The
Economic and Financial Crimes Commission has explained to the Federal High
Court in Abuja how it uncovered about 19 houses allegedly bought by the
immediate-past Minister of Petroleum Resources, Mrs. Diezani Alison-Maduke, in
Nigeria, the United Kingdom and the United States of America.
It
also explained that an Executive Director in First Bank Nigeria Limited, Mr.
Dauda Lawal, helped Diezani to transfer to the UK for the purchase of some real
estate properties in London.
EFCC
also said Benedict Peters whom it
described as a Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation’s contractor during
Diezani’s reign as the petroleum minister, contributed $60m to the $115m
allegedly provided by the ex-minister to bribe electoral officers for the 2015
general elections.
The
Nigerian properties were said to be in Lagos, Abuja and Port Harcourt.
The
anti-graft agency also said Peters was a “suspect under investigation for
Petroleum subsidy fraud” from whom $400m had been recovered.
EFCC
says Peters is the “alter ego” or owner of two companies registered abroad –
Collinwood Limited – Rosewood Investment Limited -, and a Nigerian company,
Aiteo Energy Resources.
The
anti-graft agency’s explanation gave these details in the papers which it filed
in objection to some applications urging Justice Binta Nyako of the Federal
High Court in Abuja to lift the interim forfeiture order hanging on some of the
19 properties in the UK and US.
Upon
an ex parte application titled, ‘In the matter of 19 real properties purchased
by Mrs. Diezani Alison-Maduke’, Justice Binta Nyako of the Federal High Court
in Abuja had on June 29, 2016 granted an order of interim forfeiture in respect
of the properties.
But
the trio of Peters and two of the companies said to be his, Collinwood Limited and Rosewood Investment
Limited, filed a motion dated January 10, 2017, challenging the interim
forfeiture order in respect of some of the properties in the UK and the US.
The
applicants denied that some of the properties which the court ordered their
interim forfeiture were theirs and not Diezani’s as alleged by the EFCC.
The
properties interested in by the applicants included the ones at 5 Park View; 83
– 86 Prince Albert Road; St. John Wood, all in London NW8 7RU, UK; as well as
270-17 Street, Unit 4204, Atlanta, Georgia, USA.

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