The Independent Corrupt Practices and other
related offences Commission has commenced a probe into the 24,325 government
properties that were sold to government officials under the monetisation policy
of former President Olusegun Obasanjo.
Also, the anti-graft agency has arrested a
retired Appeal Court judge, Justice Mohammed Tsamiya, for allegedly demanding a
N200m bribe in exchange for a favourable judgment in a National Assembly
election case that was pending before the Imo State Judicial Division of the
Court of Appeal.
The ICPC said in a statement by its spokesperson,
Mrs. Rasheedat Okoduwa, that many, who bought government properties, had yet to
make full payment while some others were secretly renting the properties to
private citizens.
The anti-graft agency said most of the culprits
were in the Office of the Head of Civil Service of the Federation and the
Federal Housing Authority.
The statement read in part, “In recent times, the
ICPC has been inundated with petitions from patriotic Nigerians, drawing the
attention of the commission to allegations of widespread abuse of the policy by
beneficiaries and some government workers.
“The commission, while acting on the petitions,
discovered through preliminary investigation that a number of civil servants in
the OHCSF, who benefited from the policy had not paid for the houses since
2005. While some had completely defaulted, others owe the government a sizeable
amount of the money.
“The investigation further revealed that 32,305
houses were captured by the committee on the sale of government properties
while 24,345 were eventually sold to beneficiaries.
“However, civil servants in some government
agencies, notably OHSCF and the Federal Housing Authority, have allegedly
turned the policy into a shoddy business with the aim of defrauding the Federal
Government.”
The ICPC said it also found out that some public
servants and government agencies were concealing government properties and
collecting rent on same without the consent of the Federal Government. This,
the agency noted, flouted the intent of the policy that primarily focuses on
divesting government’s interest from providing housing for its employees.
The commission said an employee of the OHSCF
allocated some of the houses to undeserving beneficiaries who were not public
servants at the time of the exercise and some of the properties had yet to be
allocated.
It added, “The investigation has so far yielded
fruitful result with the recovery of N18, 031,000 from some civil servants and
a host of companies including Montgomery & Campbell Ltd. and SICCONS, which
has been paid into the coffers of the government.”
The ICPC vowed that anyone found to have
contravened the law would be prosecuted upon conclusion of the investigation.
Meanwhile, the commission says it has arrested a
retired Justice of the Court of Appeal, Justice Mohammed Tsamiya, for allegedly
demanding N200m bribe from one Mr. Nnamdi Orji, in exchange for a favourable
judgment in a National Assembly election case that was pending before the Imo
State Judicial Division of the Court of Appeal.
The ICPC said the offence, which violates Section
10 of the Corrupt Practices and Other Related Offences Act, 2000, was alleged
to have been committed in 2015, when the retired Justice asked Orji, who was
the candidate of the All Progressive Grand Alliance for the Arochukwu/Ohafia
Federal Constituency, to give him N200m to enable him to influence the court’s
decision in his favour.
Orji had approached the Court of Appeal, Imo
State Division, to seek redress in a case involving an alleged inflation of the
result of election in the Arochukwu Local Government Area of Abia State, which
he had earlier lost to his opponent, Mr. Nkole Ndukwe, at the National Assembly
Election Petition Tribunal.
The retired judge was alleged to have assured the
appellant of getting a favourable judgment from the court upon the payment of
the money.
“Justice Tsamiya has since been granted bail by
the commission upon the fulfilment of his bail conditions even as investigation
continues,” the ICPC added.
Post A Comment: