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Emenalo and Farouk |
Having spent a week at Kuje Maximum Prison in Abuja, erstwhile
Chairman and Secretary of the House of Representatives Ad-hoc Committee
on fuel subsidy probe, Farouk Lawal and Mr Boniface Emenalo, have begged
trial Justice Mudashiru Oniyangi to okay their release.
The duo, who had on February 1, pleaded not guilty to a 7-count
criminal charge preferred against them by the Independent Corrupt
Practices and other Related Offences Commission, ICPC, in their
consolidated application for bail, urged the court to consider their
health and allow them to attend trial from home.
Begging the court through their lead counsels, Chief Ricky Tarfa,
SAN, and Chief Mike Ozokhome, SAN, the embattled lawmakers said they
would not jump bail if released from prison.
Farouk further pleaded the court to take cognizance of the fact that
prior to his arraignment, he had ample opportunities to run away, having
travelled outside the country four times since investigation into his
alleged complicity in the bribery scandal began.
Besides, he told the court that he had in the course of investigation
into the matter, reported to the Police on 37 different occasions,
saying he never violated the administrative bail given to him by the
Police, an argument also canvassed by his co-accused person, Emenalo.
ICPC had in the charge entered before the high court, alleged that
the embattled lawmakers demanded and collected bribe from the Chairman
of Zenon Petroleum and Gas Ltd, Femi Otedola, as an inducement to remove
the name of his company from the report of the House of Representatives
Ad-hoc committee on monitoring of fuel subsidy regime.
They were said to have collected an aggregate sum of $3million, with a
view to ensuring that Zenon Petroleum and Gas Ltd escaped prosecution,
even though the Committee had ab-initio found it culpable in fuel
subsidy fraud.
The anti-graft agency maintained that the offence they committed was
contrary to Corrupt practices and other Related Offences Act, 2000 and
punishable under section 8 (1) 17 (1) and 23(3) of the same Act.
More so, the prosecuting commission alleged that Emenalo, while being
a public officer, an Assistant Director and Clerk of the Committee on
Education of the House of Reps, sometime in April 2012, while acting as
the Secretary of the Ad-Hoc Committee, was offered gratification by
Otedola but failed to report the offer to any officer of the ICPC or any
police officer.
Though the accused persons had made frantic effort to persuade the
court to release them on self recognition on the day they were docked,
counsel to the ICPC, Chief Adegboyega Awomolo had opposed their request,
even as he urged the court to remand them in Prison custody pending
hearing and determination of the substantive case against them.
Counsel to the accused persons had beseeched Justice Onayingi to
consider that “the 1st accused have had cause to travel out more than
four times since the commencement of the investigation, the 2nd accused
have had cause to travel to the USA more than two times since then. My
Lord, the 1staccused has been a full time member of the Reps since 1999;
he is also a member of the ECOWAS parliament and has been a member for
the last twelve years.
“He is one of the founding members of the said ECOWAS parliament and
he is presently chairing the committee on Administration of Finance.”
Tarfa, SAN, further relied on decided case-law in Owudalu Vs State,
2008, AFWLR, and Ebute& Ors Vs State, 1994, 8-NWLR, and argued that
not only did the accused persons failed to abscond when they had the
opportunities, he said they had voluntarily submitted themselves to the
Police for investigation.
He said: “The accused persons are willing and ready to face their
trial. My Lord should also take cognizance of their status and position
in the society and grant them bail in self recognition. The constitution
says they should be considered innocent until proven guilty,” he
insisted.
In opposing their bail request, the prosecuting counsel, Awomolo,
SAN, maintained that it would be in the interest of justice to allow
them to remain in Prison.
Relying on section 8, 10, 17 and 23 of the ICPC Act 2000 and the
decided case-law in Asari Dokubo Vs FRN, 2007, 12 NWLR, Awomolo, SAN,
said: “We are opposing the application for bail and urge your lordship
to refuse it. The accused persons are charged with an offence punishable
by 2 to 7 years imprisonment and therefore not ordinarily bailable.
“An application for bail is an application in equity which requires
my Lord to exercise your discretion judicially and judiciously. The
principles that guide the court in granting bail have been well
enunciated in the case of Bamaiyi Vs State, 2001, the nature and gravity
of the offence and the likelihood of the accused committing another
offence while on bail.
“The offence by which the accused persons are standing trial is the
case of corruption by a public officer at the highest level,
particularly in the legislative arm. The accussed person, in the
affidavit did not give an undertaking that if they go back to the
National Assembly, they will not be members of another committee and
that they will not demand or obtain bribe in the discharge of their
official duty.
“Your Lordship needs to be assured that what prompted them to demand
$3million will not also prompt them to demand $10million.The accused
persons were part of the making of the ICPC Act, they knew the intention
of the lawmakers and deliberately violated the law, on that ground
alone, I urge my lord to deny them bail,” Awomolo added.
Meantime, two of the charge against the lawmakers read: “That you
Hon. Farouk Lawan (M) while being a member of the House of
Representatives and chairman of Ad-hoc committee on Monitoring of fuel
subsidy regime sometimes in April 2012 or thereabout at Abuja within the
Federal Capital Territory under the jurisdiction of this honourable
court did while acting in the course of your official duty corruptly
obtained the sum of $500,000 (five hundred thousand dollars) for
yourself from Mr. Femi Otedola Chairman Zenon Petroleum and Gas Ltd as
an inducement to remove the name of Zenon petroleum gas ltd from the
report of the House of Representatives Ad-hoc committee on Monitoring of
fuel subsidy regime and you thereby committed an offence contrary to
section 17 (1) of the Corrupt practices and other Related Offences Act,
2000 and punishable under section 17 (1) of the same Act.
”That you Mr. Emenalo Boniface (M) while being a public officer, an
Assistant Director and Secretary of the House of Representatives Ad-hoc
committee on Monitoring of Fuel Subsidy Regime sometimes in April 2012
or thereabout at Abuja within the. Federal capital territory under the
jurisdiction of this honourable court did while acting in the course of
your official duty as Secretary…corruptly asked for the sum of
$3,000,000 (three million US dollars) for yourself from Mr. Femi
Otedola, and you thereby committed an offence contrary to section 8 (1)
(b) (ii) of the Corrupt Practices and Other Related Offences Act, 2000
and punishable under section 23 (3) of the same Act.”
It will be recalled that shortly after the Farouk Lawal led panel
released its fact-finding report that exposed astronomical fraud
perpetuated by various companies under the subsidy regime, Otedola, in a
retaliatory move, released an audio tape with a view to proving that
the probe panel demanded cash-for-clearance.
Otedola specifically accused Lawal of demanding for $3million to
exonerate his company, emphasizing that the lawmaker even went to the
extent of stuffing monies in his cap on one of the occasions he came to
receive bribe on behalf of the panel.
However, Lawal, through his lawyer, Chief Ozokhome, SAN, refuted the
allegation that he stuffed money in his cap, stressing that contrary to
insinuation that he travelled to Lagos to collect bribe as alleged, he
only received money from Otedola on two separate occasions at his room
at Protea Hotel at Apo Abuja and at Otedola’s house at Aso Drive Asokoro
also in Abuja.
Describing the audio tape which was released to media houses as “a
devilish caricature”, Lawal had urged Nigerians to give him the benefit
of doubts, insisting that he would not rest until he proved that the
primary intention why he collected the money was to uncover the level of
corruption within the oil sector of the Nigerian economy.
In a bid to further puncture the probe report, Otedola alongside his
company, Zenon Oil and Gas, filed a suit before the High Court, where he
is seeking the sum of N250billion against Farouk and the Speaker of the
House of Representatives, Aminu Tambuwal, as exemplary damages for
alleged oppressive and arbitrary actions he said was meted against him.