The presidential candidate of the Peoples Democratic
Party in the February 23 presidential election, Atiku Abubakar, on
Saturday said 24 operatives of the Economic and Financial Crimes
Commission arrested his son-in-law, Alhaji Babalele Abdullahi.
He
said Abdullahi, who is also finance director of Atiku Group of
Companies, was arrested after the EFCC officials in two vehicles, an
18-seater Toyota bus with registration Abuja CS 522 RSH and a Hilux van,
had invaded the Maitama residence of his son-in-law at about 8.30am.
A
statement by Atiku’s media adviser, Mr Paul Ibe, said the EFCC
officials were, however, not given access into the house until
Abdullahi’s lawyers arrived.
He said, “In a desperate move to
have Atiku Abubakar concede and congratulate President Muhammadu Buhari,
officials of the EFCC at about 8.30am today (Saturday) invaded the
Maitama residence of Babalele. They were, however, not given access into
the house until his lawyers arrived.
“The EFCC agents numbering
about two dozens came in two regular vehicles, an 18-seater Toyota bus
(with registration Abuja CS 522 RSH) and a Hilux van. They came with a
search warrant to search the house and the office of Babalele and found
nothing incriminating.
“They then proceeded to his office at
Oakland Centre in Maitama and found nothing incriminating there.
However, they took away some documents of landed property. Not done, the
EFCC officials stormed his Wuse residence where they again found
nothing incriminating after the search.
“Afterwards, Babalele was
taken away to the EFCC office in Wuse to make a statement alongside Mr
Lawan Ayuba. It was gathered that the petition relied upon to invade the
residence and the office of Babalele was authored by a brother of the
wife of President Buhari.”
Ibe stated that as a law-abiding
citizen, Atiku recognised the constitutional role of the EFCC and indeed
any other agency of the government to carry out investigations, but
would not be cowed by any attempt to blackmail him into mortgaging his
mandate.
The statement reported Atiku as assuring Nigerians that
under no circumstance would he mortgage what he called the mandate of
Nigerians, which he claimed was freely expressed on February 23.
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