ABUJA — The House of Representatives has dismissed the broadcast of
purported audio records of how Mr Farouk Lawan allegedly collected
$620,000 bribe from Mr Femi Otedola, as part of attempts to distract the
lower chamber of the National Assembly from its commitment to ensure
that the report of its ad-hoc committe on petroleum subsidy is
implemented.
This assertion was made by the Chairman of the House Committee on
Media, Zakari Mohammed, while briefing newsmen on the activities of the
House during the week.
On what transpired between Otedola and members of the House Committee
on Ethics and Privileges, Tuesday, Mohammed said the House had no
problem with the oil mogul.
Said he: ”We are not trying Otedola, he was only invited as a witness in a case of alleged misconduct against our colleague.”
Throwing light on why the committee decided to hold its investigative
hearing on the bribe saga in camera, Mohammed said it wasn’t only the
Houses’s Committee that observed such rules, citing the orderly room
trial and court martial normally undergone by policemen and military
personnel involved in misconduct as examples.
Said he: ”Even the Ethics Committee of the Nigeria Bar Association,
NBA, sits in camera when hearing cases of misconduct involving lawyers,”
and urged relevant law enforcement agencies to ensure that the report
of the ad-hoc committee was fully implemented, acknowledging that it had
been partly implemented.
He denied that the House was trying to cover up the case involving Lawan, adding that “he was on his own.”
He explained why Zenon Petroleum and Gas Ltd.owned by Otedola had to
be relisted among companies indicted by the House, adding that it was
because of the circumstances surrounding its initial delisting.
He further stated that what was happening was that the House was
paying the price for some of the decisions it took on behalf of the
Nigerian people
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