Court Orders Forfeiture Of Diezani Alison-Madueke's $37.5m Banana Island Property
Justice Chuka Obiozor of the Federal High Court in Ikoyi, Lagos has ordered the temporary forfeiture of a $37.5m property at Banana Island, Ikoyi bought by former Minister of Petroleum Resources, Diezani Alison-Madueke, in 2013.
Counsel to the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC), Anselem Ozioko told the court that the property has 24 apartments, 18 flats and six penthouses and is located at Building 3, Block B, Bella Vista Plot 1, Zone N, Federal Government Layout, Banana Island Foreshore Estate and that she paid for the building in cash. Apart from the property, the court also ordered the temporary forfeiture of the sums of $2,740,197.96 and N84,537,840.70, said to be part of the rent collected on the property. The funds were said to have been found in a Zenith Bank account number 1013612486.
"Nothing could be more suspicious than someone keeping such huge amounts in her apartment. Why was she doing that, to avoid attention? We are convinced beyond reasonable doubt because as of the time this happened, Mrs. Diezani Alison-Madueke was still in public service as the Minister of Petroleum Resources."
The ex-parte application taken before the judge was filed in pursuant to Section 17 of the Advance Fee Fraud and Other Related Offences Act, No. 14, 2006 and Section 44(2) (k) of the constitution.
Listed as respondents in the application are Mrs. Alison-Madueke, a legal practitioner, Afamefuna Nwokedi, and a company, Rusimpex Limited. In a 41-paragraph affidavit attached to the application, an investigative officer with the EFCC, Abdulrasheed Bawa, explained that Nwokedi, in connivance with Mrs. Alison-Madueke, purposely incorporated the company, Rusimpex Limited, on September 11, 2013 to facilitate the alleged fraud scheme. According to Bawa, when Nwokedi was questioned by the EFCC, the lawyer explained that he had approached Mrs. Alison-Madueke for opportunities in the Oil and Gas industry but the ex-minister told him that being a lawyer, she did not have any such opportunity for him and asked him whether he could in the alternative manage landed properties, an offer which Nwokedi accepted.
Bawa said Nwokedi later registered Rusimpex Limited at the Corporate Affairs Commission, wherein a lawyer in his law firm, Adetula Ayokunle, and a Russian, Vladmir Jourauleu, were listed as the directors of the company, while the address of Nwokedi's law firm in Ikoyi, Lagos was registered as the business address of Rusimpex Limited.
The investigator added that when Ayokunle was questioned by the EFCC, he explained that he only appended his signature on the CAC documents at his boss' instruction, while Jourauleu denied knowledge of the company.
The investigator explained: "Sometime in 2013, the former Minister of Petroleum Resources, Mrs. Diezani Alison-Madueke, invited Barrister Afamefuna Nwokedi, the Principal Counsel of Stillwaters Law Firm, to her house in Abuja for a meeting where she informed the said Barrister Afamefuna Nwokedi to incorporate a company and use same as a front to manage landed properties on her behalf without using her name in any of the incorporation documents.”
He further explained that Mrs. Alison-Madueke further directed Mr. Afamefuna Nwokedi to meet with Mr. Bisi Onasanya, the Group Managing Director of First Bank of Nigeria Plc for that purpose.
After listening to the EFCC lawyer, Ozioko on Tuesday, Justice Obiozor made an order temporarily seizing the property and the funds.
He then directed that the order should be published in a national newspaper. He adjourned till August 7th 2017 for anyone interested in the property and funds to appear before his court.
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