Nigeria: Why We Can’t Reveal Forfeited Abuja Estate’s Owner – EFCC


“It is important to note that the substantive criminal investigation on the matter still continues,” EFCC said.

The Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) has responded to criticisms for concealing the identity of the owner of the vast Abuja estate forfeited to the federal government on Monday.

PREMIUM TIMES reported Monday how EFCC, Nigeria’s leading anti-corruption agency, secured the final forfeiture of the estate in Abuja, the largest single-asset recovery since the agency’s inception in 2003.

The commission achieved this through an order of final forfeiture issued by a court in Abuja Monday.

The recovered asset is a vast estate in Abuja measuring 150,500 square metres with 753 units of duplexes and other apartments.

But EFCC refused to disclose its owner in jts statement announcing the unprecedented asset recovery on Monday.

This has fuelled speculation of cover-up among Nigerians.

Response

In a statement on Tuesday, Dele Oyewale, the spokesperson for the EFCC condemned the allegation of cover-up of the owner of the estate levelled against it by Omowole Sowore, Sahara Reporters publisher. Mr Sowore had said despite EFCC’s deliberate effort to conceal the owner’s details, he found that the asset belonged to Godwin Emefiele, the embattled former governor of the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN).

But Mr Oyewale described Mr Sowore’s allegation as “unacceptable and grossly un-charitable.”

“It is shocking that the activist (Sowore) is not concerned about the systemic lassitude and unhelpful permissiveness that allowed such a monstrous corrupt act in the first instance,” he wrote.