Governor Ayo Fayose of Ekiti state has accused the Federal Government of protecting the real owner of the money recently found in an apartment in Ikoyi by the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC).
This is coming on the heels of reports that the National Intelligence Agency (NIA) has claimed ownership of the funds.
Fayose said that the development is a cover up by the government, adding that the All Progressives Congress (APC) is not fighting corruption.
The Governor also said that the discovery of funds in the Ikoyi apartment has rubbished President Buhariâs corruption war.
According to Daily Post, Fayose said âYesterday, it was made public that the National Intelligence Agency (NIA) claimed ownership of the $43,449,947, ÂŁ27,800 and N23, 218,000 seized on Wednesday by the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) from Osborne Towers, a luxury residential complex in Ikoyi, Lagos.
âThis, to my mind is one cover-up too many and this federal government seeming plot to protect the original owner of both the money and the apartment where it was found has further shown that the anti-corruption fight is political, selective and therefore a ruse.
âNigerians should recall that I have consistently maintained that the APC-led federal government was not fighting any corruption. Rather, the government is using the anti-corruption fight as a major political tool to cripple opposition and turn the country to a one party state.
âTherefore, for once, the federal government should operate with the mind-set that Nigerians are no fools. They are capable of asking questions and they are already doing that.
âSome of the questions being asked are: who is the owner of the apartment in which the money was found? does the apartment also belong to the NIA? if the apartment belong to the NIA, when was it bought and from whom,? if the apartment does not belong to the NIA, from whom and when was it rented?
âHow could a whistle-blower be aware of movement of money into one out of many apartments in a building without knowing the owner of the apartment? if truly the NIA was carrying out a âcovert operationâ as claimed, was President Muhammadu Buhari not briefed of the so-called âcovert operationâ when he took over power?
âWas the National Security Adviser (NSA), whose office controls all intelligence agencies, including the EFCC and DSS not aware of the âcovert operationâ? was there any security presence at the vicinity of the apartment to suggest that it was being used as warehouse for over N13 billion cash belonging to the NIA?
âDoes NIA need an unprotected apartment to keep such huge sum of money purportedly meant for âcovert operationâ? how much was released for the so-called âcovert operationâ? how much has been spent and to who was account rendered up to date?
âAs for me, the script being acted on this discovered cash is a cover-up that will mar the EFCC and the federal government. It is a movie well scripted for some alawada (comedians) but acted so badly.
âIt is case of a dog that has been eating other peopleâs children to the admiration of its owner suddenly attacking the beloved son of the ownerâs friend and they are now trying to cover-up the dog owner.
âIt is a major test of the integrity of the APC federal governmentâs so-called anti-corruption fight, and the earlier the proponents of the cover-up plot come back to their normal senses and tell Nigerians who owns the apartment in which the money was found, the better for them.
âIn the last few weeks, we have been served with dramas of recovery of funds by the EFCC.
âN49 million in cash was said to have been found in Kaduna Airport and was promptly âarrestedâ by EFCC officials. But up till now, Nigerians have not been told the identities of those who brought the five sacks in which the cash was found into the airport despite the presence of CCTV cameras at the airport.
âEFCC also fed Nigerians with tales of recovery of N448,850,000 (Four hundred and forty eight million, eight hundred and fifty thousand naira) cash from a shop at LEGICO Shopping Plaza, Ahmadu Bello Way, Victoria Island, Lagos. We were told that the shop had not been opened for two years and one wonders how the cash got into the shop.
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