The suggestion to strip both the former directors of
their honours was part of the recommendations made in the Adhoc committee
report on the investigation.The report was submitted by the Adhoc committee
chairman, Tukur El-Sudi.
Ibru had been awarded national honours as Member of the
Federal Republic (MFR) and Officer of the Federal Republic (OFR), while
Akingbola was conferred with an OFR for services to banking and the country.
Both former bank directors where sacked by Nigeria
apex financial institution, Central Bank
of Nigeria (CBN) in 2009 for fund misappropriation in their banks after a joint
audit with the Nigeria Deposit Insurance Corporation (NDIC). The audit
conducted discovered that both managers along with six other Bank Directors had
impaired their banks’ capital.
Of the accused bank managers, only Ibru and
Akingbola were given national honors.
While Ibru has been convicted for her crime after
pleading guilty to the financial crime, Akingbola’s case is still in court.
According to This Day, the committee advised that all former bank executives, who
are recipients of national honours and are currently being prosecuted for
crimes and unethical practices, which led to the collapse of their banks, be
stripped of the honours.
Meanwhile, as part of the report submitted, the
committee asserted that N8 billion was misplaced during the
recapitalisation of Union Bank Plc through a public offer. It concluded that
investors’ funds were fraudulently diverted after the offer. The group
recommended that past board and management of the bank, the CEO of the issuing
house to the offer, the present members of the board and management including
the managing director of the bank, "be investigated by the Economic and
Financial Crimes Commission with a view to establishing the facts and
recovering the missing funds."
The group also posits in its report that the nationalisation
of three banks and their subsequent change of names to Mainstreet Bank Limited,
Keystone Bank Limited and Enterprise Bank Limited, was in violation of the
AMCON Act, NDIC Act and Section 44 of the 1999 Constitution.
“The process of transfer (of ownership) was fraught with
potential forgery, unethical practices, abuse of office and various
unacceptable bad corporate governance precedents.”
The committee recommended that the Economic and Financial
Crimes Commission (EFCC) should investigate the Managing Director of NDIC, Mr.
Umaru Ibrahim; Managing Director of AMCON, Mr. Mustafa Chike-Obi; as well as
the Governor of the CBN, Mallam Sanusi Lamido Sanusi, to establish their
complicity in the deal while the transaction is reviewed.
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