N3.7bn UK house put Diezani in trouble
12:06
THERE were indications on Monday on how a
 former Minister of Petroleum Resources, Mrs. Diezani Alison-Madueke and
 a former Managing Director of a parastatal under the NNPC got 
themselves into trouble with the police in the United Kingdom.
We learnt that the 
purchase of houses each in London by the former minister and the sacked 
NNPC top shot had sent the police investigators after them since 2013.
Alison-Madueke and the ex-MD had bought a
 house each in London through a mortgage but the two were said to have 
attracted suspicion when they offered to pay huge sum to clear the 
mortgage on the properties.
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A
 source said the ex-minister’s house cost £12.5m. The source was however
 silent on the cost of the house bought by the former MD of the 
subsidiary of the NNPC.
It was learnt that the UK’s National 
Crimes Agency had dispatched a team to Abuja for an investigation into 
the incomes of the affected public officers because of the huge amount 
of money that was being paid steadily to defray the amount on the 
mortgage.
The source explained that the police 
suspected that the mortgaged London properties might have been serviced 
with laundered money from the Government of Nigeria.
The source said, “This particular 
investigation did not originate from Nigeria. I can tell you that this 
is different from the investigation being conducted by the Economic and 
Financial Crimes Commission into the financial operations of the NNPC 
under Alison-Madueke.
“This is a strictly UK investigation and
 it has to do with the procurement of a property in the UK for £12.5m 
through a mortgage arrangement in London.
“The UK authorities became suspicious 
when they realised that the agreed monthly amount for the mortgage was 
too high for the income of a public official without other sources of 
income.
“You know the (UK) people; they kept 
quiet when the whole arrangement was going on in 2013. They allowed the 
funds to go into their economy before they moved in against them with 
the intent to seize the properties.
“She was not the only person that bought
 the properties. The other guy, a close ally from the NNPC also bought a
 house in London. These are the issues the UK police are investigating.”
The investigation, which commenced in 
2013 climaxed Friday last week with the arrest of Alison-Madueke and 
four others by the UK police for alleged fraud.
The EFCC raided the residence of the ex-minister at Asokoro same day she was arrested in the UK.
Although the raid did not yield any huge
 financial recovery contrary to media reports, the operatives from the 
Subsidy Unit of the EFCC carted away several documents from the 
residence.
The EFCC operatives, who insisted that 
only N1.2m was recovered from the Asokoro residence of the minister, 
said that the files moved away from her house were being analysed.
When contacted, the spokesperson for the EFCC, Mr. Wilson Uwujaren, on Monday declined to comment on the Alison-Madueke saga.
Uwujaren said he did not know anything about the ex-minister’s case.
Meanwhile, the British National Crime 
Agency on Monday obtained court permission to temporarily seize £27,000 
(N8.078m) from a former petroleum resources minister, Diezani 
Alison-Madueke, Reuters reports.
The ex-President Goodluck Jonathan’s oil
 minister between 2010 and 2015 and her cohorts were arrested in London 
last Friday and charged with money laundring offences.
Reuters quoted an administrative officer
 at the Westminster Magistrates’ Court as saying on Monday that the NCA 
had applied to the court for an order to seize various sums of money in 
relation to Alison-Madueke and two other women for up to six months.
The administrative officer did not provide any information on the link between the three women.
The NCA had on Friday issued a short 
statement saying its International Corruption Unit had arrested five 
people in London as part of an inquiry into suspected bribery and money 
laundering offences.
The NCA did not name those arrested but 
said all five had been released on conditional police bail, pending 
further investigations in Britain and overseas. It said the 
investigation had started in 2013.
But the Federal Government through 
presidential spokesman, Garba Shehu, had confirmed late on Sunday the 
arrest of the former minister and that “the government of Nigeria is 
collaborating with the UK authority in the investigations and her 
trial.”




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