ABUJA—The United Kingdom, UK, National Crime Agency has said that the
£27,000 (N9,180,000) seized from the former Petroleum Minister, Diezani
Alison-Madueke, was not related to her arrest.
The agency, in response to an enquiry by Vanguard, said that cash seizure in the UK does not need to be related to an arrest.
Furthermore,
NCA’s Press Office confirmed, in an electronic mail sent to Vanguard in
Abuja yesterday, that apart from the £27,000 recovered from the former
minister, ‘smaller sums’ were also seized from two other individuals,
who it declined to name.
On why it had not revealed the identities of
those arrested along with the former minister, the agency
made it clear
that it does not confirm the identities of individuals it arrests
unless there was specific operational requirement to do so.
Vanguard
had written to the agency, Monday, asking to be availed of the time and
place where the money was seized from Alison-Madueke and when she would
be charged to court.
NCA’s mail
The agency replied
yesterday, saying: “We can confirm that £27,000 was seized from Diezani
Alison-Madueke at Westminster Magistrate’s Court along with smaller sums
from two other individuals. But we are not providing any further detail
at this time.
“Cash seizure in the UK does not need to be
related to an arrest. The NCA does not confirm identities of individuals
at arrest, unless there is a specific operational requirement to do so.
“There is no further information we are offering at this time.”
The
agency skipped discussion on when the Nigerians, now on bail in the UK,
would be formally charged for money laundering and bribery, fuelling
speculations that the agency had not completed their findings.
Meanwhile,
the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission, EFCC, has denied
arresting one of the oil players in the country, identified as a close
business associate of the former oil minister and Atlantic Energy
Chairman, Olajide Omokore.
However, Vanguard learned that the commission interrogated Omokore and released him on administrative bail.
‘EFCC quizzed Omokore’
A
source in EFCC told Vanguard that Omokore reported at the commission’s
headquarters in Abuja, Monday morning, on the invitation of the agency.
The source told Vanguard, on condition of anonymity, that the oil baron denied any wrongdoing.
The
source told Vanguard in Abuja last night: “Omokore came and was
promptly grilled on many issues relating to what he did during the
tenure of the former minister and was released on administrative bail.”
Contacted,
the spokesman for EFCC, Mr. Wilson Uwujaren, said: “I am not aware of
the development. Once I have information on that I will make it
available to you.”
Source: Vanguard News
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