Saraki Raises Alarm Over EFCC's Claim to Have Cleared CCT Chairman of N10m Bribe
The Senate President, Dr. Bukola Saraki, has queried the powers of the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission, EFCC, to clear the Chairman of the Code of Conduct Tribunal, CCT, Justice Danladi Umar, from prosecution after he was accused of complicity in N10 million bribery scandal.
He expressed doubt why the CCT Chairman should be shielded from prosecution. He therefore dismissed the purported clearance contending that under the law, only the Attorney General of the Federation and Minister of Justice had the powers to shield an accused person from criminal prosecution.
Saraki therefore urged that the recommendation by the immediate past AGF made in 2014 for the prosecution of the CCT Chairman be followed. Speaking through his lawyer, Mr. Ajibola Oluyede, Saraki said the clearance the EFCC issued to Umar holds no water.
He said the clean bill of health the anti-graft agency gave the CCT chairman recently, confirmed his position that the tribunal, under Umar, would not ensure fairness in his ongoing trial.
Oluyede argued that only the AGF could reverse a decision to prosecute an accused person, insisting that his client’s application urging Justice Umar to disqualify himself from the trial was still pending before the tribunal.
Oluyede said: “We are not saying he (Umar) is guilty. We are saying he is tainted and that he cannot act independently while the EFCC that is investigating him and had indicted him is now prosecuting our client before him. That is why we asked him to excuse himself from the trial.
“He did so before in the case involving former FCT Minister, Jeremiah Useni, where he excused himself from the hearing on the grounds that he had a close relationship with Useni. We are asking him to do so again now because of the facts that we have presented.”
He expressed doubt why the CCT Chairman should be shielded from prosecution. He therefore dismissed the purported clearance contending that under the law, only the Attorney General of the Federation and Minister of Justice had the powers to shield an accused person from criminal prosecution.
Saraki therefore urged that the recommendation by the immediate past AGF made in 2014 for the prosecution of the CCT Chairman be followed. Speaking through his lawyer, Mr. Ajibola Oluyede, Saraki said the clearance the EFCC issued to Umar holds no water.
He said the clean bill of health the anti-graft agency gave the CCT chairman recently, confirmed his position that the tribunal, under Umar, would not ensure fairness in his ongoing trial.
Oluyede argued that only the AGF could reverse a decision to prosecute an accused person, insisting that his client’s application urging Justice Umar to disqualify himself from the trial was still pending before the tribunal.
Oluyede said: “We are not saying he (Umar) is guilty. We are saying he is tainted and that he cannot act independently while the EFCC that is investigating him and had indicted him is now prosecuting our client before him. That is why we asked him to excuse himself from the trial.
“He did so before in the case involving former FCT Minister, Jeremiah Useni, where he excused himself from the hearing on the grounds that he had a close relationship with Useni. We are asking him to do so again now because of the facts that we have presented.”