Convicted former Board
Chairman of the Nigeria Ports
Authority (NPA), Chief Olabode George
and five other persons will remain in
Kikiri Prisons till 9 November this
year when their bail appliction will
come up for hearing.
Justice Olubunmi Oyewole of the Ikeja
High Court, this morning fixed 9
November for hearing on the bail
application filed by George’s counsel.
George and five co-convicts filed
the bail application before the court
urging the judge to grant them bail,
pending the hearing of their appeal
now before the Court of Appeal.
Part of the grounds cited by
George for the bail application are
that: he is hypertensive, has
arthritis, and that his appeal, which
might take more than two and a half
years, might be prejudiced.
The other five convicts are also
asking for bail on several
circumstances bordering mostly on
their health.
The six convicts were not however
in court. Only Bode George’s wife,
Roli, and few family members were
present.
The court adjourned till 9 November
for hearing, to enable all parties in
the matter exchange court processes.
George and five other persons
accused along with him by the Economic
and Financial Crimes Commission, EFCC,
over allegation of N85 billion fraud
at the Nigeria Ports Authority, NPA,
were sentenced to two-and-half years
imprisonment without an option of fine
last Monday.
He was convicted by Justice
Olubunmi Oyewole of the Ikeja High
Court.
George was specifically convicted
on 35 out of the 68-count charge which
border on contract splitting,
inflation, abuse of office and
disobedience to lawful order.
Justice Oyewole sentenced all the
six accused persons to two years each
on seven counts of abuse of office and
another six months for 28 charges
bordering on disobedience of lawful
order.
The judge held that all the accused
persons were guilty of splitting
numerous contracts as members of NPA
board from 2001 to 2003.
According to the judge, there were
incontrovertible evidence that all the
six accused persons intentionally and
knowingly condoned the splitting of
contracts.
Also, Justice Oyewole held that
George and his co-accused disregarded
lawful order passed to them by the
Ministry of Transport stipulating a
new approval limit of contracts in all
government parastatals including the
NPA.
According to the judge, all the
accused persons in their evidence
acknowledged receiving the said order
from the Ministry of Transport but
chose by their own volition to
disregard the order.
He, however, held them not liable
for contract inflation.
During the trial which lasted for
15 months, one of the major
prosecution witnesses, Engr. Mustapha
Bukar, a director in the Federal
Ministry of Transportation, who
chaired the 7-man administrative panel
instituted by the Federal Government
to probe the activities of the NPA,
said his panel discovered that about
29,526 contracts were awarded by the
management of the NPA between year
2001 and 2003.
In his evidence, the witness said
that some of the contracts were split
and inflated before they were awarded
to different contractors by the NPA
management. However, the witness,
admitted under cross-examination by
counsel to the defendants that there
was no evidence indicating that the
contracts awarded were given out or
signed by the Board of the NPA led by
Bode George.