Energy
$3.2bn cash stolen from Brass gas project
The police have begun investigations into the depletion of a $3.7bn account of the Brass/Liquefied Natural Gas Company. The Brass/Liquefied Natural Gas Account Number 2011104669, which is domiciled in the First Bank of Nigeria, has been depleted to $469.4m. It was learnt that the police had frozen the balance through a court order while investigations continued into why the money was not remitted to the Treasury Single Account in the Central Bank of Nigeria.
The probe, being handled by the Special Investigation Panel, headed by Ali Ahmodu, a retired Assistant Inspector-General of Police, uncovered that the balance in the account was not remitted to the TSA in violation of an order by the Federal Government, directing all Ministries, Departments and Agencies to close all deposit accounts in commercial banks and remit same to the CBN.
The SIP was established by the Inspector-General of Police, Ibrahim Idris, to investigate unresolved high-profile cases in the country.
A highly-placed source in the police informed our correspondent on Thursday that the SIP had interrogated some FBN and CBN officials over the flagrant disregard for the government directive on TSA.
The source stated that the CBN was indicted by the panel for keeping sealed lips over the violation of the TSA directive by the commercial bank.
ALSO SEE: EFCC on trail of ex-Gov. Shema over N60 bn mismanaged
He added, “It is a US dollar account domiciled in the First Bank of Nigeria and it was discovered to have a total credit remittance of $3.7bn out of which $3.2bn was withdrawn between August 1, 2008, and August 29, 2016.
“The current balance of $469,427,562.85 has been frozen on the order of the court. Officials of the bank and the CBN have been invited to explain why the balance sum was not transferred to the TSA account and why the apex bank kept sealed lips on such action for over one year. We are also investigating the withdrawal.”
The FBN Corporate Affairs Manager, Babatunde Lasaki, could not be reached for comment as calls to his phone failed to connect.
He had yet to respond to an SMS as of the time of filing this report.
The CBN had, on August 23, sanctioned nine deposit money banks for hiding over $2.274bn belonging to the NNPC from the TSA.
The errant banks were banned from the foreign exchange market until they remitted all the funds to the TSA.
The offending banks were mandated to move the money to the TSA before they would be considered from further participation in forex trading.
The banks were readmitted into the foreign exchange market on August
-
Politics1 week agoPRP presidential primary heads to court as aspirant challenges Donald Duke’s nomination
-
Politics1 week agoWike-backed Lagos PDP extends olive branch to Bode George ahead of 2027 realignment
-
Latest5 days agoAlleged xenophobic attack claims life of Malawian street vendor in South Africa
-
Football2 days agoAfrica breaks World Cup record with seven teams in knockout stage
-
Aviation6 days agoHeading through the storm: Multiple taxes, complex leasing drag on Nigerian carriers
-
Latest7 days agoTroops close in on forest hideout as search continues for abducted Oyo schoolchildren
-
Energy1 week agoGlobal oil prices fall after U.S.–Iran talks
-
Comments and Issues4 days agoNorway’s Rowing Celebration Captures The Spirit Of The World Cup

