills-building activities.
The project aimed to foster self-awareness among participants and educate them on essential hygiene practices. Volunteers from the Rachel Mujong Project Braid Me provided practical workshops on creating homemade shampoo and bathing soaps, playing a crucial role in enhancing the program.

Tonye Marclint emphasized the importance of empowering girls in conflict-affected areas, stating, “As much as these young girls are victims of armed conflict, they also represent the hope and vision for a better future. This year’s theme, ‘Girls’ Vision for the Future,’ highlights the urgent need to empower them with the skills and confidence to shape that future.”
He underscored that equipping them with essential life skills supports their immediate needs and helps them envision a brighter tomorrow.

The project received funding from the Building Blocks for Peace foundation, which enabled the successful execution of the initiative. Through this effort, Marclint aims to draw attention to the unique challenges faced by young girls displaced by conflict and provide them with the necessary tools to thrive despite these adversities.

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Tonye Marclint, a 2024 Young Peacebuilder Fellow, is also a researcher at the Institute for Peace and Conflict Resolution in Abuja and a member of the Conflict Research Network (CORN) West Africa. His passion for addressing the impact of conflict on youth drives his commitment to creating impactful programs and policies in this area.

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Olu Agunloye Mother, Chief (Mrs) Adesola dies at 97

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Adesola Agunloye

The Matriarch of the Agunloye Family of Erusu Akoko, Ondo State, Chief (Mrs) Adesola Agunloye is dead

Aged 97 years, she died peacefully in her Ibadan, Oyo State home on Saturday, July 13, 2024.
Mama Agunloye who is a community leader and philantrophist, held the chieftaincy titles of Yeyelua Erusu Akoko and the Akowajo of Anglican Church.
She is survived by five children, many grandchildren and  many great grandchildren.

One of her children who is also the Olori Ebi Agunloye, Dr Olu Agunloye, a former Minister of Power and Steel, pioneer Corps Marshall of the Federal Road Safety Corps and current National Secretary of thr Social Democratic Party (SDP) confirmed the death of his mother in a statement obtained by Vital News on Monday.
According to him, Mama did not give any hint that she was leaving.

“She left peacefully without any stress. She was 97 years old. She lived a good life, she did not stress us. She was not in pain.
“You can see people who are sick and in pain. Houses are sold and the person will still die. So we are thanking God, the woman has done very well. Her husband Joseph Olawale Agunloye died in 1963, 61 years ago.
“The family members are in high spirits and are grateful to God for the life of the matriarch and for His mercies and His grace,” Dr Agunloye said.

See also  Mambilla & Manifestations of Malfeasance

Full text of the statement from Dr Olu Agunloye on the death of Chief (Mrs) Adesola Agunloye reads : “Our mother and mentor, Chief Mrs. Adesola Agunloye, omo Olowo elewu-okun of Owo, omo Ojomu Uro Oloyemekun, aya Akoko, iya Akoko, the _Yeyelua Erusu_ and the _Akowajo_ of Anglican Church bowed out quietly in Ibadan on Saturday, 13 July 2024.

“She did not give any hint that she was leaving. She left peacefully without any stress. She was 97 years old.
“Details of the burial ceremonies will be announced later by the family.

“In the meantime, senior orphans will be admiting me officially to the orphanage as a COJ *_(Certified Orphan Junior) any moment from now.”

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