The trial of
Emeka Mba, a former Director-General of the Nigerian Broadcasting Commission,
NBC, has begun.
He is facing
a 15-count charge of money laundering and procurement fraud to the tune of
N2.9billion commenced.
Charged with
him are a former Director of Finance of NBC, Patrick Areh; Basil Udotai
(trading in the name and style of Technology Advisors) and Babatunde Amure
(trading in name and style of Divine Partners).
They were
alleged to have at various times connived and transferred state funds to the
tune of N2.9 billion from the account of NBC through various proxies for
personal gains.
Mba was also
alleged to have used his office as former DG to award contracts without
following due procurement process.
The Economic and Financial Crimes Commission,
EFCC, prosecuting, presented its first witness, John Ejim at the trial taking
place at the Federal High Court presided over by Justice Gabriel Kolawole.
Ejim, an operative
of EFCC, while being led in evidence by counsel to EFCC, Prince Ben Ikani, told
the court that his investigation was an offshoot of a petition dated December
30, 2015, to the Presidency by one Okey Nwafor and copied to the Executive
Chairman of the EFCC.
“The
petition alleged among others things: a diversion of proceeds of sale of 700Mhz
of Spectrum to an account held by NBC in Zenith bank and that the amount
diverted was illegally paid to 5 setup proxies and manufacturers under the
digital switch platform”, he said.
When Ikani
sought to tender the document (copy of the petition) in evidence, Mba’s
counsel, S. I. Ameh, SAN, objected saying, “the witness cannot be examined on a
document he did not make”.
Also counsel
to the 2nd, 3rd and 4th defendants – I. F Chude, P. Erukoro and Ikoro M. Ikoro
respectively aligned themselves with the objection raised by Ameh, while
Erukoro added that there was no evidence of stamp duty paid by the prosecution
on the document as stipulated by law.
Responding,
Ikani noted that the witness, as an investigator, was only stating what led to
the investigation and that in law, what matters is the relevance of the
document tendered.
Justice
Kolawole overruled the objection saying, “the document sought to be tendered is
relevant to the case” and admitted it as exhibit 1.
Continuing,
the PW1 said he invited the account officer as well as the compliance officer
of Zenith bank who brought along the account opening documents in which it was
discovered that Mba was a co-signatory to the account.
“The
documents revealed the deposit of a lump sum of N34.1billion and a transfer of
N2.9billion from the said account to Technology Advisors.
“We invited
Emeka Mba and Patrick Areh to further interrogate them on the matter.”
“I attended
to Patrick Areh who volunteered his statement after I availed him a copy of the
petition”, Ejim stated.
Ikani sought
to tender the document (2nd defendant’s statement) in evidence, but its
admissibility was objected by Chude, who said that the statement was not
voluntarily obtained.
Justice
Kolawole, thereafter, adjourned to March 8, 2017 for a trial-within-trial to
determine the voluntariness of the statement.
(NAN)
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