The Economic and Financial Crimes
Commission has seized 29 properties from the immediate past Chief of Air
Staff, Air Marshal Adesola Amosu; a former Chief of Accounts and
Budgeting in NAF, Air Vice Marshal Jacob Adigun (retd.); and a former
Director of Finance and Budget, Air Commodore Olugbenga Gbadebo (retd.).
No fewer than 11 properties were seized from Amosu; 12 were seized from Adigun and six from Gbadebo.
Our correspondent learnt on Sunday that
the properties included three plazas, six mansions, a quarry, a
hospital, a block of flats, animal farms, a school, two hotels, some
uncompleted buildings and some parcels of land.
According to documents made available exclusively to The PUNCH, the properties were acquired mostly in 2014.
The properties seized from Adigun were said to be worth N9.6bn.
Some of the properties include a
shopping plaza known as Capadar Plaza on Adetokunbo Ademola Crescent,
Wuse 2, which is worth N980m; a residential mansion on Lake Chad Street,
Maitama, Abuja, worth N450m; an executive mansion in Imo River Close,
Off Dandube Crescent, Maitama, worth N710m and a four-unit terrace on
Agadez Street, Off Aminu Kano Crescent, Wuse 2, worth N720m.
Other properties, said to belong to
Adigun, include a 35-room uncompleted hotel on Salt Lake Street,
Maitama, Abuja; a parcel of land located on Bourdillon Street, Ikoyi,
Lagos; a block of 12 service flats, located on Agodogba Street, Park
View Estate, Ikoyi, said to be worth N1.8bn and a quarry in Bwari area
of Abuja worth about $694,000.
The source added that all the properties had been temporarily seized.
He added, “Adigun spent most of his own
share of the money on properties and so we did not recover much cash
from him. Amosu, however, returned over N2.3bn and raised two bank
drafts.”
He added that some of the properties
seized from Amosu included a house on Adeyemo Alakija Street, Victoria
Island, Lagos, worth N250m; a duplex at House 11, Peace Court Estate,
GRA, Ikeja, Lagos, worth N110m; a N40m property located at NAF Harmony
Estate, Asokoro Base and a five-bedroomed house at Valley NAF Estate,
Port Harcourt, worth N33m.
Others include a hospital on Adeniyi
Jones Avenue, Ikeja, known as St. Solomon Hospital with equipment worth
$2.15m and a N95m house on Umaru Dikko Street, Jabi, Abuja.
The properties seized from Gbadebo
include a fish farm worth N10m; a N20m poultry, located at Musa Close,
Oyibo Ayobu, Lagos and a school known as Bloomsville International
School, Divine Estate, Isheri-Olofin , off Lagos-Ibadan Expressway.
The three suspects will be arraigned by the anti-graft agency this week.
The retired military officers were accused of diverting public funds to the tune of N21,467,674,707.43 in 2014.
Others charged alongside the accused
persons are Delfina Oil and Gas Limited, McCallan Oil and Gas Limited,
Hebron Housing and Properties Company Limited, Trapezites BDC, Funds and
Pricey Limited, Degree Oil and Gas Limited, Timsegg Investment Limited
and Solomon Healthcare Limited.
One of the charges read in part, “That
you (accused persons) on or about the 5th day of March 2014 in Lagos,
within the jurisdiction of this honourable court, conspired amongst
yourselves to commit an offence to wit conversion of the sum of
N21,467,674,707.43, property of the Nigerian Air Force which was derived
from stealing which is contrary to Section18 (A) of the Money
Laundering Act of 2012 (as amended) and punishable under Section 15 (3)
of the same Act.”
According to other charges, the accused
persons had allegedly used some of the aforementioned companies, which
they own, to award phantom contracts to themselves.
A prosecution witness for the EFCC, in a
case against a former Chief of Defence Staff, Air Chief Marshal Alex
Badeh (retd.), had revealed in court how N558m was diverted from the
accounts of the air force monthly.
The EFCC was said to have based its
investigation on the alleged diversion of N558m and the diversion of
funds allocated to the Nigerian Air Force for the procurement of arms,
fighter jets and other equipment.
Amosu and his predecessor, Badeh, were,
in January, arrested for the non-specification of procurement costs,
absence of contract agreements, award of contracts beyond authorised
thresholds, transfer of public funds for unidentified purposes and
general non-adherence to provisions of the Public Procurement Act.
The investigation also centred on the
payment of N4,402,687,569.41 for unexecuted contracts; the procurement
of two used Mi-24V helicopters instead of the recommended Mi-35M series
at $136,944,000.00; four used Alpha-Jets for the NAF at US$7,180,000,
funded by ONSA; the cannibalisation of engines from NAF fleet to justify
procurement of jets; and the excessive pricing of 36D6 Low Level Air
Defence Radar at $33m instead of $6m per one.
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