OPERATIVES
from the London Metropolitan Police are to give evidence when the trial
of the Chairman, Bi-Courtney Highway Services, Dr. Wale Babalakin,
finally begins at a Lagos High Court, Ikeja.
A
senior lawyer privy to the goings-on in the case told our correspondent
on Sunday that the Met police investigated the involvement of Babalakin
and others in the alleged laundering of N4.7bn on behalf of the
convicted former governor of the state, James Ibori.
“The
United Kingdom metropolitan police investigated the case. They just
finished their investigation. That is why they are going to give
evidence in the case, because it is their case,” the source, who is a
Senior Advocate of Nigeria, said.
He
added that the bulk of the evidence the Economic and Financial Crimes
Commission would use against Babalakin would be supplied by the Met.
police
The EFCC had charged Babalakin along with Alex Okon with 27 counts of helping Ibori to siphon the sum in 2006.
The
arraignment, initially scheduled for November 29, 2012, could not hold
due to Babalakin’s absence in court. He was said to be on admission at
the Lagos University Teaching Hospital.
The
source told our correspondent that the money looted by Ibori was
discovered to be part of Delta State fund used by the former governor to
buy a jet in Canada.
He said the EFCC was right to charge Babalakin in a court within the country which is where the money originated from.
“The
issue of charging him in Nigeria when it was the UK police that
investigated the matter cannot raise any jurisdictional issue because
the money originated from here,” he said.
The EFCC, in the charge sheet, claimed that Babalakin used different companies as conduits to carry out the alleged shady deal.
The
companies scheduled to be arraigned with Babalakin and Okon are
Stabilini Visioni Ltd., Bi-Courtney Ltd., and Renix Nigeria Ltd.
The
EFCC alleged that the accused had fraudulently assisted Ibori to
transfer various sums to Erin Aviation account in Mauritius for the
purchase of a Challenger Jet.
The anti-graft agency said the transactions took place between May and September 2006.
EFCC
counsel, Mr Rotimi Jacobs (SAN), had expressed shock at the excuse
given by Babalakin’s counsel, Mr. Ebun Sofunde (SAN), for his client’s
absence in court on the scheduled date for the arraignment.
Jacobs had alleged that Babalakin wanted to frustrate his arraignment.
He
had told the court that he did not believe the medical report tendered
by Sofunde because it was issued on November 26, 2012, the same day
Babalakin met with the EFCC in Abuja.
He
said, “It took the EFCC close to a week to get him. He was served with
all the processes and released because he took an undertaking that he
would appear in court for his arraignment.
“We
believe if there is a medical issue that he should have contacted us a
day earlier (November 28) rather than to confront us with this
application this (November 29) morning.
“We
are disappointed by the tactics of the first defendant (Babalakin) but
Your Lordship can bend backwards and allow us to come back next week.”
Justice
Onigbanjo had re-scheduled the arraignment for December 13, the same
day a Federal High Court, Lagos, fixed for the hearing of a suit in
which Babalakin is seeking to stop his arraignment.
Punch Nigeria
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