A Federal High Court Abuja on Thursday granted an application to list former
Minister of Information and Culture, Alhaji Lai Mohammed, as a prosecution
witness in a trial involving the misapplication of the N2.5 billion federal government
Digital Switch-Over (DSO) programme seed grant.
The application was granted yesterday by Justice
Folashade Ogunbanjo-Giwa in respect of the application by the Independent Corrupt
Practices and Other Related Offences Commission (ICPC).
This followed the withdrawal of the objection
earlier raised by the defendants.
The matter is the 12-count money laundering and
abuse of office instituted by ICPC against the Director-General of the National
Broadcasting Commission (NBC), Ishaq Modibbo-Kawu, and the Chairman of Pinnacle
Communications, Sir Lucky Omoluwa, and the company's Chief Operating Officer,
Dipo Onifade.
According to NAN reports, after calling two
witnesses, the ICPC filed the application seeking to add the former minister
and Shuaibu Sabo, a Bureau de Change operator, as additional witnesses in the
trial.
Counsel to Omoluwa and Onifade, Dr Alex Izinyon
(SAN), had filed a motion prohibiting the prosecution from listing Mohammed and
Sabo as additional witnesses.
At the resumed
hearing of the trial yesterday, Mr Abayomi Oyelola, who held the brief of
Iziyon, said they were withdrawing the motion opposing the list of additional
witnesses by the ICPC.
Justice Oginbanjo-Giwa, thereafter, struck out the
motion by the defendants.
The judge has also granted the applications by the
defendants seeking the release of their international passports to enable them
travel abroad for official functions.
The court decision was also sequel to the
withdrawal of the counter affidavit of the ICPC challenging the release of the
traveling documents.
ICPC lawyer, E. A. Shogunle, said he was
withdrawing the counter affidavit because the period the applicants would be travelling
fell within the court vacation.
The lawyer also informed the court that the
prosecution had complied with the directive of the court to verify the
addresses of the sureties to the second and third defendants as given in the
bail bonds, and filed same.
Shogunle, however, said the prosecution could not
verify the address of the surety to the first defendant (Kawu) because there
was an error in the house number provided in the bail bond.
He said the lawyer to the first defendant would
have to correct the error in the house address at the court registry before he
could file a verifying affidavit.
The judge, however, held that since the prosecution
had withdrawn the counter affidavit to the motion, the travel documents of all
the defendants should be released to them.
She ordered that the defendants should be given
their international passports in the custody of the Deputy Chief Registrar
(DCR) and be allowed to travel within the time they stipulated in their motions
The judge, however, ordered that the defendants
should return the traveling documents to the custody of the DCR upon their
return not later than September 25.
She directed the sureties to the defendants to
swear respective affidavit to the effect that they would surrender themselves
for trial in case the defendants abscond.
Specifically, she said the sureties would take the
place of the defendants and would remain in detention until the defendants
surrender themselves for trial.
Justice Oginbanjo-Giwa therefpr adjourned the case to October 2 for continuation of hearing.
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