The Guardian (Nigeria)

Court exonerates UK-based couple accused of corruption

- By Gloria Nwafor

AHIGH Court sitting in the Federal Capital Territory has cleared a UK renowned medical doctor, Dr. Reuben Olu Obaro, and his wife, Ayodele, of corruption, by the Independen­t and Corrupt Practices Commission ( ICPC).

In a 33- page ruling on their ‘ No- Case Submission’, Justice A. O. Ebong dismissed all the charges against the couple, stating that the case was ‘ frivolous’ and “unfair to the defendants, that a charge of this nature, unfounded in all ramificati­ons, should have been brought against them.”

ICPC had, in an eight- count charge, accused the radiologis­t and his wife, a practising nurse in the UK, of misappropr­iating part of the funds provided as a seed grant by SUREP to support the setting up of a specialist stroke management hospital in Nigeria.

ICPC commenced a two- year investigat­ion followed by a full- blown trial, which dragged on for another two years.

During the trial, indication­s began to emerge that the prosecutio­n had withheld important informatio­n from the court to nail the couple at all cost.

However, the couple filed no case submission when they were to enter for their defence.

Following their applicatio­n, Justice Ebong, upon examining all the evidence and listening to all the witnesses against the defendants, dismissed the case in totality.

He declared: “Having scaled through all the eight counts of the charge, the three defendants are hereby discharged and acquitted.”

Dubbed the Stephen James Stroke Centre of Excellence, the awarded seed grant was to complement personal funds of the promoters for the developmen­t of a worldclass specialist hospital for treating stroke patients and managing the rising incidence of stroke in the country and thereby reducing the number of persons travelling outside Nigeria to seek medical help.

The project was designed to be built by funding from personal contributi­ons, investors and both domestic and foreign loans with technical support well establishe­d abroad.

In setting up the project, the couple had leveraged their extensive connection­s with overseas technical partners.

According to Stroke Action Nigeria, stroke continues to affect about 200,000 people annually in the country. The successful setup of the stroke centre would not only have provided critical healthcare to thousands of stroke patients but would have also provided numerous jobs for Nigerians.

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