From the various reports, Press releases and statements made by all the
actors involved in this saga, certain undisputable facts have emerged:
(1)
There was definite communication between Farouk Lawan and Femi Otedola
(both by telephone and face-to-face) in respect of the offer and
acceptance of bribe money concerning the investigation by the House
Committee probing the fuel subsidy scam. The question of who initiated
a relationship is completely irrelevant when determining the guilt or
otherwise of the giver and taker of bribe money.
(2) The sum of
$620,000 dollars out of a grand total of $3million price tag actually
exchanged hands between Otedola and Lawan. No party is disputing this
fact.
(3) Otedola involved the State Security Service (SSS) and
the scene was recorded when the money was handed over to Lawan to prove
that he was pressured to part with the money.
(4) Even though
Lawan claims he collected the money to expose Otedola, he (Lawan) did
not involve any law-enforcement agency when collecting the money.
QUESTION: So how on earth did Farouk Lawan ever hope to later convince
anyone that those dollars came from Otedola when Otedola’s name is not
written on the dollars? How did he ever hope to “expose” him?
(5)
A few hours after collecting the dollars, Farouk Lawan stood up on the
floor of the House and, instead of exposing Otedola, he was actually
shielding him by convincing his colleagues to remove Otedola’s company
name from the list of indicted companies in the Report. That was the
point that Lawan was expected to tell the world that he just collected
bribe money, and like has been done in the past, spill the money on the
floor of the House. He did not do so.
(6) It was not until the
scandal broke out in the Press that Farouk Lawan did something. He
first denied ever collecting money and said he did not go to Otedola’s
house and that if there is any such video, it must have been doctored.
(7)
Less than 24 hours later, Lawan sang a different tune. He now said he
actually went to Otedola’s house to collect money, but it was to
“expose” Otedola.
(8) The only “expose” Lawan claimed he did
was to write a hand-written note to Honourable Adams Jagaba, Chairman
House Committee on Narcotics and Financial Crimes, to purport to hand
over the bribe money to him. Honourable Jagaba has since denied that
this ever happened. QUESTION: WHY DID FAROUK LAWAN NOT APPROACH ONE
SINGLE LAW-ENFORCEMENT AGENCY WITH THE BRIBE MONEY?
(9) The
bribe money that is the all-important evidence to “nail” Otedola cannot
be produced by Farouk Lawan now despite repeated demands by the Police.
QUESTION: How come Farouk Lawan treated his all-important evidence with
so much levity that he did not make Honourable Jagaba to acknowledge
receiving the dollars in writing when he purportedly handed it over to
him?
(10) On the other hand, it has since emerged that Femi
Otedola kept all his audio and video evidence intact and has decided to
release them piecemeal to the public.
From the above sequence
of undisputed facts, it is only a hired goon, mischief maker, or a
complete fool that will not easily come to a definite conclusion in
this on-going disgraceful and shameful episode rocking the National
Assembly: Farouk Lawan collected bribe purportedly on behalf of his
Committee to doctor his report but somewhere along the line the
operation, like most robbery incidents, went terribly wrong. All the
drama playing out now cuts the picture of a destroyed, disgraced and
thoroughly embarrassed Farouk Lawan clinging on so desperately to
anything to save his finished image and political career.
I use
the phrase “National Assembly” advisedly because, even though it had
sought to distance itself from the whole episode, it is undisputable
that the bribe was solicited for and was offered to a Committee of the
National Assembly which was doing an assignment of the National
Assembly. Farouk Lawan only collected the money on behalf of the said
Committee. Whether he gave to other members is another matter
altogether.
However, the taped conversations between Otedola
and Lawan only confirm what both parties actually agree took place:
that they negotiated payment of bribe money several times by telephone.
The only point of divergence is that both claim the negotiations were
sting operations on the other. But while Otedola has evidence of his
sting, Farouk Lawan has none.
By denying his obvious voice on
those tapes, Farouk Lawan has made another u-turn: he is giving the
impression that he never spoke to Otedola on telephone whereas he had
earlier confirmed that there were several phone conversations between
them and that he has call-logs to prove this. So, question to Lawan:
during those phone conversations, what were they talking about? Was it
about girlfriends or politics?
I thought the only honourable
thing Lawan should have done is not to deny the obvious, but to say
those taped conversations were part of his plan to “play along” and
catch Otedola red-handed. So Farouk Lawan needs to now come up with his
own version of those conversations between himself and Otedola because
Otedola has provided to the public his own version.
In any
case, the endless search for dollars or the debate about voice on those
tapes are most unnecessary. The law says what has been admitted needs
no further proof. In other words, what the recovery of the dollars and
the voices on the tape seek to establish has since been established by
the confessional statement of Farouk Lawan himself; i.e. he had several
discussions with Otedola on phone over the bribe money and he actually
collected it.
I am aware that many Nigerians are not happy with
the way Femi Otedola hobnobs with all governments in power (and perhaps
gets undeserved business concessions by so doing), but in this instant
case, whether you like Femi Otedola or hate him, by reporting the
matter to the SSS (the law says the SSS has all the powers of Police
Officers too) and going ahead to record the transaction between him and
Lawan, Otedola did all that a responsible citizen under the
circumstances should do. Whether the sting was thorough or not is no
longer his business. By the way, the purpose of arresting someone
whilst collecting bribe is to establish the fact that the suspect
actually collected it. But the video has already established that fact.
Farouk
Lawan has confessed to that fact. And in any case, no Nigerian would
have believed the SSS or the Police if Farouk Lawan was arrested for
any reason a few hours to the presentation of that report. If, for
instance, Farouk had claimed he was forced at gun point to go to
Otedola’s house and then was arrested there, Nigerians would have
believed him. In addition, Farouk Lawan would not have had the
opportunity to perform the act for which the bribe was collected on the
floor of the House the next day. But as it is, the
SSS allowed him to roast in his own stew. In my view, the SSS did perfectly well in this case.
The
bare-faced denial by Farouk Lawan of his voice on those tapes, and the
denial of his complicity despite these overwhelming evidence, gives the
clear impression that we are dealing with a hardened, unrepentant crook
who is like a thief caught with his hand in the cashbox, but still
claims he was only checking the color of the money.
In Japan, such persons like Farouk Lawan would have committed what they call “hara-kiri”.
In America and Europe, he would have resigned immediately from public office in shame and begged for forgiveness.
Unfortunately, here in Nigeria and aided by dubious hired goons, he continues to deny the obvious. What a shame!
As
for the House Committee on Ethics and Privileges, their so-called
investigation of the scam is nothing but a laughable sham, a
diversionary and disgraceful enterprise with a pre-determined end, an
unconstitutional and illegal exercise and Nigerians must ignore it.
I
issue this statement out of a deep love for my country over and above
personal relationships. If we do not say things as we see them
truthfully and honestly at such times when patriots are required to
stand up and be counted because of friendships, personal or
professional benefits, then we should not complain if our country and
its critical institutions continue to collapse. In fact, after the oil
subsidy probe and before the presentation of the Report, I was with one
of the Committee members in London when Farouk Lawan called and the
phone was handed over to me. We chatted a few minutes on the phone
during which time I encouraged him to do a thorough job and thanked him
for his efforts so far. But alas! He has let everybody and himself down.
Farouk
Lawan must stop this dance of shame and save that House of whatever is
left of its credibility by resigning from office immediately and face
his criminal trial squarely. It is, indeed, himself and his hired goons
that are turning this episode into a theatre of the absurd, and not the
other way round.
Thank you.
FESTUS KEYAMO, ESQ.
He is a sinking man,trying to take others along. Honorable indeed. Shame
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