The Economic and Financial Crimes Commission, EFCC, on Monday, April 7, 2025, arraigned the Accountant General of Bauchi State, Sirajo Muhammad Jaja, before Justice O.A. Egwuatu of the Federal High Court, sitting in Maitama, Abuja for fraud.
Jaja was arraigned alongside a bureau de
change operator, Aliyu Abubakar, and his company, Jasfad Resources
Enterprise. Others involved in the case, who are currently at large, include a
former Secretary to the Bauchi State Government, Ibrahim Kashim, the incumbent
Secretary to the State Government, Aminu Hammayo, Saleh U. Mohammed and
Balarabe Abdullahi.
The defendants are facing a nine-count
charge, bordering on money laundering, diversion of public funds, and
criminal misappropriation of funds to the tune
of N8,380,626,430.95 (Eight Billion, Three Hundred and Eighty
Million, Six Hundred and Twenty-six Thousand, Four Hundred and Thirty Naira,
Ninety-five Kobo).
One of the charges reads: “That you, Aliyu Abubakar,
Jasfad Resources Enterprise (a Bureau de Change operator), and Ibrahim Kashim
(former Secretary to the Bauchi State Government, now at large), sometime
between January 5, 2024, and December 10, 2024, within the jurisdiction of this
Honourable Court, committed an offence to wit: money laundering by converting
and transferring the sum of Two Billion, Eight Hundred and Eight Million, Five
Hundred and Ninety-Five Thousand, One Hundred Naira (N2,808,595,100.00) of
public funds belonging to the Bauchi State Government from the Bauchi State
Expenditure Account, domiciled in United Bank for Africa with account
number 1022197086 into the account of Jasfad Resources Enterprise, also
domiciled in United Bank for Africa with account number 1023444660, and thereby
committed an offence contrary to Section 18(2)(b) and punishable under Section
18(3) of the Money Laundering (Prevention and Prohibition) Act, 2022.”
They pleaded not guilty to all charges when
they were read to them, following which prosecution
counsel, Abba Mohammed, SAN, requested a trial date and urged the court to
remand them in a Correctional Facility, while defence counsel,
Mohammed Ndayako, SAN, representing the first and second defendants, and Chris
Uche, SAN, representing the third defendant, moved applications
for their bail.
Uche informed the court that the third defendant, the
Accountant General of Bauchi State, played a central role in the state's
financial operations and was already on administrative bail. He urged the
court to grant him bail on self-recognition or release him to
the Attorney General of Bauchi State, who would undertake to produce
him in court.
The prosecution counsel, in opposing the applications,
drew the attention of the court to the fact that the first defendant
had previously jumped administrative bail and further informed the court that
the third defendant did not reside in Abuja, which made him a flight risk.
“We filed a 17-paragraph counter-affidavit on April 4,
2025, deposed to by Ogundana Peter Kolawole, alongside a written address. We
adopt both and urge the court to refuse the third defendant’s application for
bail,” he said.
After hearing the arguments from both
sides, Justice Egwuatu granted bail to the defendants in the sum of N200
million each with two sureties in like sum. The sureties, the court held,
must be residents of Abuja, of which one must be a federal
government employee not below Grade Level 17 and must present evidence of tax
payment for the past three years. The court further held
that the defendants must deposit their passports with the court registrar.
Pending the perfection of their bail conditions, the
third defendant was released to the Attorney General of Bauchi State, Hassan L.
Yakubu, SAN, while Jaja, the first defendant was remanded in Kuje
Correctional Centre, Abuja.
The matter was adjourned till June 17, 2025, for
commencement of trial.
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