The Economic and Financial Crimes
Commission (EFCC) on Friday December 5, 2014 presented another set of witnesses
in the trial of a former Governor of Ogun State, Otunba Gbenga Daniel.
Daniel is being prosecuted on a 38-count charge of stealing public funds, bribery, fraudulent conversion of public property and false declaration of assets to the tune of N211.3million
Daniel is being prosecuted on a 38-count charge of stealing public funds, bribery, fraudulent conversion of public property and false declaration of assets to the tune of N211.3million
At the last adjourned date Thursday December
4, 2014, prosecuting counsel, Mr Rotimi Jacobs, SAN, had presented a witness, Mr AJibola kaka, who
legal representative of one Mr Adeniyi Adenuga whose land was appropriated by
the former governor.
In his testimony, Kaka explained to the
court how his client, Adenuga called him, sometime in 2004 to tell
him that he received a letter from the Bureau of Lands and Survey,
inviting him for a meeting with the Surveyor General .
The
outcome of the meeting was that, the government wanted to use his client's
land in Government Reservation Area, GRA, Sagamu for public purpose and that
the government will relocate his client to a nearby land.
"My
client later called to tell me that he was satisfied with the land re-allocated
to him, but much later, he told me that he was not given a letter of
allocation. At that instant, I advised him to fence the land and also
complained to the Bureau which he did. However, after the fence was
constructed, some people came into the land and started erecting a structure,
a twin duplex apartment.
“At that
point when my client told me of the development, I advised him to go and
put a gate but he was stopped by the same people constructing the apartment. Eventually, some people from the
press met me, requesting for an interview regarding the property and I told
them what I knew about it", he said.
Consequently,
Kaka said his client called him again, telling him that he was invited by
the Bureau regarding the interview he granted to the press and asked Kaka to
represent him in the meeting. At the meeting, Kaka said that a fresh offer of
another land was made to his client. The offer was accepted but compensation
was demanded for the fence already constructed on the initial land allocated to
Adenuga.
"Mr Akogunu and I agreed on a payment
of N2, 500,000 (Two Million, Five Hundred Thousand Naira Only) as
compensation to my client which was paid to me in cash", Kaka said.
When asked by Jacobs whether the
initial land was used for public purpose as stated by the Bureau , Kaka said he
discovered that the land was used to build a personal house for the former governor
.
The defense counsel , Professor Taiwo
Osopitan, SAN, while cross examining the witness asked him, whether he was
instructed by his client to come and give a testimony. Jacob quickly came in
and stressed that his testimony was proper and legal. Justice Olarenwaju
upheld the prosecution's argument, saying that the witness is a witness of the state. Justice Olarenwaju discharged the witness
and Mrs Bolanle Ayunuga was invited by Jacob as his second witness .
Mrs Ayunuga, former
Head, Revenue Section of the Bureau of Lands and Survey, in her testimony,
disclosed that she was in charge of the preparation of weekly and monthly
revenue report and supervision of revenue staff.
She said sometime in
2012, operatives of the EFCC came to her office, requesting for evidence
of payment in respect of Mr and Mrs G. O Daniel, Aron Nigeria
Limited, Gateway Foundation and others she could not remember.
She said after going through their
record, she could only find evidence of registration payment and
Administrative charges but the evidence of premium capital contribution and
survey were not there.
Justice Olarenwaju, after listening to all
the testimonies, adjourned proceedings to Friday December 5, 2014.
At
the resumed hearing today, Jacobs presented two more witnesses: Christopher
Olusanjo Oyebade and Meojuola Oladimeji Baderinwa, who work with the Bureau of
Land and Survey, Abeokuta
and Sagamu Zonal Office respectively.
The first witness, Oyebade, a
retired Assistant Surveyor General, was the Principal Technical Officer in
Abeokuta Zonal Office at the time the alleged offence was committed..
He explained to the court
that sometime in March 2004 the then Surveyor General sent him on
assignment to Sagamu Zonal office, where
he carried out survey on a parcel of land at Sagamu GRA as instructed.
Exhibit 13 was shown to the
witness and he identified it as the 1.6 hectares of land he was asked to survey
but denied any knowledge of the original owner of the land when asked by Jacobs.
Asked whether there was any
building on the land at the time he carried out the survey, the witness said there
was a dual perimeter fence on the property and beacons at the boundaries which
showed that a survey had already been executed on the land.
The witness also denied receiving any
payment in respect of the survey.
The second prosecution witness, Baderinwa
who was the Zonal Surveyor in the Sagamu office of the Bureau, from 2009 to 2012, while explaining what
transpired in 2012, disclosed that sometime in 2012 he was accompanied by
operatives of EFCC to Sagamu for inspection and identification of some property
in Sagamu GRA but could not remember their exact location.
He further
revealed that after they identified the land, EFCC operatives requested for
composite plan of the property. “The composite plan comprise of a number of
plots. I later subdivided the contents of the plots and revealed the plots as
they were before being merged to become one”, he told the court .
The
witness was shown the Sagamu Master Plan as well as the composite plan of the
lands for identification. They were eventually tendered in evidence by the
prosecution and marked as exhibit 57 and 58 respectively.
Mr Baderinwa further told the court that
exhibit 58 shows that Plots 1a, 1b, 1c were merged together with plot 12, NEPA
quarters and another piece of land that was supposed to be a road going by the
master plan, to become one Plot.
When asked by the prosecuting counsel if
it is normal practice in his profession to conduct a survey on a road, he
answered, NO!
He also confirmed that the content of exhibit
58 (The composite plan) distorted the master plan of Sagamu.
During
cross examination, the Defense counsel asked the witness if he knew about the
revised version of the Ogun
State master plan, to
which he answered, no.
The defense counsel then requested
the court for adjournment in order to produce the revised version of the master
plan.
Justice Olrenwaju adjourned
the case to 16th January, 4th and 5th February
2015 for continuation of trial. 
No comments:
Post a Comment