
It has been revealed that N35m out of the
N8.5bn diverted by retired Maj. Gen Emmanuel
Atewe was paid to the Living Faith Church
popularly known as Winners’Chapel.
Atewe served as the Commander of the military
Joint Task Force, Operation Pulo Shield, in the
Niger Delta before his retirement.
He was last week re-arraigned by the Economic
and Financial Crimes Commission for an alleged
fraud of N8.5bn, which the EFCC claimed was
perpetrated during the operation.
He is facing 22 counts before Justice A.O. Faji of
the Federal High Court in Lagos.
The other defendants in the case are a former
Director-General of the Nigerian Maritime
Administration and Safety Agency, Patrick
Akpobolokemi; Kime Engozu and Josephine
Otuaga.
The EFCC accused them of conspiring among
themselves to divert N8.5bn from Operation Pulo
Shield between September 5, 2014, and May 20,
2015, using six companies.
The six companies were listed as Jagan Ltd;
Jagan Trading Company Ltd; Jagan Global
Services Ltd; Al-Nald Ltd; Paper Warehouse Ltd;
Eastpoint Integrated Services Ltd and De-
Newlink Integrated Services Ltd.
They had been arraigned on three occasions and
had on each occasion pleaded not guilty to the
offence.
In a bid to prove its allegations, however, the
EFCC called Ahidjo as its first witness on Friday.
Led in evidence by the EFCC prosecutor, Mr.
Rotimi Oyedepo, Ahidjo introduced himself as a
businessman, who dealt in stationeries, printing,
and general contracts.
The Abuja-based businessman said he carried
on his trade under his five companies based in
Abuja, adding that he was a registered
contractor with the National Assembly, the
National Population Commission, and the
Independent National Electoral Commission, to
which he made supplies.
He claimed to have known Atewe from Villa
Church in Abuja, where they both worshiped, as
of when the retired general was still a Guard
Commander.
The witness said, being a pentecostal, he also
attended Living Faith Church, and Atewe also
worshiped there.
He said he cultivated a good relationship with
Atewe, to the extent that he attended “midnight
church” in Atewe’s house in Abuja, three times a
week.
Ahidjo narrated to the court how Atewe moved to
Bayelsa between July and September 2014
where he served as JTF Commander.
“He invited me to Bayelsa and I went. He told me
that the Federal Government gave JTF a grant
for security and building of barracks and if I have
any company into which account money could be
paid. And being somebody I knew very well from
Guard Commander to Major General, I provided
the companies that I listed earlier,” Ahidjo said.
The witness said on a second invitation and visit
to Atewe in Bayelsa, Atewe told him that three
payments were about to be made into his
accounts and as soon as they were made he
should acknowledge the payments and await
further instructions.
He said within two to three days of the meeting,
he started to receive the payments and
accordingly informed Atewe, who asked him to
hold on till he (Atewe) returned to Abuja.
The witness said upon Atewe’s return to Abuja,
he invited him to his office at Niger Barracks in
Abuja, where he introduced, Engozu, who is the
3rd defendant, as the person that would take
delivery of the money from Ahidjo.
Ahidjo said in view of the volume of the monies,
Engozu advised him to change the money from
naira to dollar before delivery, and he according
contacted a Bureau de Change operator, named
only as Jimoh.
“Each time I received it (money), I would call a
BDC operator, named Jimoh. I knew him before
this time. He would change the money, I would
pay him the naira equivalent and take the
dollars. Once I changed it, I would wait for
instruction either from Major General Atewe or
Mr. Kime. That was what we continued to do
until the end of the transaction in 2015,” Ahidjo
said.
He said he received a total of N4,915,163,103
within the period, out of which about N4.1bn
were converted to dollars and delivered to
Engozu, who in turn issued a receipt for each
payment based on Atewe’s instruction.
Ahidjo said of the remaining amount, he was
instructed by Atewe to transfer N35m to
Winners’ Chapel; N103m to INP Ltd; N170m to
First Investment Ltd; N99m to Lord Fem Ltd;
N88m to Ocean Gas and N297m to Cisco Nobot.
Asked by the prosecutor the purpose of the
transfer to Living Faith Church, Ahidjo said, “I
don’t know what it was for; it was on the
instruction of Maj. Gen. Atewe. All these monies,
I don’t question what they were meant for. It is
not my money, so I can’t question what it was
for. Maj. Gen. Atewe asked me to act on
instruction.”
Justice Faji adjourned till March 21, 2017, for
Ahidjo to continue his evidence.
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