Two oil marketers and an oil marketing
firm were on Tuesday brought before a Lagos State High Court in Ikeja
over alleged N4.5bn fuel subsidy fraud.
The accused persons, who were freshly
arraigned on an amended 49-count of fuel subsidy fraud, include Mamman
Ali, son of a former National Chairman of the Peoples Democratic Party,
Ahmadu Ali.
Ali was charged by the Economic and
Financial Crimes Commission, alongside his two alleged accomplices:
Christian Taylor and Nasaman Oil Services Limited, an oil marketing
firm.
The three were dragged before Justice
Adeniyi Onigbanjo by the EFCC, which alleged that they fraudulently
obtained N4.5bn as fuel subsidy claim from the Federal Government on a
purported importation of 30.5 million litres of Premium Motor Spirit.
The re-arraignment of Ali and the two
others on Tuesday followed the running away of one Oluwaseun Ogunbambo,
with whom they were first arraigned by the anti-graft commission on July
26, 2012.
Though in 2012 the four accused persons
were charged with nine counts bordering on the offence, the amended
charge brought to court on Tuesday, however, contained 49 counts.
The counts bordered on conspiracy, obtaining money by false pretences, forgery and use of false documents.
The Tuesday’s proceedings commenced with
the EFCC’s prosecutor, Seidu Atteh, informing the court of the amended
charges and seeking the permission of the court to take the plea of the
three accused persons.
“With the kind permission of My Lord, we apply that the amended charge be read to the accused persons,” Atteh asked.
Onigbanjo subsequently granted the
prayer. But upon reading the charges to them, all the accused persons
pleaded not guilty to all the counts.
Atteh told the court that having freshly arraigned the accused, the anti-graft commission was ready to open its trial.
The prosecution, in the new charge,
alleged that the accused persons committed the subsidy fraud between
January 2011 and April 2012.
According to the anti-graft agency, Ali
and the others allegedly forged a bill of lading and other documents to
facilitate the fraud.
The prosecutor, Atteh, told the court
that the accused, by their alleged fraudulent act, violated section 1(3)
of the Advance Fee Fraud and Other Fraud Related Offences Act of 2006.
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