The Economic and Financial Crimes Commission, EFCC, has deepened its probe into All Progressives Congress stalwart, Bola Tinubu.
To
this end, the EFCC has written a letter to the Code of Conduct Bureau,
requesting copies of Tinubu’s asset declaration form.
A
copy of the letter which was published by online news medium, The Peoples
Gazette, revealed that the investigation into Tinubu began last year after the
removal of erstwhile Chairman, Ibrahim Magu.
The
letter marked CR/3000/EFCC/LS/Vol4/322, dated November 6, 2020 was signed by
the then Lagos zonal head, Abdulrasheed Bawa, who is now the Chairman of the
EFCC.
The
letter read in part, “In view of the above, you are kindly requested to furnish
the commission with the outstanding requested information of Bola Ahmed
Adekunle Tinubu.
“This
request is made pursuant to Section 38(1) and (2) of the EFCC Act 2004.”
Attempts
to speak with the EFCC Spokesman, Mr. Wilson Uwujaren, proved abortive as he did
not respond to calls.
However,
a senior EFCC official confirmed the authenticity of the letter, adding that it
was part of a wider probe.
The
official, who wished to remain anonymous, said the probe was sequel to some
petitions written against Tinubu since 2018 which Magu had failed to act on.
The source said, “The letter is authentic. The EFCC is in receipt of
several petitions against Tinubu, including one involving alleged fraud in
Alpha Beta Consulting.”
A former
Managing Director of Alpha Beta Consulting, Mr. Dapo Apara, had written
petitions to the EFCC, accusing the firm of tax evasion and being run by Tinubu
albeit by proxy.
Apara
had also instituted a lawsuit against Tinubu.
In
his statement of claim, he stated that Tinubu controlled the company which was
receiving 10 per cent of the taxes collected on behalf of the state.
The
former MD said as the head of the company, he began looking into its finances
and he made many startling discoveries such as mysterious transfers of over
N20bn to various companies.
He
stated, “N550m payment to Ocean Trust Ltd vide payment instruction dated the
15/5/18, N850m payment to Ocean Trust Ltd vide payment instruction dated the
14/3/15.”
The
claimant said N960m was spent on purchasing HITV’s 300,000,000 shares.
However,
Alpha Beta Tax consultancy firm, Alpha Beta LLP, denied allegations levelled
against it by Apara, adding that he had diverted about $5m during his time as
managing director by inflating a contract which was worth about $300,000 and
then diverted a separate N6bn to personal use.
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