The bank chief executive
was taken into EFCC custody three days ago for presiding over the receipt of
such huge cash and helping to distribute it to beneficiaries two days to the
last general elections.
The Managing Director of
Fidelity Bank Plc, Nnamdi Okonkwo, allegedly helped former Petroleum Minister,
Diezani Allison-Madueke to launder $115 million cash.
The bank CEO is said to
have violated extant law by not reporting the receipt and warehousing of the
cash to the Nigerian Financial Intelligence Unit, NFIU, as required by law.
Diezani is said to have summoned the bank chief to her Abuja home and told him
to prepare to receive foreign currency running into billions of Naira from four
companies and to convert it to Naira and pay them to designated beneficiaries
on her behalf.
A day after the instruction
from her, four companies stormed the bank with various amounts of cash and were
promptly received by the bank. A breakdown of the funds given by the EFCC shows
that Actus Integrated paid in $17,884, Northern Base Gas Company, $60m;
Midwestern Oil and Gas, $9.5m; and Laitan Adesanya, $1.35million.
Diezani on her part
allegedly lodged $26 million cash into the same account same day. It was
learned that shortly after paying in the cash, Diezani’s son, Ugonna,
approached the detained MD and furnished him with the list of beneficiaries of
the cash as instructed by his mother.
A source in the EFCC said:
“When Okonkwo found it difficult to convert the money into Naira before the
election as directed by the former Minister, he notified her of the
development.
“She in turn told him to
use the Bank’s fund and then convert the Dollar into Naira after the election.
“This was promptly done and
the fund was distributed as directed.”
The total sum in Naira then
was put at about N23.3 billion.
Out of the sum, not less
than N681 million was said to have gone to officials of INEC.
Among those who allegedly
benefitted from the money was the INEC Resident Electoral Commissioner for
Cross River State, Gesil Khan.
Khan allegedly got
N185,842,000.
Although the detained bank
chief complained that he would not have enough time to cash in Naira to effect
the immediate distribution of the money as instructed by the then minister, she
asked him to use every available cash to pay the beneficiaries and use the
Dollar as collateral.
The source did not, however,
say when the bank official would be charged to court or if he would refund the
money to the government.
Olee operation still dey go even during trial he must rot there o
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