Justice Nnamdi Dimgba of the
Federal High Court in Maitama, Abuja has
turned down the application of Abba Moro, former interior minister, to
travel abroad for medical appointment.
Moro is facing an 11-count charge
of procurement fraud and money laundering preferred against him by the Economic
and Financial Crimes Commission, EFCC.
He is being charged alongside the former
permanent secretary in the ministry, Anastasia Daniel-Nwobia, a deputy director
in the ministry, F. O Alayebami, one Mahmood Ahmadu (at large), and Drexel Tech
Nigeria Limited, a firm that was given the contract to organise the ill-fated Nigerian
Immigration Service, (NIS) recruitment in 2014.
Moro, had through his counsel, Paul
Erokoro, SAN, sought leave of the court to travel abroad for a medical
appointment in an application dated December 16, 2016.
At the resumed sitting today,
Erokoro, while reminding the court of the pending application urged his
lordship to allow the defendant attend to his medical needs abroad.
In his ruling, Justice Dimgba noted
that, the application, dated December 16, 2016 addressed the request for the
defendant to travel out of the country for a medical appointment in January
2017.
“A medical appointment for January
2017 cannot be given in March”, the judge held.
Justice Dimgba asked that the
counsel update the application, and adjourned till Tuesday 21 March for hearing
on pending applications.
Earlier in the proceeding, Ishaq
Yahaya, a director of compliance at the Bureau of Public Procurement, BPP, who
testified as PW3 was called to the witness box for further cross-examination.
He had at the last sitting on 16
March, while being cross-examined by Erokoro, SAN, and Chris Uche, SAN, counsel
to 1st and 2nd defendants, told the court that Drexel Tech Global Services, a
company purportedly used by the defendant to perpetuate the alleged crime “is
non-existent”.
Answering questions by S. I. Ameh,
SAN, counsel to the fourth defendant, Drexel Tech Nigeria Limited, Yahaya gave
additional insight into how the recruitment of 17 March, 2014 that led to the
death of scores of Nigerian job applicants was carried out without due process.
He informed the court of the
provisions of the Public Procurement Act for procurement of services.
According to him, “While the use of
ICT cannot be tagged as a criminal activity, the method prescribed by the
Public Procurement Act for procurement of services are: the Open Competitive
Method, the Special and Restricted
Methods, under which are Selective Tendering, Direct Procurement, Emergency
Procurement and Two-Stage Tendering. Consultancy falls under all the methods”.
Abba Moro (middle) in court |
Regarding the contract (Exhibit
AAFD 13), Yahaya said, “The parties to the e-recruitment platform contract were
the Ministry of Interior and Drexel Tech Nigeria Ltd. The contractual agreement
between the Interior Ministry and Drexel was a Public-Private Partnership
project, as indicated by the Minister. Drexel was engaged to provide the
e-recruitment platform for the Government.
“The item and the amount relating
to the operational cost of N83million were not captured in the document. No sum
from the Federal Government was invested in this project. Information on a
sharing ratio of 70:30 between the Federal Government and the contractor was
not captured in the document”.
He added that there was no
supplementary document or addendum with the documents supplied by the Ministry
for the purpose of review.
Upon allusions by Ameh to the
effect that the BPP did not write to Drexel Tech Nigeria Ltd for their account
of events, Yahaya said, “We were reviewing the contract and not Drexel, the
organisation”.
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