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Home NEWS Kogi probe: Agbakoba heads to Supreme Court over EFCC powers

Kogi probe: Agbakoba heads to Supreme Court over EFCC powers

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EFCC, in its response through its Head of Media and Publicity, Wilson Uwujaren, said that Agbakoba was wrong in his allegations.

By Jeffrey Agbo

Senior Advocate of Nigeria, Olisa Agbakoba, has confirmed he would seek the Supreme Court’s interpretation on the exact scope of powers of the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC), especially in relation to states of the Federation.

The former President of the Nigerian Bar Association (NBA) made this known in a statement on Tuesday.

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The SAN described the continuous beaming of search light on Kogi as nothing less than “deliberate breakage” of the rule of law guiding its operations as an anti-graft agency.

“I am indeed heading to the apex court to seek for a declaration on the exact scope of powers of the commission, especially in relation to states of the Federation.

“EFCC must not in its fight against corruption undermine the rule of law.

“The very recent decision of the Supreme Court in a case of Dr. Joseph Nwobike SAN v The Federal Republic of Nigeria in suit number FRN SC/CR/161/2020, the Apex Court drastically limited the scope of powers of the EFCC, as it recognised that the EFCC being very powerful could not be allowed to run amok.

“I am so concerned that the EFCC often exceeds its powers in the investigation and prosecution of alleged offenders of our criminal laws.

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“The EFCC had issued a response stating that I was wrong to take the views that it sometimes acts outside the scope of its powers vested by the EFCC Act.

“I am not in any way against the EFCC on the fight against corruption just as the Commission has admitted that I have always supported the fight against corruption.

EFCC secures
EFCC operatives

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“My concern is that the EFCC, in its undoubted statutory powers to stamp out corruption in Nigeria, it must strictly conform to the prescriptions of the law.

“But since the EFCC has in its fight against corruption undermines the rule of law, so, to the courts I go for a redress,” Agbakoba threatened.

According to him, how a state spends its money should not be the business of the anti-graft agency.

But the EFCC in its response through its Head of Media and Publicity, Wilson Uwujaren, said that Agbakoba was wrong in his allegations.

Uwujaren argued that the EFCC has not done anything outside its constitutional mandate at checkmating money laundering in Kogi and other states across the country and was not afraid of Agbakoba’s threat.

The clash began last Thursday when the EFCC arrested and arraigned the nephew of Governor Yahaya Bello before a Federal High Court in Abuja over alleged money laundering offences.

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