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Monday, 9 May 2016

Joshua Dariye jumps bail, wanted in UK

Dariye: fugitive in United Kingdom
Dariye: fugitive in United Kingdom

Like James Ibori, former governor of Delta state, Joshua Dariye, former governor of Plateau state faces a spell of years in United Kingdom  jail over money laundering charges, if he ever steps into the country.
Like Ibori, his accomplice, a woman had been jailed three and half years.Britain is waiting for him to get his own share of the sanctions.

Peter Clark, a retired detective constable with the UK Metropolitan Police, on May 9, 2016, told a Federal Capital Territory, FCT, High Court, sitting in Gudu, Abuja, that Dariye, is still wanted in the United Kingdom for money laundering.

Dariye, who is being prosecuted by the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission, EFCC, on a 23-count charge bordering on money laundering and diversion of funds before Justice Adebukola Banjoko, is alleged to have siphoned the state’s ecological fund to the tune of N1.162 billion.
Clark gave a blow-by-blow account of how £11,560 cash found on Christopher Mekwunye, an aide of Dariye, who is allegedly involved in a credit card fraud, was traced to the former governor, making him a suspect of money laundering.

Led in evidence by prosecuting witness, Rotimi Jacobs (SAN), Clark told the court that Mekwunye had under interrogation confessed that the money was given to him to deposit on behalf of Dariye into his Barclays Bank account.

He said: “In 2004, officers of the Met Police involved in investigating a large credit card fraud had, during search of a number of houses, found the cash on Christopher Mekwunye at 127 Chilton House, Portland Street, SW London.

“I asked him about Dariye and he told me that he was a politician and governor of Plateau State in Nigeria. I then left him with the other officers working on the credit card fraud and made several inquiries with the Barclays Bank, where they informed me that Dariye was a customer with the bank with an account that was operated in a suspicious way.”

Clark , who retired on March 9, 2015 after 28 years in service, thereafter, obtained a court order to enable him obtain more information about the said account.

He added: “After I got the court order, I was able to gain access to the accounts operated by Dariye. I received the bank statement, the personal customer profile, which is the information provided to the bank, while the account was operated by Dariye.
“He first operated the account in 1995 and he told the bank that he was employed as a manager for Benue Cement Company, and that he was on a £500,000 yearly salary.

“There were nine bank accounts operated by him. Some of them were dormant, but some were high interest- bearing accounts, which showed a £816,000 balance. Closer examination of the account showed that money was being transferred into the account from a company called Ebenezer Retnan Ventures (ERV) with about £440,000, and the bank sending in the money was All States Trust Bank in Nigeria.

“There were a number of other electronic transfers directly made by Joshua Dariye himself; and from memory, I remember Lion Bank. Mr. Dariye also operated a credit card and all the accounts were registered at one address: Flat 28, Regent Plaza Apartments, 8 Greville Road.”
He further told the court that investigations showed that one Joyce Oyebanjo was also paying into the account, issuing cheques from her bank account at National Westminster Bank.

According to him, “I discovered from the account that in October 2003, she received more than £1 million through electronic transfers from Nigerian companies. She was also responsible for paying money into Dean Close School in the UK for three of Dariye’s children.”
Clark further told the court that he thereafter requested for the assistance of the EFCC to help in unravelling evidence linked to ERV.

While giving further testimony, he said: “In July 2004, Joyce Oyebanjo was arrested; and in a prepared statement, she stated that all the monies that were sent to her from Nigeria came from Mr. Dariye and were being sent to her for the upkeep of his children and the maintenance of his property in the UK.
“In September, 2004, I received information that Dariye was  at Marriott Hotel, George Street and on the 2nd of September, around 8.20am, I went to Rm 1208 ,which was occupied by Dariye.

“I introduced myself and told him I’d been investigating his bank accounts and had suspicion that the money he had received in the account was stolen. As a result, I arrested and cautioned him on suspicion of money laundering. He made no reply to the caution.”

Clark revealed further that on searching his room, £43,000 cash was found and seized. Various denominations, including Euros, sterling, dollars and Scottish bank notes were found in the room and confiscated. Also a Mont Blanc pen worth £7,000 and Louis Vuitton branded shoes worth £700 a pair, were among properties found in his room.
Oyebanjo, according to Clark, already served a three-and-a-half jail term in the UK for involvement in the money laundering offence.

The photograph of the seized bank notes were presented in court and accepted as exhibits against Dariye.
Enquiry at the hotel counter, according to Clark, revealed that contrary to Dariye’s claim that he only booked one room, he actually booked another, which was occupied by one Chrystabel Bentu.
He said: “I asked him if he had travelled to London on his own, which he informed me that he had. However, I had information from the hotel that he booked two rooms. The other was Rm 1220 occupied by Chyrstabel Bentu, who claimed to be Dariye’s Personal Assistant.”
Clark told the court that when her room was searched, £50,000 cash was found in her safe, including Dariye’s international passport and flight ticket.

Bentu, according to him, was subsequently arrested on suspicion of money laundering.
Dariye, according to Clark, was served with a notice which he signed , warning him not to move any money again as part of the money laundering offences already committed.
The notice, which stated that Dariye must return to the UK by December 14, 2004, was signed, dated and agreed to by Dariye.

The documents were presented in court as exhibits.
Clark, however, told the court that if he had got wind of the revelations of money laundering unearthed before September 2004 by the EFCC, he would not have granted him bail, but would have “charged him with criminal offences”.

He said: “On September 22, 2004, my colleagues searched Flat 28, a property bought by Dariye, and found £11,995 in his pocket, which was seized. There were also three Barclays Bank cheques of £57,000 each.
“Immediately after he failed to answer his bail, I made an application for a warrant of his arrest; that warrant for his arrest was granted and is still valid today; he was circulated as wanted on our computer system and he remains wanted in London as of today.”
Justice Banjoko has adjourned till June 6, 2016 for continuation of trial.


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Accumulated cases: India has 52,000 shortage of judges

Modi
Modi
Indian judiciary has expressed a serious concern over the poor judge-population ratio in the country. Chief Justice T. S. Thakur, Chief Justice of India, said on Monday at a legal function in the eastern state of Odisha’s Cuttack town (India) that India needed more than 70,000 judges to clear the pending legal cases.

He noted that while the Law Commission of India in 1987 had suggested for having 44,000 judges to effectively tackle the then number of pending cases, NAN reported that the country today had only 18,000 judges. In other words, the country will need about 52,000 more.

Thakur said 30 years down the line judges had been working with depleted strength.
“If you go by the number of people that have been added to the population, we may now require more than 70,000 judges to clear the pending cases.

The chief justice stressed that access to justice was a fundamental right, and shortage of judges is one of the formidable challenges the judiciary was facing now.

“The government cannot afford to deny the people their fundamental right. In fact, this is not the first time that the chief justice has raised the issue of low strength of judges in the country and pleaded before the government for the appointment of more judges to clear the legal cases pending for years,” he said.
 
A report noted that at a function in the national capital last month where Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi was also present, he got emotional and broke down while speaking about the shortage of judges in the country.
He said the judiciary was stuck as nearly 4 million cases remained unattended to.


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16 cases of Zika virus in Switzerland

File; Maria Camila Davila, a pregnant woman infected with the Zika virus, is attended at the Erasmo Meoz University Hospital in Cucuta, Colombia. AFP
File; Maria Camila Davila, a pregnant woman infected with the Zika virus, is attended at the Erasmo Meoz University Hospital in Cucuta, Colombia. AFP

Switzerland has recorded 16 cases of infection by the mosquito-borne Zika virus since March this year, local newspaper Tribune de Geneve reported on Monday.

Tests had revealed the presence of the virus transmitted by the Aedes aegypti mosquito in each of the known cases, the report said, citing the Swiss Federal Office of Public Health (FOPH)’s pandemic preparation unit head Patrick Mathys.

All of them had previously travelled to areas affected by the virus which has reached pandemic proportions in regions including but not limited to South America, Central America and the Caribbean.
Tribune de Geneve  said two  of the infected had travelled to Brazil and Colombia, one each  to Bolivia, Guadeloupe and Ecuador.

The number of infections could be much higher however as data reveals that only around one in four infected individuals develop symptoms which include fever, rash, joint pain and conjunctivitis.
Though rarely fatal, Zika presents a risk for pregnant women and their unborn babies as the causal relationship between microcephaly and other severe foetal brain defects has been confirmed.

First isolated in 1947 from a monkey in Uganda, the Zika virus was limited for decades to a narrow equatorial belt stretching across Africa and Asia, rarely affecting humans.
In 2007, the virus breached its geographical range as the first documented outbreak was recorded in the Pacific Islands.

The situation since has drastically changed. In 2015, the mosquito-borne virus was detected in the Americas with Brazil reporting its first case in May last year.
The World Health Organisation’s (WHO) latest situation report indicates that 57 countries and territories report continuing mosquito-borne transmission.


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