Tag: ACCESS BANK

  • Yahaya Bello Facing Political Witch-Hunt, Not Money Laundering Trial — JB Daudu

    Yahaya Bello Facing Political Witch-Hunt, Not Money Laundering Trial — JB Daudu

    The defence team of former Kogi State Governor Yahaya Bello has bluntly told the Federal High Court, Abuja, that the case instituted against him by the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) is nothing more than a political witch-hunt disguised as a money laundering trial.

    Mr Joseph Daudu, SAN, made the assertion on Wednesday before Justice Emeka Nwite, in a sharp rebuttal to remarks by EFCC counsel, Mr Kemi Pinheiro, SAN, during proceedings.

    The stinging exchange unfolded while Olomotane Egoro, the EFCC’s seventh prosecution witness (PW-7) and a compliance officer with Access Bank Plc, was being rigorously cross-examined by the defence.

    Under oath, the witness made a series of admissions that appeared to undermine the prosecution’s case. Egoro confirmed unequivocally that Bello never served as a local government chairman in Kogi State and had no role in awarding any of the contracts under investigation.

    He further admitted that all the contracts referenced by the prosecution were awarded by various local government chairmen, as reflected in Exhibit 33 tendered before the court.

    More damaging to the prosecution, Egoro told the court that Bello’s name did not appear anywhere in the transaction records linked to the alleged money laundering. According to him, “Yahaya Bello” was neither a sender nor a recipient in any of the local government transactions cited by the EFCC.

    The witness also conceded that transactions contained in Exhibit 33(11), particularly those involving local governments and Keyless Nature Limited, were, on their face, consistent with normal banking operations. He admitted he did not know the purposes of several payments made by the 21 local government areas, nor could he establish whether there was any contractual relationship between the councils and the company.

    Egoro further testified that banks only raise red flags where fraud is suspected, stressing that customers are free to spend their money as they choose. He confirmed that Access Bank was not acting under any court order and had no fraud report relating to the transactions in question.

    On payments made to Fayzade Business Enterprise, the witness identified a May 6, 2022 inflow from Okene Local Government Area as payment for the supply of reading materials. He also listed other payments from Ogorimagongo, Okehi, Omala and Yagba local government areas for clearly stated purposes, including education materials, medical items, sporting equipment and medical consumables, with amounts running into several millions of naira. Other transactions, he said, covered agrochemicals, farm inputs and medical supplies.

    When pressed by the defence to confirm whether Bello was a local government chairman in any part of Kogi State, Egoro answered plainly: he was not.

    In an apparent attempt to rescue the prosecution’s narrative, Pinheiro interjected, suggesting that payments in money laundering cases are often disguised. Daudu immediately fired back, insisting that such casual remarks could not mask the reality before the court.

    He maintained that the evidence so far had exposed the trial as politically motivated, declaring that the proceedings would soon be seen for what they truly are — a political prosecution rather than a genuine money laundering case.

    Justice Nwite subsequently adjourned the matter until February 5 for the continuation of the cross-examination of the prosecution witness.

  • Wigwe University Registrar dies ‘mysteriously’ in Abuja

    Wigwe University Registrar dies ‘mysteriously’ in Abuja

    Another tragedy has hit the fledgling Wigwe University, as its registrar, Ms. Ulonna Inyama, has died under mysterious circumstances in Abuja, sparking concerns about medical negligence and hospital safety.
    According to a family source, Ms. Inyama died due to complications from fibroid surgery and a wrong blood transfusion.
    The source revealed that she was initially admitted to a hospital in Abuja for fibroid treatment but suffered a fatal reaction after receiving the wrong blood type.
    “She died of loss of blood due to fibroid complications under mysterious circumstances. We were told that wrong blood transfusion led to her death.
    “When her condition worsened due to complications, she was referred to another hospital, where she passed on,” the source told Vanguard on Monday in Abuja.
    The incident has raised questions about the quality of medical care and safety protocols in Nigerian hospitals. The family has demanded an investigation into the circumstances surrounding Ms. Inyama’s death.
    Ms. Inyama’s death comes just months after the tragic loss of Wigwe University’s founder, Herbert Wigwe, who died in a helicopter crash, February 9th, 2024 in California, USA, along with his wife and son.
    The university community is still reeling from the loss of its founder and now faces another devastating blow with the loss of its Registrar
  • Equity market continues bullish run, gains N534bn

    Nigeria’s equity market on Monday appreciated by N534 billion as an investment in the shares of United Bank of Africa, FCMB, Access Bank and others lifted the market activity

    The market capitalization of listed equities increased by 1.60 percent to N33.731 trillion from N33.197 trillion reported the previous day.

    The NGX All Share Index also increased by 980.97 basis points to 61949.24 points from 60968.27 points traded on Friday.

    A review of the investment during the day showed that JapaulGold, UPL, and Fidelity Bank led the gainers’ table gaining 10 percent each to close at N0.77 percent, N2.75, and N7.70 percent respectively, Meyer Paint and Eterna Plc also increased by 10 percent each to close at N23.10 per share.

    On the contrary, Triple G topped the losers’ chart during the day, shedding 9.87 percent to close at N3.38 percent each, Cornerstone Insurance and NSL Tech trailed with a loss of 9.09 percent each to close at N1.00 and N0.30 per unit respectively. ABC Transport fell by 6.82 percent to close at N0.41 per share, Julius Berger was down by 3.23 percent to close at N30.00 per share.

    Volume of trades increased by 20.692 million, representing 20.73 percent as investors traded 1.205 billion shares valued at N14.039 billion in 12128 deals against 998.080 million shares valued at N15.956 billion in 10580 deals.

    Transactions in the shares of FCMB group was the toast of investor during the account for 173.808 million shares valued at N930.697 million, United Bank for Africa followed with an account of 160.673 million shares worth N2.119 billion, Access Corp traded132.518 million shares valued at N2.383 billion, Jaiz Bank exchanged 80.637 million shares worth N138.392 million while Transnational Corporation of Nigeria Plc sold a total of 74.963 million shares cost N285.247 million.