However,
a source at the commission said Soludo was granted administrative bail and was
allowed to go home, having been grilled for several hours by the commission’s
team of investigators.
The
source said his international and diplomatic passports were seized after he had
produced two sureties at the level of Permanent Secretaries or Directors.
The
source added: “But that is not the end because he is also expected back for
further interrogation.
“I
don’t have much details on the other 12 ex-staff of CBN and the Nigerian
Security Printing and Minting Company who were linked with the scam; it is
not as if the suspects are here.
“But
a number of them have been questioned over time and they are both from NSPMC
and CBN, it is not as if they are in our station at the moment.”
But
a close aide of Soludo denied that his passports were seized or that he was
granted any administrative bail, or that he provided any sureties.
A
statement by his media office Friday said the former CBN Governor voluntarily
went to the EFCC office to honour the commission’s invitation.
The
statement signed by Bonaventure Melah said Soludo was neither arrested nor
escorted to EFCC office by operatives of the commission as was reported.
“We
want to put it on record clearly that the media reports that Professor Chukwuma
Soludo was arrested by the operatives of the EFCC in Abuja is totally false or
to say the least written in error.
“The
fact of the matter is that the EFCC wrote a letter to Prof. Soludo inviting him
to their Abuja office on the 10th of January 2013. EFCC’s invitation letter to
Prof. Soludo was dated 20th December 2012.
“Soludo
was abroad attending to several international engagements when the letter was
sent to his aides. As a law-abiding citizen of the country, Soludo returned to
Nigeria in the New Year and honoured EFCC invitation on January 10th as
requested.
“He
voluntarily went from his home to EFCC office on Thursday. He was neither
arrested nor escorted by any operative of the Commission.
“The
EFCC letter of invitation to Soludo states that: ‘This Commission is
investigating a case in which the need to obtain certain clarifications from
you has become imperative.’
“It
was a two-paragraph letter which also indicated date and time for the meeting
between Prof. Soludo and officials of the Commission,” the statement added.
The
Guardian yesterday learnt that Soludo alongside others were quizzed by the
anti-graft agency on the processes adopted in handling the contract and not on
any alleged bribery.
A
top official of the anti-graft agency, who pleaded anonymity, disclosed that
the issues of alleged contract bribery did not come up during the
interrogations, rather the agency was looking at the processes adopted in awarding
the contract.
According
to the official, Soludo made some clarifications on the issue on Thursday and
was allowed to go home.
On
how contract for currency adoption or printing is being awarded, a top official
of the apex bank said that the first step is for the President to give
approval, after which CBN gives the job to the Nigerian Minting and Printing
Company or any other printing company. The minting and printing company will
now source for polymer from Securency.
“CBN
does not award contract for such job nor has any direct contractual arrangement
with Securency. So there should be no link between CBN and the Australian
polymer company’, the official said.
The
decision to look into the polymer deal was triggered by a petition by Human and
Environmental Development Agenda, headed by Olanrewaju Suraju, demanding the
investigation and possible prosecution of those involved in the alleged
contract scam.
Sources
also indicated that other top management staff of the CBN who had worked during
Soludo’s tenure were also picked and are currently being held alongside other
ex-staff of the Nigerian Security Printing and Minting Company.
However,
all efforts to get the identity of other detained suspects proved abortive, as
no one was willing to volunteer information. Sources also stated that the
commission had been conducting discreet investigations on the contract scam
before Soludo’s eventual invitation, adding that as a prelude, several
officials of the NSMPC and the CBN had been quizzed.
Ahead
of the 2010 Anambra governorship election in which Soludo contested as the
governorship candidate of the PDP after a protracted legal battle that
terminated at the apex court three day to the election, the issue of the
alleged polymer note bribery allegation was levelled against Soludo by some of
his political opponents. This followed a report by an Australian newspaper that
there was a global investigation on Securency and its agents all over the world
which revealed that the agents must have bribed public officials of countries
that adopted polymer.
In
an exclusive interview with The Guardian, Soludo said: “CBN under my leadership
never awarded any contract to Securency. I was not aware and did not know of
anybody who may have been given money for anything. I would be surprised if any
such thing happened.”
Soludo
emerged the PDP candidate for the election amidst opposition from some
aspirants, but the Presidency, under the late President Umaru Musa Yar’Adua,
backed his candidature.
Due
to his ill-health, Yar’Adua left the country and president Jonathan took over
as acting president and supervised the election where Soludo lost to Governor
Peter Obi.
Source:
Guardian
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