The ongoing probe of the immediate past
administration by President Muhammadu Buhari is to beam its searchlight on the
alleged purchase of three mobile stages, costing $6.9m, by former President
Goodluck Jonathan and two of his officials, a Presidency source has said.
According to a document, which was obtained from
the Presidency on Saturday, the deal, which is now a subject of investigation,
was allegedly carried out by Jonathan; his Chief Security Officer, Mr. Gordon
Obuah; and former Minister of Petroleum, Mrs. Diezani Alison-Madueke.
The fund was said to have been withdrawn from one
of the numerous accounts of the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation.
The $6.9m (about N1.37bn) was said to have been
withdrawn for the purpose of buying three pieces of 40-feet mobile stages for
use by Jonathan during mass public speaking events.
According to the document, apart from the fact
that the sum for the stages was “incredibly inflated”, there is currently no
evidence that the stages were bought since the money was withdrawn.
The document read, “While the cost of mobile
stages ranges in sizes and designs, only outlandish rock star musicians in
Europe and the US spend hundreds of thousands on their huge stages way bigger
than the 40-feet stages.
“Even then, those musicians and superstars would
not pay over $2m per stage, according to industry sources.
“The process of procurement of the three mobile
stages was neither known to extant Nigerian laws and due process regulations
nor were the offices of the Auditor-General and the Accountant-General in the
know, according to the investigators.”
It added that the phony purchase was carried out
late 2011, a few months after Jonathan won the presidential election for a full
term after having completed the term of the late President Umaru Yar’Adua.
Jonathan’s CSO was said to have initiated a memo
to the former President on October 17, 2011, asking for the purchase of three
mobile stages.
He was reported to have written in that memo to
Jonathan that memo referred to “my earlier discussion with Your Excellency on
the security implication of your public appearances and your subsequent
directive on the need to procure a secured presidential platform.”
The Presidency source said on the same day,
without any financial advice or purchase order reviews, the former President
approved the request to buy the three stages and minuted the memo to the then
Minister for Petroleum Resources.
In his minute, Jonathan was said to have written,
“We have discussed this, please deal.”
According to the document, on the same October
17, the Senior Special Assistant to the President on Administrative Matters,
Mr. Matt Aikhionbere, did another letter on the strength of the President’s
approval requesting the minister to take action on the request to purchase the
stages for $6.9m.
It added, “By the next month, an NNPC payment
voucher, number 3840336, was already in place, revealing that the money was
released.
“NNPC directed that the money be taken from one
of its accounts in New York CITIBANK with sort code CITIUS 33, and Routing
number 021000089.
“It was first routed from the US bank to an NNPC
account in Zenith Bank account number 5000026593, Maitama branch in Abuja, from
where the money was sent to a private account.
“The sum of $6.9m was then credited to a Sterling
Bank account of one J. Marine Logistics Limited, Abuja, a company investigators
said was registered by Obuah.
“The CSO himself, according to investigators, has
not been able to show proof of the purchase and his memo irked his bosses at
the SSS that he took the initiative to write requesting for the stages, an
action which officials said was way above his pay grade.”
The document added that it was not the duty or
responsibility of the CSO to make the determination on that purchase as he was
meant to have informed the service, which will then review the situation and
act accordingly.
It added that the $6.9miilion in question was
promptly paid on Nov. 29, 2011 into a private account belonging to the former
CSO.
“The former President approved the procurement of
the mobile platforms without due process and bypassing the Procurement Act;
neither was there an appropriation in the 2011 budget for such facility,” the
document quoted investigators as saying.
It added that neither the then Minister of
Finance nor the Director-General of the Budget Office was aware of the deal.
“Investigators say this is just one of the
several instances, where the Jonathan administration used secret NNPC accounts
to fund many questionable projects and for alleged personal financial
aggrandisement.
“Already, the CSO has been questioned over his
role and activities in the Jonathan Presidency. It will be recalled that he was
arrested, detained, questioned and later released.
Attempts to get the National Publicity Secretary
of the Peoples Democratic Party, Chief Olisa Metuh, to react to the allegation
against the former President did not succeed as calls to his mobile telephone
did not go through.
He had yet to respond to an SMS sent to his
mobile phone as of the time of filing this report.
Source:punchng
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