Senate spokesperson, Senator Sabi
Abdullahi, has said that the full attention which the leadership of the
upper chamber was paying to the consideration of the 2016 budget,
delayed the request for the issuance of a warrant for the arrest of the
immediate past Chairman of the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission,
Ibrahim Lamorde.
Abdullahi told our correspondent in an
interview that the process to ensure that the ex-EFCC boss faces
investigation at the Senate was still on course.
He explained that since the Senate
Committee on Ethics, Privileges and Public Petitions had confirmed
making a formal request to the office of the Senate President for the
issuance of a warrant for Lamorde’s arrest, necessary actions would be
taken in that regard.
He said, “If the committee has made its
request to the Senate President, then it is left for somebody also to do
his own part because in taking any decision, you must look at what the
rules and regulations say.
“We must follow the procedure. It has
certain basic things that must be met, perhaps, I want to believe that
they are still in the process of doing what has to be done.
“What is our worry now is the budget. If
when we have not passed the budget we are now expending energy on how
somebody who had gone on ‘AWOL’ is brought back, people will accuse us
of not being serious with the welfare of Nigerians.
“Right now we are concentrating our energy on what is key to Nigeria, which is the budget; which itself is a process.”
It will be recalled that the Chairman of
the Senate Ethics Committee, Senator Samuel Anyanwu, had confirmed to
our correspondent early on in the month that his panel had formally
requested the office of the Senate President to issue a warrant for
Lamorde’s arrest.
The upper chamber had asked the Anyanwu-led committee to begin the process of issuing the warrant of arrest on Lamorde.
The Senate is investigating Lamorde on a
petition written against him by one Dr. George Uboh on an alleged
diversion of over N1tn recovered from treasury looters by the anti-graft
agency.
Uboh, the Chief Executive Officer of
Panic Alert Security Systems, had petitioned the Senate through the
senator representing Delta-North senatorial district, Peter Nwaoboshi.
He had alleged that Lamorde, in
collusion with some other EFCC officials, shortchanged the Federal
Government in the remittance of funds and assets recovered from some
eminent public office holders.
Uboh alleged that under Lamorde, the
EFCC operated accounts in banks to warehouse recovered funds which did
not reflect in the EFCC audited accounts.
He also alleged that the EFCC doctored
and manipulated bank accounts to conceal diversion of funds, and also
released recovered funds to unidentified persons and EFCC officials.
Apart from these, Lamorde was also
accused of diverting over 90 per cent of the EFCC recovered funds in
foreign currencies, including those from multinational companies.
At the consideration of the report at
plenary, the ethics panel lamented that all avenues explored to get
Lamorde’s reaction to the allegations were not successful.
Anyanwu, who read the report, claimed
that Lamorde ignored all invitations extended to him and therefore
recommended that a warrant of arrest be issued on him.
He said that Lamorde had been invited on
three occasions through letters dated August 19, 2015, November 3,
2015, and November 11, 2015, but that all the invitations were turned
down by the former EFCC boss.
He listed series of efforts made to get
Larmode to appear before the committee to no avail, adding that the
panel was convinced that Larmode deliberately refused to appear to
defend the allegations against him.
The committee therefore said it was
expedient for the Senate to force Larmode to appear if only to ‘save the
National Assembly as the highest law-making body of the nation, from an
irreparable damage to its reputation and capacity to summon’.
The committee also recommended that a warrant of arrest be issued by the senate for Larmode’s arrest.
Citing necessary constitutional
provisions, Deputy Senate President, Ike Ekweremadu, said the ethics
committee was supposed to forward a request to the Senate President who
would, in turn, issue a directive to the Inspector General of Police.
The Senate President, Bukola Sarski,
agreed with his deputy’s submission as he ruled that the committee
should do the right thing to get the warrant of arrest issued on
Larmode.
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