The chairman of EFCC, Ola Olukoyede, yesterday, went the extra mile to clear insinuations surrounding the impending trial of the former Kogi State governor, Yahaya Bello, saying he spoke to the ex-governor and assured him requisite courtesies would be extended to him. Olukoyede spoke in Abuja while briefing journalists on the innovation, restructuring agenda, and other developments in some sectors of the economy. The EFCC chairman, who addressed extensively the ongoing trial of Bello, also said as a result of the commission’s reform agenda, it had created a Fraud Risk Assessment and Control Department through which it flagged off a probe of the presidency, National Assembly, the judiciary, and the Bureau of Public Procurement (BPP), among other agencies. The EFCC chairman explained that the commission had not broken any law in seeking to prosecute Bello.
He said the judgement of the Kogi State High Court only provided it with the lead to file the case at the Federal High Court. He said Nigerians must come together to fight the scourge of corruption, and added that the commission gave the former governor a long rope in its investigations. Olukoyede stated, “As the chairman, I called the former governor and gave him all due respect, including allowing him to be interrogated in my office, but the man declined. If I fail to investigate and prosecute Yahaya Bello, I would not have the moral right to prosecute others, including the former governor of Anambra State, Mr. Willie Obiano, and the former governor of Kwara State, Abdulfatah Ahmed.
The commission is monitoring all those involved in one way or the other in the Yahaya Bello saga. We are watching them and we will prosecute all of them at the right time. If they have immunity today, they will not have immunity tomorrow.” He also spoke on the Fraud Risk Assessment and Control Department through which the commission had commenced probe of some government agencies. Olukoyede said, “We have begun with the State House because we believe it is not a place we cannot go to. We met with the president recently, and he asked us to go and do our work. And we wrote to his Chief of Staff to furnish us with the process of awarding contracts and within a week, he replied. We also wrote to the National Assembly to furnish us with the process of awarding contracts and the cars they buy and, surprisingly, they replied.
The same thing with the Chief Justice of the Federation. It is not about the investigations and the convictions we have secured but about the source of this crime. The more I prosecute people, the more I recover money, but the more we face this problem.” While appealing to the media and civil society organisations to support the commission’s campaign against corruption, Olukoyede hinted that EFCC had recovered about N120 billion in the last six months, and was unrelenting in its activities.