The
Economic and Financial Crimes Commission has been grilling a former Senior
Special Assistant to ex-President Goodluck Jonathan on Public Affairs, Dr.
Doyin Okupe, for the last one week for allegedly receiving N85m from embattled
former National Security Adviser, Col. Sambo Dasuki (retd.)
The
EFCC, however, did not detain him but afforded him the privilege of coming from
home due to a heart condition Okupe reportedly suffers.
Apart
from allegedly receiving money from Dasuki, the former presidential aide is
also accused of receiving dubious contracts to the tune of N76m from a local
council in Niger State
According
to investigators at the anti-graft agency, Okupe was first invited on June 22,
2016 over fresh allegations bordering on illicit payments received from the
account of the Office of the National Security Adviser, which is domiciled at
the Central Bank of Nigeria.
A
source at the EFCC said, “Okupe was quizzed over N50m which he collected in
cash from the former NSA, without record or accountability. Another company
that is linked to Okupe, Abraham Telecoms Limited, allegedly received N35.5m
from the NSA through the CBN.
“We
also got evidence that a company owned by him, Romic Soil Fix International
Limited, received N63m from Chanchaga Local Government council of Niger State
and another N13.5m from the same council, for reasons that are not stated.
“We
were told that the payments from Chanchaga Local Government to Romic were made
on November 21, 2014, during the Peoples Democratic Party’s primary election
and February 13, 2015, just before the general elections.
“He
has not been able to explain the receipts and has been asked to be reporting at
intervals. The reason he is not detained is because he claimed to have a heart
condition and presented a medical report to back up the claim.”
It
will be recalled that Okupe had openly confessed on his official Twitter handle
on May 7 that he received money from Dasuki on several occasions for the
running of his office.
Okupe,
who served under Jonathan from 2012 to 2015, however, said he had nothing to do
with the arms scam which reportedly cost the country over $15bn in stolen
funds.
Okupe
said, “I was not paid arms deal money. The NSA paid for the running of my office
monthly from August 2012. Dasukigate was in 2014. I did not take part in the
campaign.”
It
had been reported in January that Okupe got money from Dasuki in three shady
cyber security contracts.
One
of the contracts had instructions to hunt down unfriendly media websites with
Distributed Denial of Service attacks.
It
was believed to be a project conceived to shut down online media platforms
perceived as friendly towards Muhammadu Buhari, the then presidential candidate
of the All Progressives Congress ahead of the 2015 election.
The
other contract was to intercept all optic fibre cables landing in Nigeria. The
third was a passive mass and target GSM interception that had the ability to
decrypt ciphers and operate undetected.
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Politics