THISDAY

Nwaoboshi Challenges Court Order on Assets Freezing

- Alex Enumah

Embattled Senator representi­ng Delta North senatorial district in the National Assembly, Peter Nwaoboshi, has challenged the orders of the Abuja Division of the Federal High Court, which frozen his assets, including funds in four banks.

The court had on July 2, 2019, while delivering ruling on an ex-parte applicatio­n brought by the Special Presidenti­al Investigat­ion Panel for the Recovery of Public Property (SPIP), ordered for the interim forfeiture of Nwaoboshi’s assets, which included accounts in Zenith, Access, UBA and Sterling banks.

But the senator, in a motion on notice filed on July 11, 2019, asked the court to vacate the said order on the grounds that the court was misled by the SPIP in obtaining the order.

Nwaoboshi further submitted that the court lacked the necessary jurisdicti­on to entertain and grant the exparte order in the first place following an earlier decision of the court, which held that the government agency that had requested for the said order, lacked prosecutor­ial powers.

“The suit said to have been filed in the name of the Federal Republic of Nigeria and purportedl­y by the AttorneyGe­neral of the Federation as well as the ex-parte interim forfeiture and restrainin­g orders sought and obtained therein, was filed and obtained by the SPIP in the absence of any lawful authority.

“By the decision in Tumsah v. FRN (2018) 17 NWLR (Pt. 1648) 238, the SPIP lacks the competence to institute this suit and to seek and obtain the said ex-parte interim forfeiture and restrainin­g orders, and this honourable court is thereby stripped of the jurisdicti­on to entertain the suit and/or grant the said ex-parte orders.

“The interim forfeiture and restrainin­g orders were sought and obtained upon deliberate suppressio­n and/ or misreprese­ntation of facts in utmost bad faith.

“The institutio­n of this suit and the filing of the said motion ex-parte for interim forfeiture and restrainin­g orders constitute a grievous abuse of the judicial process,” the senator’s lawyer, Chief Robert Clarke SAN, told the court.

However at the resumed hearing yesterday, lawyer to the SPIP, Oluwatosin Ojaomo, said his client was not yet served with the senator’s motion.

Another lawyer, Sylvanus Maliki, who said he represente­d an interested party, Mrs. Ngozi Veronica Aniezu, said he has also filed a motion.

While responding, the trial Judge, Justice Taiwo Taiwo, directed that the motions by Nwaoboshi and Maliki be served on the SPIP’s lawyer in court.

Clarke had told the court that his client’s motion was earlier served on the office of the Attorney General of the Federation (AGF).

Following the service of the processes on the SPIP’s lawyer in court, Justice Taiwo adjourned further hearing in the matter to August 16.

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