Authorities in Seychelles have opened a criminal investigation into the
multi-million dollar assets which Senate President Bukola Saraki and his
wife, Toyin, are believed to hold through offshore shell companies in
tax havens, PREMIUM TIMES can report.
Bukola and Toyin Saraki are
being targeted by financial intelligence operatives for their
“suspicious” use of offshore shell companies as uncovered in the Panama
Papers investigation published in 2016, according to new records
obtained by the International Consortium of Investigative Journalists
and shared with PREMIUM TIMES and other partners.
Investigators
at the Seychelles Financial Intelligence Unit said they are interested
in determining whether or not Mrs Saraki stood as a front for her
husband in the ownership of some of the offshore holdings linked to the
family when a trove of offshore assets managed by Panamanian law firm,
Mossack Fonseca, was leaked to the media.
The investigators are
also working to determine if the transactions undertaken with the shell
companies were used to launder funds or carry out other suspicious
activities.
Two weeks after the Sarakis were exposed as owning
undeclared offshore assets in violation of Nigeria’s code of conduct
regulations, detectives from that country’s FIU asked Mossack Fonseca to
furnish them with all documents relating to Sandon Developments Ltd, a
firm registered in Seychelles under Toyin Saraki’s name.
Mossack
Fonseca responded to the request on April 29, 2016, by forwarding a link
to the PREMIUM TIMES article on the Panama Papers as well as all
documents relating to Sandon Ltd, including international passports and
business activities.
The status of the investigation, however
remained unclear as there is no record of any update about it since
Mossack Fonseca responded to the authorities’ requests at the end of
April 2016.
Mrs Saraki registered Sandon Ltd in 2011 and used it
to buy a family property at #8 Whittaker Street, Belgravia, London SW1W
8JQ.
Mr Saraki denied links to the offshore assets in 2016,
saying they belonged to his wife’s family. But information obtained by
PREMIUM TIMES at the time indicated that the Senate President merely
used his wife as a front, and Seychelles authorities also found the
denial unconvincing.
The revelations were amongst the findings of
a lengthy investigation by the International Consortium of
Investigative Journalists, German newspaper Süddeutsche Zeitung and more
than 100 other global news organizations – including PREMIUM TIMES.
PREMIUM
TIMES was the only Nigerian publication involved in the investigation,
which lasted a year before the first set of stories started running on
April 3.
For two weeks, Yusuph Olaniyonu, a spokesperson for Mr
Saraki, did not return PREMIUM TIMES requests for comments about the
criminal investigation of his principal and spouse in Seychelles.
Nigerian
authorities had previously stated that they were investigating Mr
Saraki’s offshore assets that were not declared in contravention of the
law, but no charges have been brought against him.
Offshore shell
entities are not necessarily fraudulent. There are legitimate uses for
them by businesspersons across the world, but several other people,
including criminals, have used them for untoward activities.
When
Mrs Saraki registered Sandon Ltd on January 12, 2011 in Seychelles, she
listed Babatunde Morakinyo, a long-term personal aide and friend of Mr
Saraki, as a shareholder.
Mr Morakinyo was amongst the top aides
of Mr Saraki who were identified by the Economic and Financial Crimes
Commission as laundering billions of naira in suspected bribes from the
Paris Club refund to Nigerian states in 2017.
While incorporating
that Sandon Ltd, documents show, Mrs Saraki bought a curious service
from Mosshich she tucked the hidden assets.
PREMIUM TIMES further
reported at the time that Sarakis used nominee directors in order to
perhaps avoid being identified as the beneficial owner of Sandon.
Nominee directors are sometimes used in tax havens to conceal real
owners of companies and assets.
She then made an undertaking
indemnifying the Panamanian company “in respect of all claims, demands,
actions, suits, proceedings, costs and expenses whatsoever as may be
incurred or become payable by you in respect of or arising out of any
member or employee or associate of your company or associated companies
holding any office, directorship or shareholdings in the company or by
reason of or in consequence of any act or decision made by any such
person or company in connection with the management and/or
administration of the said company.”
Shortly after the company
was incorporated, Mrs. Saraki used it, in July 2011, to buy the property
on Whuttaker Street, Belgravia, London SW1W 8JQ.
The property,
acquired from Renocon Property Limited, a company registered in the
British Virgin Island, was never disclosed to Nigerian authorities as
required by the country’s code of conduct law.
The revelations
came at the time Mr Saraki was being tried by the Code of Conduct
Tribunal (CCT) for failing to properly declare his local assets when he
became governor in 2003, 2007 and when he moved to the Senate in 2011,
having completed the two terms allowed under the Constitution.
In
June 2017, the CCT found Mr. Saraki not guilty on all the 18 counts of
false assets filings as brought against him by the Nigerian government.
The
Nigerian government challenged the ruling at the Court of Appeal, which
affirmed the conclusion of the tribunal on all but three counts in a
December 12 ruling. Mr Saraki appealed the decision to the Supreme
Court.
The Supreme Court is scheduled to deliver its judgment in the appeal on July 6.
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