Ekiti Assembly threatens EFCC boss, Magu, with contempt charge

Magu, EFCC boss

Ekiti State House of Assembly has threatened to initiate contempt

proceedings against the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) acting Chairman, Ibrahim Magu, over the arrest and detention of the state Commissioner for Finance, Chief Toyin Ojo, and the Accountant General, Mrs. Yemi Owolabi.

It described the EFCC arrest of Ojo and Owolabi as premeditated, malicious, politically motivated, contemptuous and unconstitutional in all ramifications and that it smacked of gangsterism by an agency that derives its power from the constitution but acts in contempt of the rule of law.

“It is in view of this that we demand the immediate release of the Commissioner for Finance, Chief Toyin Ojo, and the state Accountant General, Mrs Yemisi Owolabi,” the House stated. The House of Assembly, in its letter dated October 2, 2017 and signed by the Speaker, Kolawole Oluwawole, which was delivered at the EFCC’s Abuja office today (Tuesday), said that there was a subsisting order of the Federal High Court, Ado Ekiti granted on November 7, 2016, in the case of Attorney General of Ekiti State Vs EFCC, IGP, Ekiti State

House of Assembly and 15 others. The letter delivered by the Chairman of the House Committee on Information, Dr Samuel Omotoso, Sina Animasaun and Dayo

Akinleye reads: “The court granted an Order of Interim Injunction restraining the 1st and 2nd defendants (EFCC and the Inspector General of Police, their agents, privies or any other investigative agencies, however described) from arresting, detaining or investigating any person or persons, whether past or present officials in the Ekiti State Government, without any report of indictment from the Ekiti State House of Assembly pending the hearing and determination of the Motion on Notice filed in this suit.

“It also granted an Order of Interim Injunction restraining the 3rd – 7th defendants (Speaker of the Ekiti State House of Assembly, the House of Assembly, Clerk of the Ekiti State House of Assembly, Accountant General and Auditor General of Ekiti State) by themselves or by their servants, agents, and privies from surrendering their constitutional assigned roles, including power of control over the public funds of Ekiti State, the duty to direct or cause to be directed the investigation or the

disbursement and administration of money appropriated or to be appropriated under any appropriated bill passed by the House of Assembly or as enabled under constitution, pending the determination of the Motion on Notice already filed in this suit.

“The consequential effects of the court order, which has not been vacated by a superior court, is that the Ekiti State House of

Assembly, being the only institution vested with the powers to appropriate fund for the State Government and enforces the judicious use of such, through its Public Account Committee must first carry out

its function of investigating the use of fund appropriated for the State Government and report of indictment made.

“In this instance case, the Ekiti State House of Assembly did not report any indictment against the Commissioner for Finance, Chief Toyin Ojo, and the Accountant General, Mrs Yemi Owolabi, to the EFCC.

“Therefore, the EFCC acted in violation of a valid and subsisting court order by arresting and detaining since Thursday, September 28, 2017, the Ekiti State Commissioner for Finance, Chief Toyin Ojo and

Accountant General, Mrs Yemi Owolabi.”

Describing the EFCC as partisan, the House stated: “Despite the petition against former Governor of Ekiti State, Dr Kayode Fayemi, and others dated November 24, 2016 and submitted to the EFCC by the Ekiti State House of Assembly; you have declined to invite any of those that we complained against.

“Instead of acting on our petition, your commission opted to turn itself into an agent of harassment and intimidation against the

Government of Ekiti State, acting on every frivolous petition.”

 

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