A move has been initiated by the
Department of State Security Service (DSS) to demolish Amigo Supermarket in Abuja
following alleged discovery of boxes with arms in the complex.
The outfit is owned by some Lebanese who
were recently linked with terrorism activities including providing cells for
Hezbollah terror group in Kano.
An online organisation claimed
that the SSS had requested the approval of President Goodluck Jonathan to
demolish the supermarket. It added that the president had received the request
by security agents but declined to grant it, more than a week after
investigators sealed off the supermarket.
Last week, the media was awash with
reports of the discovery of “boxes” containing arms during minor excavation
works within Amigo.
According to Premium Times, SSS sources
said that the president had refused to communicate his decision on the matter
to the agency, more than three days after, as it was the case with reports sent
by the department. The development, it was learnt, had raised fears that the
president might veto the proposal and stall further action on the matter.
While the department recommended, in the
report sent on Monday to the president, that the sprawling mall, estimated at
over N5 billion be bulldozed and the area thoroughly searched for more arms, it
suggested that the land on which Abuja’s biggest amusement park, Wonderland,
also owned by the Lebanese, was built be revoked immediately by the Federal
Capital Territory Administration (FCTA).
The property hosting the park is said to
be owned by the FCTA and was only leased to the group for 10 years, sources
said.
“We have sent in our report, but
we can’t proceed without an approval by the president on such a matter of
national security,” a senior official of the SSS involved in the investigations
said.
SSS spokesperson Marilyn Ogar did not
respond to phone calls seeking to get the agency’s official reaction and next
line of action.
The president’s office did not also
respond to request for response to this story. Emailed request for comments to
presidential spokesperson Reuben Abati on why the president has not decided was
unanswered; his mobile telephone number was not available as at the time of
this report, the online outfit said.
Officials well briefed about Amigo
/Wonderland investigations say the SSS’ recommendation that the supermarket be
pulled down was based on three reasons: the security agency believes the place
was used for stockpiling weapons. Also, investigators said they have evidence
that proceeds of sales from the multi-billion enterprise had been used in
funding terrorism; and the SSS expressed concern that a new administration
after Jonathan’s might reallocate the property to the Lebanese group.
The last scenario is reflected upon the
well-known case of the Indian business group, Vaswani brothers, who were
deported by the Obasanjo administration formoney laundering but were ushered back into
the country at the advent of a successor administration of Umaru Yar’Adua in
2007.
The Jonathan administration has already
faced criticisms for its response to what investigators say is a clear
terrorism case, after the authorities took more than 24 hours since the
discovery of weapons in Kano last week before shutting down property linked to
the suspects, including Amigo and Wonderland, both in the heart of the Nigerian
capital. The Abuja property were sealed off on Friday night while the Nigerian
military had revealed the discovered weapons in a Kano property on Thursday
evening.
Meanwhile, counsel to the arrested
suspects, Bamidele Aturu, has questioned the rationale behind the move to
demolish the Amigo structure.
Aturu threatened legal action against
the federal government if those arrested were not charged to court on Wednesday
as required by law. “What law allows the demolition? Nobody supports terrorism,
but what we are asking is that they follow the laws of the land,” he told
Premium Times on phone.
Mr Aturu said he had not been
allowed to speak to his detained clients (the three Lebanese arrested)
including a co-owner of the two Abuja companies, Mustapha Fawaz, since their
incarceration.
Source: Leadership
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