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Akinwande Soji-Ojo
A Lagos-based law firm, Lawflex, has asked the Code of Conduct Bureau (CCB) to prosecute the presidential candidate of the Labour Party, Mr Peter Obi, for failing to declare the assets he stashed in tax havens while serving as Anambra State governor.
In a letter dated March 23, and signed by Olukoya Ogungbeje, the firm said the purpose of the letter is to bring to the CCB’s notice an investigation on the issue done by PREMIUM TIMES.
PREMIUM TIMES had in its 2021 investigation provided details of Obi’s investments in some notorious tax havens, which he did not disclose in his mandatory CCB filings before and after leaving office as governor of Anambra State.
The businesses were set up and operated overseas, including in notorious tax and secrecy havens in ways that breach Nigerian laws.
According to Lawflex, Obi flouted the code of conduct for Nigerian public officials and urged the CCB to “act appropriately by arraigning the former governor before the “Code of Conduct Tribunal for contravention of the Code of Conduct for Nigerian Public Officers as spelt out in the Fifth Schedule to the Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria 1999, (As Amended).”
Obi failed to declare his offshore holdings and their associated assets. As a governor, he also continued to operate and maintain foreign accounts including with Lloyds in the United Kingdom.
The former governor admitted that he did not declare these companies and the funds and properties they hold in his asset declaration filings with the Code of Conduct Bureau, the Nigerian government agency that deals with the issues of corruption, conflict of interest, and abuse of office by public servants.
He said he was unaware that the law expected him to declare assets or companies he jointly owns with his family members or anyone else.
After becoming governor, Obi continued to be a director of Next International (UK) Limited for 14 months.
However, Ogungbeje urged the CCB to immediately investigate the violation and invite Obi for questioning.
The lawyer warned that if the CCB refuses to take constitutional action within 30 days, his firm would seek a “judicial review by way of an Order of Mandamus in a court of competent jurisdiction in a bid to compel performance of public duty.”