Human
rights lawyer, Femi Falana, has asked President Goodluck Jonathan to
order the immediate trial of the former Chairman of the House of
Representatives’ Adhoc Committee on Fuel Subsidy Regime, Mr. Farouk
Lawan, and billionaire businessman, Mr. Femi Otedola, for bribery.
Lawan allegedly received about $620,000 out of $3m bribe from
Otedola, to delete the businessman’s companies from the list of firms
indicted by the committee.
Secretary to the committee, Boniface Emeluno, was also said to have received part of the bribe.
Falana, in a statement on Sunday, rejected the duo’s excuse for their
involvement in the scandal, insisting that there was sufficient
evidence to prosecute them.
He said, “Having undertaken to make the fight against corruption part
of its transformation agenda the Goodluck Jonathan Administration
should direct the anti-graft agencies to bring to book all those who
have been indicted in the various probes on the fuel subsidy. Let no one
deceive Nigerians by saying that there is no evidence to try criminal
suspects who have made confessional statements.”
Falana wondered why Lawan and Otedola had not been charged to court
when a few months after the bribery scandal broke, two other members of
the House, Herman Hembe and Chris Azubogu were promptly arraigned by
the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission for a similar allegation.
Hembe and Azuogu were last November 26, re-arraigned at an Abuja High
Court before Justice Peter Kekemeke for illegal collection of about
$4,095 (less than N5m) from the Nigerian Security Exchange Commission
sometimes in October 2012.
Falana said, “Since what is sauce for the goose is sauce for the
gander, Messrs Lawan and Emenulo should be charged to court without
any further delay. Otedola should also be arraigned in court for bribing
the two legislators to delist his indicted companies.”
Attributing Nigeria’s poor rating on global corruption scale to
“lackadaisical manner of handling cases of corruption involving
influential members of the ruling class”, Falana expressed worry why the
Federal Government had not acted upon the police report on the bribery
scandal.
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