The Economic and Financial Crimes Commission has arrested the immediate
past Director General of the Nigerian Maritime Administration and Safety
Agency [NIMASA], Patrick Ziakede Akpobolokemi, two weeks after he was
fired from his post.
A source in NIMASA told PREMIUM TIMES Mr.
Akpobolokemi was arrested in Lagos Thursday morning and was detained at
the Lagos office of the EFCC in the Ikoyi area of the city.
“He
was taken in this morning around 10 a.m.,” the NIMASA insider said.
“Some of our other officials have also been summoned while EFCC
operatives have been conducting discreet
investigation here. There is
tension everywhere.
“One of our people just returned from EFCC
and he told me the former DG is still there, sweating profusely as he
was being questioned by investigators.”
Our source said while at
NIMASA headquarters, EFCC operatives asked questions about some curious
multibillion naira transactions approved by Mr. Akpobolokemi, especially
during the dying days of the last administration.
“For
instance, they wanted to know how a whooping N13 billion was spent on
the acquisition of land for the permanent site of the Nigerian Maritime
University in Delta,” our source said.
“They also asked about
other transactions they believed were fraudulent, including transfers of
millions of dollars from NIMASA accounts to other accounts.”
The
spokesperson for the EFCC could not be reached for comments. He did not
answer multiple calls as well as a text message to his telephone.
But
an official in the prosecution unit of the EFCC in Lagos confirmed that
Mr. Akpobolokemi was brought into the complex on Thursday morning.
“I’m
aware he is with us but I don’t have details about the case against him
or what investigators are asking him,” said the official, who cannot be
named because he has no permission to speak to journalists on the
matter.
President Muhammadu Buhari had on July 16 sacked Mr.
Akpobolokemi and directed him to immediately hand over all government
property in his possession and vacate office.
There have been
several allegations of financial impropriety against NIMASA during Mr.
Akpobolokemi’s tenure, including those which suggested the agency funded
the lavish lifestyles of some Niger Delta militants and bankrolled most
of the hate campaigns against Mr. Buhari in the run-up to the 2015
elections.
In 2012, the Fiscal Responsibility Commission,
accused the maritime agency of failing to render its audited accounts
from 2007 to 2011.
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