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A Federal High Court sitting in Abuja has convicted a former Permanent Secretary at the Ministry of Interior, Anastasia Daniel-Nwobia, on charges of fraud arising from the controversial 2014 Nigeria Immigration Service recruitment but deferred her sentencing till April 17, 2022.

The former Permanent Secretary was prosecuted by the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) alongside the former Minister of Interior, Senator Abba Morro, a Deputy Director in the ministry, Femi O Alayebami, one Mahmood Ahmadu (at large), and Drexel Tech Nigeria Ltd.

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They were initially arraigned on 11 count charge bordering on procurement fraud and money laundering for allegedly defrauding applicants for employment in Nigerian Immigration Service (NIS) to the tune of N675,675,000 (six hundred and seventy-five million, six hundred and seventy-five thousand Naira).

The amount represents N1, 000 obtained from each applicant through e-payment for the online recruitment exercise on March 15, 2014, an ill-fated exercise that led to the death of more than 15 applicants.

In the course of trial, the counts were reduced to 4 (counts 2, 4, 5 and 11) after the court quashed seven counts (counts 1, 3, 6, 7, 8, 9 and 10) following a no case submission by the defendants.

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However, the presiding judge, Justice Nnamdi Dimgba, while delivering judgment on Thursday, convicted Daniel–Nwobia on count 4 and discharged Morro and Alayebami on all remaining four counts.

The court in convicting Daniel- Nwobia, held that as the accounting officer of the ministry, it was her responsibility to ensure compliance with the Public Procurement Act and, having found that there was no approval from the Bureau of Public Procurement (BPP) before inviting the four companies, found her guilty.

While the court in exonerating Morro, held that the EFCC failed to prove how the he abused his position as minister as he was neither a member of the tenders board nor a member of the committee that recommended the setting up of e-recruitment portal for the exercise.

Meanwhile, the EFCC has vowed to appeal the ruling on Senator Morro.

The anti-graft agency, in a statement by its spokesman, Wilson Uwujaren, averred that the trial court erred in discharging the former minister and his co-defendant.

The Star

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