The former Military Administrator of Akwa Ibom state and chieftain of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), is accused of N450,000,000( Four Hundred and Fifty Million Naira only) from the sleazy $115million deposited by former Minister of Petroleum Resources, Diezani Alison-Madueke, with Fidelity Bank Plc.
Former governor of Akwa Ibom state, Idongesit Nkanga arrested by EFCC for involvement in $115million poll bribery scandal.
According to Premium Times, Mr Nkanga, a retired air commodore was arrested in Port- Harcourt, the Rivers state capital on Monday, May 9.
Sources said Nkanga allegedly collected the money in two tranches, from one Saint-Anthony Ejiowu, a staff of Fidelity Bank in Uyo, the Akwa Ibom state capital.
The first tranche of the money – N350,000,000 (Three Hundred and Fifty Thousand Million Naira only) was paid to the politician on March 27, 2015, the sources revealed.
Nkanga allegedly received the second tranche of N100,000,000 (One Hundred Million Naira only) on March 31, 2015.
“He is in the custody of the EFCC and would be charged to court soon,” an unnamed official said.
The EFCC arrested the former governor just as the Chairman of the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC), Mahmood Yakubu, assured Nigerians that the Commission will cooperate with the anti-graft agency in regarding its personnel named in the scandal.
According to a statement by the commission’s Director, Voters’ Education and Publicity, Oluwole Ozaze-Uzzi on Monday, Mr. Yakubu gave the assurance during a meeting with editors in Lagos.
“Whatever level of cooperation any of the agencies requires of the Commission, we will give that level of cooperation because it is also in a bid to sanitize the system,” Mr. Yakubu was quoted as saying.
“I hope also it (investigation) will extend to the givers not just the takers so that there will be collective sanity. Whoever violates the law of this land and there are questions to answer, the person should answer, the person should bear his own cross.
“All the staff that are fingered are individuals. It is not a collective institutional thing. They should go and answer for what they have alleged to have done.”
Some staff of the electoral body were alleged to have received a cumulative N23 billion in bribe from Mrs. Alison-Madueke, through Fidelity Bank.
Prominent among the accused INEC staff were Gesila Khan, the Resident Electoral Commissioner who had earlier been arrested by the State Security Service over allegations of inducement to rig elections in Rivers State; and Uluochi Obi Brown (INEC’s Administrative Secretary in Delta State), former Deputy Director of INEC in Cross River state, Edem Okon Effanga, and the Head of Voter Education in INEC in Akwa Ibom, Immaculata Asuquo.
Also under investigation is retired INEC official, Sani Isa, who allegedly collected bribe on behalf of the deceased Resident Electoral Commissioner in Kano State, Mukaila Abdullahi.
Also two unnamed former INEC chiefs were said to have participated in aiding the flow of the bribe money.
The alleged bribery scandal involved bank chiefs, including Sterling Bank Chief Executive, Yemi Adeola, the removed Managing Director of Fidelity Bank, Nnamdi Okonkwo and Access Bank Managing Director, Hubert Wigwe, who allegedly assisted Mrs. Alison-Maduekwe in laundering part of the fund which was allegedly handed to INEC staff in a plot to influence outcomes of the 2015 presidential poll.
The integrity of the elections in the South-South region, particularly Rivers State, has been questioned by many organisations, including foreign observers and the Transition Monitoring Group (TMG) whose report claimed results in the oil-rich region were inflated.
A citizen group, Enough is Enough, last week filed a Freedom of Information request asking EFCC to disclose identities of the former INEC chiefs, all the electoral staff and civil society organizations involved in the alleged bribery.
Following investigation of the Investigation the poll bribery scandal, operatives of the EFCC found out that $115m (N23.29b) came from proceeds of stolen crude oil.
The said money was allegedly used as a bribe for officials of the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) to alter the results of the 2015 presidential election.
Speaking with The Nation on Monday, May 2, a top EFCC official who pleaded for anonymity said: “Our operatives have discovered that the $115 million came from stolen crude oil. They got it from former Petroleum Resources Minister Mrs Diezani Alison-Madueke.
“We will uncover how they came about the stolen crude oil and those used to siphon the oil in order to deny the nation of revenue.”
Meanwhile, the anti-graft agency has reportedly frozen all the accounts of top officials of the INEC and oil chiefs implicated in the poll bribery scandal.
According to another source, the EFCC is preparing for the arraignment of some suspects, including top banking officials and some owners of oil companies.
Charges might also be preferred against Alison-Madueke, who is believed to be central to the coordination of the huge bribe given to INEC officials.
Former governor of Akwa Ibom state, Idongesit Nkanga arrested by EFCC for involvement in $115million poll bribery scandal.
According to Premium Times, Mr Nkanga, a retired air commodore was arrested in Port- Harcourt, the Rivers state capital on Monday, May 9.
Sources said Nkanga allegedly collected the money in two tranches, from one Saint-Anthony Ejiowu, a staff of Fidelity Bank in Uyo, the Akwa Ibom state capital.
The first tranche of the money – N350,000,000 (Three Hundred and Fifty Thousand Million Naira only) was paid to the politician on March 27, 2015, the sources revealed.
Nkanga allegedly received the second tranche of N100,000,000 (One Hundred Million Naira only) on March 31, 2015.
“He is in the custody of the EFCC and would be charged to court soon,” an unnamed official said.
The EFCC arrested the former governor just as the Chairman of the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC), Mahmood Yakubu, assured Nigerians that the Commission will cooperate with the anti-graft agency in regarding its personnel named in the scandal.
According to a statement by the commission’s Director, Voters’ Education and Publicity, Oluwole Ozaze-Uzzi on Monday, Mr. Yakubu gave the assurance during a meeting with editors in Lagos.
“Whatever level of cooperation any of the agencies requires of the Commission, we will give that level of cooperation because it is also in a bid to sanitize the system,” Mr. Yakubu was quoted as saying.
“I hope also it (investigation) will extend to the givers not just the takers so that there will be collective sanity. Whoever violates the law of this land and there are questions to answer, the person should answer, the person should bear his own cross.
“All the staff that are fingered are individuals. It is not a collective institutional thing. They should go and answer for what they have alleged to have done.”
Some staff of the electoral body were alleged to have received a cumulative N23 billion in bribe from Mrs. Alison-Madueke, through Fidelity Bank.
Prominent among the accused INEC staff were Gesila Khan, the Resident Electoral Commissioner who had earlier been arrested by the State Security Service over allegations of inducement to rig elections in Rivers State; and Uluochi Obi Brown (INEC’s Administrative Secretary in Delta State), former Deputy Director of INEC in Cross River state, Edem Okon Effanga, and the Head of Voter Education in INEC in Akwa Ibom, Immaculata Asuquo.
Also under investigation is retired INEC official, Sani Isa, who allegedly collected bribe on behalf of the deceased Resident Electoral Commissioner in Kano State, Mukaila Abdullahi.
Also two unnamed former INEC chiefs were said to have participated in aiding the flow of the bribe money.
The alleged bribery scandal involved bank chiefs, including Sterling Bank Chief Executive, Yemi Adeola, the removed Managing Director of Fidelity Bank, Nnamdi Okonkwo and Access Bank Managing Director, Hubert Wigwe, who allegedly assisted Mrs. Alison-Maduekwe in laundering part of the fund which was allegedly handed to INEC staff in a plot to influence outcomes of the 2015 presidential poll.
The integrity of the elections in the South-South region, particularly Rivers State, has been questioned by many organisations, including foreign observers and the Transition Monitoring Group (TMG) whose report claimed results in the oil-rich region were inflated.
A citizen group, Enough is Enough, last week filed a Freedom of Information request asking EFCC to disclose identities of the former INEC chiefs, all the electoral staff and civil society organizations involved in the alleged bribery.
Following investigation of the Investigation the poll bribery scandal, operatives of the EFCC found out that $115m (N23.29b) came from proceeds of stolen crude oil.
The said money was allegedly used as a bribe for officials of the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) to alter the results of the 2015 presidential election.
Speaking with The Nation on Monday, May 2, a top EFCC official who pleaded for anonymity said: “Our operatives have discovered that the $115 million came from stolen crude oil. They got it from former Petroleum Resources Minister Mrs Diezani Alison-Madueke.
“We will uncover how they came about the stolen crude oil and those used to siphon the oil in order to deny the nation of revenue.”
Meanwhile, the anti-graft agency has reportedly frozen all the accounts of top officials of the INEC and oil chiefs implicated in the poll bribery scandal.
According to another source, the EFCC is preparing for the arraignment of some suspects, including top banking officials and some owners of oil companies.
Charges might also be preferred against Alison-Madueke, who is believed to be central to the coordination of the huge bribe given to INEC officials.
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