I’m not on the run from EFCC – Obanikoro.
Tunde Odesola
A former Minister of State for Defence,
Musiliu Obanikoro, has said that he is not on the run from the Economic
and Financial Crimes Commission.
Speaking with our correspondent on the
telephone, Obanikoro, who recently bagged a degree in History from an
American university, said he was not a fugitive running away from
justice.
Obanikoro, who debunked newspaper
reports suggesting that he fled the country in order to evade the
ongoing $2.1 arms probe by the EFCC, stressed that the reports were in
the realm of speculation.
A text by Obanikoro read, “To begin
with, no allegation has been made against me officially that I know of.
Therefore, I have no reason to run. I know for sure that all the
accusations in the media are in the realm of speculation.”
Shortly after former President Goodluck
Jonathan lost his re-election bid last year, Obanikoro said he was going
to pursue an academic course in the US, stressing that life was not all
about politics.
“That’s politics for you; you win some,
you lose some. And there’s life after politics. I’m going to the US to
pursue a degree,” he had said.
Troops battling the Boko Haram
insurgents in the North-East of the country protested unavailability of
arms and ammunition, a situation that military authorities frowned on.
This led to the trial of some top
military officers and men, some of whom were found guilty and sentenced
to death. A number of the protesting soldiers also suffered demotion.
A former national security adviser, Sambo Dasuki, was charged in December in connection with the arms probe.
Dasuki was accused of awarding phantom contracts to buy helicopters, fighter jets and ammunition, which he denied.
Twelve senior Nigerian army officers
were handed over to the anti-corruption agency for their alleged
involvement in the arms scandal.
The army did not name them, but said they included six serving generals.
Army spokesman, Colonel Sani Usman, said
the 12 officers referred to the EFCC included three serving
major-generals, one retired major-general, three brigadier-generals,
four colonels and a lieutenant-colonel.
It is yet to be seen whether the Lagos-born former senator would visit Nigeria after the completion of his degree.
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