‘How former permanent secretary Abba Moro, others shared N675m NIS job applicants’ money’ – Witness reveals
Two prosecution witnesses appeared before the Federal High Court in Abuja on Wednesday, narrating how the sum of N675,675,000 realised from 675,675 applicants who applied for job placement at Nigerian Immigration Service in 2014, was shared.
The two were testifying as the fifth and sixth prosecution witnesses in the ongoing trial of the then Minister of Interior, Abba Moro, and others on charges of recruitment fraud.
The Economic and Financial Crimes Commission had instituted 11 counts against Moro; a former permanent secretary in the ministry, Mrs. Anastasia Daniel-Nwobia; and a deputy director in the ministry, Mr. Femi Alayebami.
The other defendant is Drexel Tech. Nigeria Limited, a firm that carried out the NIS recruitment exercise on behalf of the ministry.
The defendants were alleged to have defrauded a total of 675,675 Nigerian job seekers to the tune of N675,675,000 through alleged fraudulent collection of N1,000 per applicant as online application fee for jobs at the NIS.
Some of the applicants died during the exercise.
A former Head of Finance of Payforme Services Nigeria Limited, Mr. Augustine Ugorji, and an employee of Keystone Bank, Mrs. Bilikisu Mohammed, testified as the fifth and sixth prosecution witnesses, respectively.
The two witnesses, separately led in evidence by the Head of the prosecuting team, Mr. Aliyu Yusuf, told the court presided by Justice Nnamdi Dimgba how the proceeds of the recruitment exercise was shared among eight banks and other companies.
Ugorji narrated how Payforme was engaged by Drexel to provide online platform for collection of application fees from the jobseekers.
As Payforme’s former Head of Finance, Ugorji, who said he worked for Payforme from 2010 to 2016, said, “Drexel had a contract with Ministry of Interior for job recruitment.
“Provision of payment site or payment platform to receive the payment from applicants was sub-let to payforme.
“The process required the applicant to go to the website of the client. In this case, indirectly, the client was Ministry of Interior, because we did not have a direct dealing with the ministry.
“The applicant completed the form before he would then pay. The applicants were given opportunity to pay either through bank or card.
“The application would be validated and re-directed to the client’s site for update.
“Payforme does not receive cash, so we entered into agreement with banks to collect payments from the applicants.”
He listed the banks engaged by Payforme as Union Bank, United Bank of Africa, Diamond Bank, Zenith Bank, Sterling Bank, Ecobank and Enterprise Bank.
He said Interswitch was engaged to provide card as means of payment by interested applicants.
He said from the N1,000 paid by each applicant, Payforme was paid N150 out of which N70 went to the receiving bank.
He said, “The agreement between Drexel and Ministry of Interior was for each applicant to pay N1,000 and Drexel agreed to pay Payforme N150 from the N1,000.
“From the N150, Payforme was paid N80 and and N70 to the banks.
“The balance of N850 went to Drexel
“The Nigeria Inter-Bank Settlement System, where banks do their clearing, was paid by Payforme in line with an agreement.
“We had 675,675 that made payment through our platform.”
He said after the banks deducted their N70 commission from the N1,000 paid by each of the applicants, the following amounts were remitted by each of the banks:
Taking the witness stand after Ugorji was cross-examined by the defence lawyers, Mohammed, who was Drexel’s account officer with Keystone Bank, also narrated how th money remitted to Drexel’s account was disbursed.
She said, “The account was opened on August 19, 2013 as a corporate account with two signatories — William Butau and Amodu Mahmud, who is the chief executive officer of the company.
“The first transaction that went into the account was in September 2013 and the amount was N20,000 for legal fees.
“Then, there were two major inflows into the account. The first was sometime in October 2013, the amount was 462,470,000.
“This amount was put in a fixed deposit. The second inflow was sometime in November 2013.
“The amount was about N111,967,200.”
The prosecuting counsel indicated to Justice Nnamdi Dimgba that he still had four to five witnesses to call.
The judge adjourned till November 7 and 8 for further trial. (Punch)
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