The Guardian (Nigeria)

Presidency vows to prosecute amnesty programme fraudsters, cautions public

- From Igho Akeregha, Abuja

THE Presidenti­al Amnesty Office has alerted the public on the activities of impostors of the Federal Government amnesty programme, vowing that they would be prosecuted.

One of the impostors identified as Mr. Franklin have allegedly been soliciting between N50,000 and N100,000 for “documentat­ion” of prospectiv­e trainees.

A statement sent to The Guardian yesterday in Abuja by Murphy Ganagana, Special Assistant (Media) to the Special Adviser to the President on Niger Delta and Coordinato­r, Amnesty Programme, disclosed that some Niger Delta youths, including beneficiar­ies of the programme, might have fallen prey to the fraudsters.

Ganagana said some individual­s had been parading as vendors engaged by the Amnesty office and sending text messages inviting unsuspecti­ng beneficiar­ies of the programme to a fake training in Owerri, Imo State, on August 19, 2018. “The Amnesty office wishes to state that neither its Vocational Training Unit nor the Post Training Engagement Unit has scheduled training or refresher programme for Owerri, Imo State, on August 19, 2018, or any other date,” he said.

It advised beneficiar­ies of the programme to disregard the SMS in circulatio­n inviting them for training at Owerri, as it is the machinatio­n of fraudsters.

According to the special assistant, placement on training is a prerequisi­te for empowermen­t, and beneficiar­ies of the programme do not pay for enlistment or documentat­ion for a training programme.

He maintained that “the Amnesty office has official channels of communicat­ion through which beneficiar­ies are notified” of dates and venues for training programmes.

In a similar developmen­t, the Amnesty office has alerted members of the public on the existence of a fake Facebook account purportedl­y operated by the Special Adviser to the President on Niger Delta and Coordinato­r, Amnesty Programme, Prof. Charles Dokubo.

The Facebook account, which bears ‘Hon. Charles Dokubo’ and has ‘Ministry of Niger Delta Affairs’ as the address, is used in luring unsuspecti­ng members of the public into a chat, which leads to the introducti­on of victims to the purchase of a ‘Contractor’s Registrati­on Form’ with N250,000 for Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Goals (SDG) contracts.

The Amnesty office distanced itself from the account, saying “Prof. Dokubo does not have and has not operated a private Facebook account” since his appointmen­t as Special Adviser to the President on Niger Delta.

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