The Federal Government of Nigeria has queried the acting Chairman of the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC), Mr Ibrahim Magu, and a Senior Advocate of Nigeria (SAN), Festus Keyamo, over the corruption charges they filed against the Chairman of the Code of Conduct Tribunal (CCT), Justice Danladi Umar.
In one of the letters dated February 16, 2018, signed by the Solicitor General of the Federation, Mr Dayo Apata, Magu was ordered to provide his response to the query to the Attorney General of the Federation and Minister of Justice, Mr Abubakar Malami, on or before February 20, 2018.
He was asked to explain what informed the filing of corruption charges against Umar who has been cleared of corruption allegations twice by the anti-graft agency.
EFCC had earlier filed two counts against Justice Umar for allegedly receiving a bribe of N10million from one Rasheed Taiwo, in the charge signed by Keyamo as a private prosecuting counsel for the anti-graft agency.
The CCT boss was also accused of receiving N1.8million through his personal assistant, Gambo Abdullahi, for a favour shown to the petitioner who was standing trial for a criminal offence before the tribunal while a date of March 15 was fixed for the arraignment of Justice Umar at the High Court of FCT in Abuja, the nation’s capital.
Prior to this, the EFCC had in two separate letters (in 2015 and 2016) to the Federal Government, through the Secretary to the Government of the Federation, cleared Umar of any wrongdoing in the alleged N10million bribery allegation made against.
The query titled “FRN vs Danladi Umar request for briefing,” read in part: “I am directed by the honourable Attorney General of the Federation to seek clarification from you as to whether the charges were filed on your instruction or directive and if in the affirmative, what is the compelling basis for doing so?
“This clarification becomes imperative in view of the following background facts. The commission’s investigation report dated March 5, 2015, addressed to the Secretary to the Government of the Federation stated as follows: the facts as they are now against Justice Umar raised a mere suspicion and will, therefore, not be sufficient to successfully prosecute for the defence.
“In view of the foregoing, the honourable Attorney General of the Federation requests for your prompt briefing as to the existence of new facts which are contrary to the position in your attached investigation report, sufficient evidence, or other developments upon which the prosecution of honourable Justice Danladi can be successfully based.”
In the same vein, Mr Keyamo, who was reportedly engaged as a private lawyer by the EFCC to prosecute the CCT boss, was also requested by the AGF, in a separate letter to confirm who authorised him to file the corruption charge against Justice Umar.
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