Bukola Saraki |
Burglars have made an unprecedented break-in at the Kwara State Ministry of Finance, carting away undisclosed amounts of money as well as all documents, including their electronic backups, which detailed government transactions since 2003.
A top government functionary told SaharaReporters that the burglars first attempted to break into the Accountant General’s office in the Ministry in the early hours of Friday, September 21, but the guards and the burglary-proof doors foiled the attack. The attackers returned on Saturday night armed with different tools grenades and even a power generator with which they broke into the offices where the documents and money were kept, the source said.
The burglary story first surfaced on Twitter, where a
whistleblower mentioned it last Tuesday, prompting a terse response from Dr.
Muideen Akorede, Governor Abdulfattah Ahmed’s spokesman, who dubbed the
incident a “robbery” that is investigation.
Akorede also made tacit confirmation of the foiled first
attempt when, in a tweet, he wondered why someone would break into a place and
return two days later, and called the document theft an effort to blackmail the
government and its officials.
He severally parried questions asked by the whistleblower
and others regarding the incident. For instance, he was quiet on why the
government has treated the matter like an official secret and why security was
not beefed up after the foiled first attack.
More than a week after the incident, neither the state
government nor the police have spoken officially on the matter and it is not
clear whether any arrest has been made.
Our source observed that having failed in their first
attempt, the burglars returned to the same place in the early hours of Saturday
September 22, this time armed with sophisticated weapons and equipment
including a power-generating machine and grenades with which they blew up the
door and other encumbrances.
Furthermore, he said that in the course of forcing their way
into the place, the attackers injured and disarmed the two guardsmen, one of
whom jumped the fence and ran to the Police Command (that night) to seek help
to ward off the invaders. But rather than follow the guardsman to the place,
the police reportedly directed him to go and report the incident at Division C
at Oja Oba in Ilorin, then to Area A which is in charge of the place, before
returning to the State Police Command.
In the end, the sophisticated burglars successfully broke into
the safe, took away all the hard currencies and Naira kept there, and, most
importantly, made away with all the documents regarding financial transactions
since 2003. They also broke into the computer room and retrieved all the
electronic backups of all the documents they had stolen.
The incident, according to another source, is fuelling
speculations about official cover-up of certain transactions that have been the
subject of public scrutiny such as local government joint accounts, contracts
and SUBEB funds, with critics drawing a parallel with a similar occurrence at
the SGBN a few years ago when the Nuhu Ribadu-led EFCC was probing the insider
trading that wrecked the bank.
The burglary, coming amid numerous investigations into the
tenure of former Governor Bukola Sarakis in Kwara State, the SUBEB funds, as
well as police claims in the N9.2b loan scam that Saraki used shares bought
with state funds to stand surety for his private company are lending credence
to the speculations of a cover up.
Saraki has denied any wrongdoing in the case, which he
labels as political blackmail being sponsored by his traducers.
The police are yet to charge him in the case, but the Police
Commissioner heading the Special Fraud Unit (SFU), Mr Tunde Ogunsakin, was
reported as saying recently that investigations into the case have reached top
gear and that it will soon be charged to court.
Source: Sahara Reporters
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