The Economic and Financial Crimes
Commission has traced an additional $5m to the Skye Bank account of Dame
Patience Jonathan, the wife of former President Goodluck Jonathan.
This brings to $20m the total amount so far traced to the former first lady.
As part of investigations into a money
laundering case against a former Special Adviser on Domestic Affairs to
ex-President Jonathan, Waripamowei Dudafa, the EFCC had traced four
company accounts to him with a balance of $15m.
The EFCC subsequently charged Dudafa and the four companies with money laundering.
The four companies, whose accounts have
since been frozen, are Pluto Property and Investment Company Limited,
Seagate Property Development and Investment Company Limited, Trans Ocean
Property and Investment Company Limited and Globus Integrated Service
Limited.
A source at the EFCC said, “While we
were investigating Dudafa, we traced the four companies to him. The
companies have domiciliary accounts at Skye Bank with a balance of about
$15m. So, we obtained a court order and froze the accounts.
“We then traced the directors of the
companies who then denied ownership of the accounts. It was later that
we were informed that the accounts belonged to Patience Jonathan and
that she is the sole signatory to the accounts. She was given a special
card which she used in making withdrawals across the world.
“We, therefore, wondered why the
accounts were not opened in her name if she had nothing to hide. In
fact, we later found out that her personal account, which bears her
name, has a balance of $5m. One wonders where a person, who has never
held a government position, got the money from. She was not our initial
target but she certainly has questions to answer.”
Jonathan’s wife has, however, sued Skye
Bank for freezing her bank accounts and giving the EFCC vital
information about her finances.
Patience filed a N200m fundamental rights enforcement suit against Skye Bank Plc.
One Sammie Somiari, who deposed to an
affidavit on behalf of Patience, claimed that the EFCC placed a No Debit
Order on the four accounts in July, in the course of probing Dudafa.
The EFCC has now filed an amended 17
counts against Dudafa and seven others, including the four companies,
wherein the suspects were accused of conspiring to conceal $15,591,700,
which the EFCC claimed they ought to have known formed part of proceeds
of an unlawful act.
Somiari said in the affidavit filed on
behalf of Patience, who is said to be away for an urgent medical
treatment abroad, that it was Dudafa who helped Patience open the four
bank accounts which the EFCC froze.
According to him, Dudafa had on March
22, 2010 brought two Skye Bank officers, Demola Bolodeoku and Dipo
Oshodi, to meet Patience at home to open five accounts.
The deponent claimed that Patience was the sole signatory to the accounts.
He, however, claimed that after the five
accounts were opened, Patience later discovered that Dudafa opened only
one of the accounts in her name, while the other four were opened in
the names of companies belonging to Dudafa.
Somiari added, “The applicant (Patience)
complained about this to Dudafa, who at his prompting and instance
promised to effect the change of the said accounts to the applicant’s
name; and to effect this change, Dudafa brought the said bank manager,
Mr. Dipo Oshodi, who was purported to have effected the changes. This
was about April 2014.
“The applicant is not a director, shareholder or participant in the companies named in the aforementioned four accounts.
“The bank official, Mr. Dipo Oshodi, as
it would appear, did not effect or reflect the instruction of the
applicant to change the said accounts to her name(s) despite repeated
requests of the applicant.
“Besides, the ATM credit cards bearing
the said companies’ names were brought to the applicant by Mr. Dipo
Oshodi of the second respondent bank, who promised to replace them once
the cards bearing the changed names were available, but he never did.
“However, since 2010 up until 2014 and
thereafter, the applicant had been using the cards on the said accounts
and operating the said accounts without let or hindrance.
“Even in May, June and July 2016, the
applicant travelled overseas for medical treatment and was using the
said credit cards abroad up until July 7, 2016 or thereabout when the
cards stopped functioning.”
In her fundamental rights suit, Patience
is urging the court to compel the EFCC to immediately remove the No
Debit Order placed on her accounts.
She also wants the court to order Skye
Bank to pay her damages in the sum of N200m for what she termed a
violation of her right to own personal property under Section 44 of the
Constitution.
However, the EFCC is in moves to arraign
Dudafa and his alleged accomplices for money laundering before a
Federal High Court in Lagos.
Further proceedings in the case has been adjourned until September 15.
However, the Chairman, Presidential
Advisory Committee Against Corruption, Prof. Itse Sagay (SAN), has said
with the fresh admission by Patience that she owns the accounts, the
EFCC has the right to probe her.
Sagay told one of our correspondents on
the telephone that the Act establishing the EFCC gave the anti-graft
agency the power to investigate anybody who is seen to have more wealth
than he ought to have.
The senior advocate wondered how
Patience, who was a civil servant and never held any government
position, could have billions in her bank accounts.
He said, “The EFCC and ICPC Act have
provisions under which they can ask the court to freeze the account of a
person if a person’s capacity to earn is below the amount of money that
the person appears to have.
“If you are living a lavish lifestyle
and it appears you don’t have the means to have acquired the property
and the wealth you have, the EFCC is free to probe you.
“If she is claiming the money belongs to her, she has put herself in a position where she must explain how she earned it.”
Attempts to get the comments of the wife of the former president were not successful.
Repeated calls and a text message sent
to the Media Adviser to former President Goodluck Jonathan, Mr Ikechukwu
Eze, were also not responded to as of 8:45pm on Saturday.
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