EFCC to arraign Oronsanye on 24-count charge of stealing today

Semiu Salami
Semiu Salami
Steve Oronsaye

The Economic and Financial Crimes Commission, EFCC, on Friday filed a 24-count charge of stealing on the former Head of Service of the Federation, Steve Oronsaye, and two others.

The charges brought against the former HOS and two other accomplices border on stealing and obtaining by false pretence, otherwise known as 419.

Oronsaye and his two accomplices would be arraigned in court on Monday.

Already, the case has been assigned to Justice Gabriel Kolawole of the Federal High Court, Abuja.

Oronsaye was arrested by the anti-graft agency on Wednesday on allegations of corruption, but ran into fresh trouble when new allegations emerged that he was engaged in theft and money laundering.

The commission had granted him administrative bail and ordered him to report for further interrogation Friday and after hours of rigorous questioning by top officials of the commission, the 24-count charges were drawn up against him.

Recalled that December 15, 2013, Premium Times had exclusively reported how Oronsaye and other top directors of the Nigerian civil service colluded to allegedly defraud the nation of N6.2 billion pension fund.

The fund, allegedly stolen through a maze of bogus contracts, was meant for biometric enrolment and payment for computer accessories that were never supplied.

A reliable source at the commission had at the time said that between 2009 and 2010, almost N6 billion in fake contracts were awarded and paid for under Oronsaye’s supervision.

According to the EFCC, Innovative Solutions and Project Limited, a company allegedly handpicked by Oronsaye, received a contract of N63 million for biometric data capture.

The contract, however, served as a conduit through which three individuals and five companies got N705.36 million.

Other companies which had no contract to participate in the biometric data capture exercise but were paid include Frederick Hamilton Global Limited, who received N119.398 million; Xangee Technologies got N153.14 million; Fatidek Venture received N30.05 million; while Obanlado Enterprises was paid N96.76 million.

During its investigations, the EFCC uncovered how Phina Chidi, a deputy director in the Pension Account at the Office of the Head of Civil Service of the Federation, OHCSF, who had given a written statement to the commission in January, 2011, disclosed to the agency how she was made to shop for companies that would execute contracts and make returns to Oronsaye.

“I was asked by Dr. Shuaibu (Teildi Shuaibu, Director, Pension Account) to shop for company names to execute our contracts, proceeds of which should be given to Mr. Stephen Oronsaye the then Head of Service,” Chidi said in her statement.

Chidi also detailed how the proceeds of such deals were kept in the accounts of two banks before Shuaibu helped to transfer them to Oronsaye.

Individuals who benefitted from the string of payments, allegedly made on the eve of Oronsaye’s retirement as Head of Service, include Kate Chinwe Obiekwe, Ibrahim Abdulkarim and Mohammed Abdullahi Ahmed who were paid N56.61 million, N80.1 million and N23,760 respectively.

The trio, who are officials of the OHCSF pension, received the “collective allowance” – allowances paid out to an officer of the OHCSF for distribution to other staff who are supposedly meant to be on a trip, contrary to Federal Government directives on e-payment.

Others who also benefited from the payments include Innovative Solutions and Project Limited and Vivians Ebony Nigeria Enterprise.

The former is said to have a N63 million worth of contract with the Office of the Head of Service but its emergence as the preferred contractor is in breach of the procurement process since the contact for the biometric exercise was not advertised.

Also, a Certificate of no-objection was not obtained by the office of the Head of Service from the Bureau of Public Procurement, BPP, although Oronsaye allegedly indicated in his statement before the EFCC that he made an informal request to the BPP about the process involved.

Apart from breaching the procurement process, the contract awarded to Innovative Solutions and Project Limited was also fraught with a series of irregular and inflated payments made to the company, according to the EFCC.

Robert Ikhaziboh, the Chief Executive of the company, admitted to EFCC investigators that he was instructed by one Osarenkhoe Afe, an IT consultant and nominee of Oronsaye as member of the Pension Reform Committee, to work with two companies – Upstrach Communication and Federick Hamilton Global Limited – with specific instructions on the amount to pay the companies whenever he received payment.

When questioned by the EFCC, Afe stated that Frederick Hamilton was paid N289.05 million for its contract, out of which he got N35 million and Oronsaye received N250 million through third parties.

Afe stated that he was willing to make a refund.

Under questioning by the EFCC on December 7, Oronsaye reportedly claimed ignorance of some of the companies that received bogus payments and traced back to him.

He also claimed ignorance of Xangee Technologies, Fatidek Ventures and Obalano Enterprises and said he never approved any payment to them.

However, when provided with evidences of payments to these companies, Oronsaye reportedly became silent, according to sources at the commission said.

Courtesy of Premium Times

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