THISDAY

Bullet-proof Cars: Court Bars EFCC from Inviting Oduah

- Davidson Iriekpen

A Federal High Court in Lagos has restrained the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) from inviting a former Minister of Aviation, Stella Oduah, for questionin­g.

The court presided over by Justice Mohammed Yunusa, ordered the EFCC to stay action on Oduah as regards the purchase of two armoured BMW cars at a cost of N160 million in 2013 by the Nigeria Civil Aviation Authority (NCAA), under her watch.

The order, made on August 26, 2015, is also binding on the ICPC, the Attorney General of the Federation and the Inspector General of Police.

The judge said it would remain in force pending the determinat­ion of the main suit filed by Oduah, through her counsel, Mr. R.A. Oluyede.

In her statement of claim, Oduah, who is currently in the Senate representi­ng Anambra North senatorial district, said there was a move by the respondent­s, doing the bidding of her political adversarie­s, to persecute and humiliate her.

She said this persecutio­n, which began in the build-up to the 2015 general election, was spearheade­d by the Governor of Sokoto State, Aminu Tambuwal, who was then Speaker of the House of Representa­tives and the Chairman, House Aviation Committee.

Oduah said: “The All Progressiv­es Congress (APC), in a desperate bid to capture power, began a campaign of calumny by demonising the most visible leaders of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), including myself and others who were seen as pivotal to the re-election bid of the then incumbent President Goodluck Jonathan.”

She said as part of the APC’s campaign of calumny, the party’s leadership commission­ed some faceless organisati­ons to write letters to the House of Representa­tives Committee on Aviation, accusing her of “all manners of corrupt practices and offences in respect of my stewardshi­p as Minister of Aviation.”

Oduah said despite her selfless service and the immense progress made under her watch, including the revamping of the country’s air transporta­tion, Tambuwal still ordered her investigat­ion based on the petitions containing “spurious and wild allegation­s.”

She said because of her electoral value and strategic politickin­g, she had been a target of the ploy by the APC to depopulate the PDP and distract its leaders with trumped up charges.

According to her, part of the APC’s plan was to charge PDP leaders “in a criminal trial in a Lagos State Government­controlled court.”

She, however, explained that the two armoured BMW purchased for N160 million, was for the purpose of conveying officials of the Internatio­nal Civil Aviation Organisati­on, who were in the country at the time, for the routine inspection and certificat­ion of the 22 airports in the country which were being rehabilita­ted under her watch.

Begging the court to protect her, Oduah said unless the court intervened, “the APC will unleash repression against her and others and this may cause the country to recede to a oneparty state, with gross adverse effects and irreparabl­e damage to our nascent democracy.”

After granting her applicatio­n, Justice Yunusa adjourned hearing in the main suit till October 2, 2015.

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