Eniola Olayemi
A prosecution witness in the N6.3 billion fraud case against Sen. Jonah Jang, Mr. Habila Dung, has said that the former Plateau governor’s style of expending security funds was not peculiar to him.
“Jang’s way of handling security funds is not new; it is the same way his successor, Gov. Simon Lalong, is doing it,” Dung, former Permanent Secretary, Cabinet, and Special Services, told the Plateau State High Court trying Jang, yesterday in Jos.
The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN), reports that Dung is the fourth prosecution witness in the case brought against Jang and Yusuf Pam, a former cashier in the Plateau Government House.
The accused persons are being tried over the alleged fraud said to have been committed between Sept. 2010 and Oct. 2014.
They are facing 12 count charges bordering on conspiracy and money laundering allegedly committed when Jang was the governor of the North-Central state.
The anti-graft agency is alleging that the defendants had conspired to defraud the state of the said amount (N6.3bn), via illegal acts, contrary to, and punishable under, sections 15, 16, 17, 18 and 19 of the Money Laundering (Prohibition Act) 2011, as amended.
The former permanent secretary had, on Thursday, told the trial Judge, Justice Daniel Longji, that all withdrawals made by Pam were taken to Jang for disbursement to the 17-member State Security Council.
But, while being cross-examined yesterday by Jang’s counsel, Mr. Mike Ozekhome (SAN), Dung said that the practice of withdrawing security funds from the state coffers by a cashier and delivering same to the Governor in his office was not peculiar to Jang.
“The practice is still on-going, long after Jang left office on May 29, 2015. The current governor is doing the same. So, it is nothing new.
“I was the Permanent Secretary, Cabinet and Special Services in the office of the Secretary to the State Government, between Dec. 2014 and Sept. 6, 2015.
“Once there is a security challenge, the governor will ask me to raise a memo for a certain amount which will be withdrawn by the cashier and taken to the governor,’’ he said.
NAN reports that Ozekhome produced documents indicating withdrawals done between July 1 to Oct. 7, 2015, in eight different bank statements by Yusuf Pam and his successor, Erick Kangnan, to further confirm that such withdrawals were “a normal trend with both the Jang and Lalong administrations.
“Will I, therefore, be correct to say that during Gov Jang’s and Gov Lalong’s tenures, while you were the permanent secretary, and when Yusuf Pam and Erick Kangnan were cashiers, the same pattern was adopted?’’ Ozekhome asked, to which Dung answered, “Yes sir, the pattern was the same.’’
“The same pattern used in withdrawing security funds tagged as `classified expenditures’ during Governor Jonah Jang is still the same pattern within the administration of Lalong,’’ Dung reaffirmed to the court.
The defence counsel asked the prosecution witness whether he had ever seen Pam (2nd accused), delivering any of the withdrawn funds to Jang in his office, to which he answered in the negative.