My resignation goodfor the church — Pope

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Vanguard, THURSNDAY, FEBRUARY 14, 2013 —15

Yar’Adua’s Principal Secretary sues EFCC zDemands N500m damages BY JOHNBOSCO AGBAK-

WURU AGOS—THE former Prin cipal Secretary to the late President UmaruYar ’adua, Mr. David Edevbie, has filed an action at the Federal High Court in Lagos, praying the court to either compel the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission to prosecute him for his alleged involvement in money laundering activities or in the absence of any concrete evidence against him give him a clean bill of health. Mr. Edevbie, alongside five other persons, have been the

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subject of investigation by the EFCC since 2009 in connection with the sale of Delta State’s shareholding in Vee Networks Ltd., VNL, while he was Delta State Commissioner for Finance. In the suit brought before the court, “for the enforcement of his fundamental right to fair hearing within a reasonable time, and the right to receive information without interference,” Mr. Edevbie is asking the court to determine whether the anti-graft agency ought not to have prosecuted or exonerated him over financial crimes

allegations, following the sale in 2006 of Delta State’s shareholding in VNL, in which Delta State was a substantial shareholder. The EFCC and Attorney-General of the Federation are the first and second respondents respectively. The plaintiff, through his lawyer, Olasupo Shasore, SAN, of Ajumogobia and Okeke, is therefore, seeking an order of the court to compel the respondents to prosecute him where investigation disclosed evidence of wrongdoing or in the alternative, an order com-

pelling the EFCC to make an official written communication exonerating him from any alleged financial crime arising from the VNL transaction. Mr. Edevbie is also praying the court to issue an order compelling the EFCC to disclose the results of its investigation into his involvement in the VNL transaction while he was Delta State Commissioner for Finance pursuant to section 1(3) of the Freedom of Information Act, 2011. In addition, he wants the court to award him the sum of N500 million as damages for the agency ’s breach of his constitutional right to receive information without interference, as enshrined in section 39(1) of the Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria, 1999,Article 9 of African Charter on Human and Peoples’ Rights (Ratification and Enforcement) Act (Cap 10) Laws of the Federation of Nigeria (LFN), 1990, (‘the African Charter on Human and Peoples’ Right’) and sections 1, 4 and 7 of the Freedom of Information Act, 2011 which denial has brought about loss of business and goodwill to the applicant over the period of the time of the denial.” In an affidavit supporting the motion, Mr. Edevbie averred that he could not have been involved in any money laundering

activity arising from the transaction because he had ceased to be a member of the Board of VNL as a Director and Delta State Executive Council as Commissioner for Finance before the sale of the shares was concluded, and funds received by Delta State Government in June 2006. He deposed that “after my resignation from VNL board in August 2004, after which I was duly replaced by another appointee of Delta State Government - Mr. Onosode - and my departure from the Delta State Government as Commissioner for Finance in December, 2005, I was no longer entitled to receive information regarding the final negotiations that eventually led to the sale of Delta State’s shares in VNL in June 2006.” However, by virtue of his position as the Commissioner for Finance and his role as representative of the state government on the board of VNL from June 2001-August 2004,Mr. Edevbie was in 2009 named with five others as a co-conspirator in the alleged money laundering charges preferred against former Delta State governor, James Ibori, by the Crown Prosecution in the United Kingdom in 2009.This was shortly after he was appointed Principal Secretary to the late President Yar’Adua, replacing the previous Chief of Staff. In his affidavit, Mr. Edevbie told the court that he wrote to the EFCC through his lawyers on February 24, 2011, and April 1, “ requesting the EFCC to carry out investigations into the allegations, with particular interest in my alleged role as the Commissioner for Finance.” Subsequently, he said, he was invited by the EFCC for questioning in its Lagos office.

Group charges FG on Ezekwesili

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BUJA—A Non-gov ernmental organization, Growth and Development Monitoring Initiative, GDMI, has urged the Federal Government not to dismiss the recent remarks by former Minister of Education, Dr Oby Ezekwesili, on the state of development in the country but consider it as a catalyst to deliver on the promises to Nigeria. A statement signed by the group’s President, Alhaji Mohammed Musa Bagana, in Abuja described Ezekwesili’s

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position as the stark reality on the issue of development in Nigeria. He said: “Although our present tragic development circumstances did not start with the Jonathan administration, the buck currently stops at Jonathan’s table. “Ezekwesili’s position that our oil rich nation merely makes us a rentier state and that even worse, the oil wealth has created not the right kind of elite class across the length and breadth of our nation but rather an extractive elite class, is true.”


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