Justice Nnamdi Dimgba of the Abuja
division of the Federal High Court Wednesday struck out the name of the
former Minister of Petroleum Resources,..
Mrs. Diezani Alison-Madueke, in
the ongoing trial of the Chairman of Atlantic Energy Drilling Concept
(AEDC) Nigeria Limited, Mr. Jide Omokore, and five others standing trial
over their alleged involvement in a $1.6 billion crude oil fraud.
The trial judge struck out her name
while delivering ruling on the former minister’s motion seeking to be
joined as a defendant in the suit.
Omokore, AEDC, Atlantic Energy Brass
Development (AEBD) Ltd., Victor Briggs, Abiye Membere and David Mbanefo
are standing trial for their alleged involvement in defrauding the
Nigerian Petroleum Development Company (NPDC), the exploration and
production subsidiary of the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation
(NNPC), of $1.6 billion.
Omokore and his firms – AEDC and AEBD –
had entered into a Strategic Alliance Agreement (SAA) in 2010 to provide
funding for the development of six joint venture oil blocks operated by
NPDC.
The SAA allowed AEDC and AEBD to recover
their investments in the oil acreages through crude oil lifting under
an agreed sharing formula with NPDC.
However, both firms were alleged to have
diverted part of the proceeds from the sale of the crude oil which
should have paid to NPDC.
But sources close to AEDC and AEBD have
maintained that the amount due to NPDC stood at about $800 million as of
2015, and not $1.6 billion as alleged by the Economic and Financial
Crimes Commission (EFCC), which charged the parties to court for alleged
fraud early this year.
Of the $800 million, they disclosed that $500 million had been repaid to the NPDC after a reconciliation process.
Of the $800 million, they disclosed that $500 million had been repaid to the NPDC after a reconciliation process.
They have also maintained that the
companies had not committed any fraud and the matter was a breach of
contract which should have gone to arbitration as provided for in the
SAA.
At the resumed trial Wednesday,
Alison-Madueke had through her lawyer, Dr. Onyechi Ikpeazu (SAN),
applied to Justice Dimgba to be joined as one of the defendants in the
suit.
She predicated the request on the
grounds that count eight of the nine-count charge proffered against the
six defendants had mentioned her name, even though the prosecution did
not make her one of the defendants.
In the motion argued before Justice
Dimgba, Alison-Madueke maintained that her application would not
prejudice the criminal trial but rather afford her the opportunity to be
heard in the interest of fair hearing.
Ikpeazu said the applicant would be
grossly prejudiced if the application was refused by the court, adding
that the refusal would further compound the gross violation of her
constitutional rights.
In opposing the application, counsel to
the EFCC, Aliyu Yusuf, urged the court to decline her request to be
joined as a defendant.
Yusuf told the court that Alison-Madueke
was currently under investigation by the Metropolitan Police, London
for several crimes and has been admitted to bail in the United Kindom
but could not leave the country.
“The applicant seeing that the
investigations by the Metropolitan Police had reached advanced stage,
and that trial in the instant charge before this honourable court is
proceeding smoothly, had designed the instant application to distract
and scuttle both her investigation and imminent prosecution in the
United Kingdom and the trial before this court,” Yusuf argued.
He further claimed that Alison-Madueke
knew she would not be able to leave the United Kingdom, in view of
ongoing investigation and imminent prosecution, and was therefore
seeking the order to amend the charge for her name to be included on the
face of the charge in order “to escape investigation and prosecution in
the United Kingdom under the guise that she is coming to face her trial
before this court and also scuttle the trial”.
In a brief ruling, Justice Dimgba held
that the EFCC could not eat its cake and have it because by including
Alison-Madueke’s name in count eight of the charge, the commission ought
to have made her one of the defendants.
The judge therefore struck out count
eight where Alison-Madueke’s name was mentioned in the suit and
adjourned trial of the substantive matter till October 5 and 6.
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