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HomeLaw & JudiciaryN2Bn Fraud: Maina Knows Fate on Bail Application February 24

N2Bn Fraud: Maina Knows Fate on Bail Application February 24

By UDEH DANIELLA

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Justice Okon Abang of the Federal High Court sitting in Abuja on Friday, reserved ruling on the bail application filed by Abdulrasheed Maina, former Chairman Pension Reform Task Team (PRTT) till February 24.

 

Maina is being prosecuted by the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission, EFCC, on charges of money laundering. He was granted bail in June 2020 but subsequently fled the country, forcing the court to revoke his bail and issue a warrant for his arrest. Upon his arrest and repatriation from Niger Republic, trial resumed with the court remanding the defendant in Kuje Custodial Centre. But on January 20, Maina approached Justice Abang for another bail, citing worsening health condition as grounds for the relief.

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At today’s session, counsel to Maina, Sani Katu, SAN, informed the court that his client was taken to the University of Abuja Teaching Hospital, Gwagwalada owing to his deteriorating health condition, adding that the Kuje Custodial Centre where he is being kept does not have the facility to minister to his health needs. The counsel provided medical reports to buttress his claims regarding the defendant’s state of health.

 

However, opposing the application, counsel to EFCC, M.S Abubakar urged the court to reject the application on the grounds that, the purported poorly managed hypertension, would only require monthly examination as indicated in the affidavit before the court.

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Referring to paragraph nine of the affidavit in support of the application, where reference was made to military hospital in Niger Republic and Chad where knee surgery was carried out on the applicant, Abubakar told the court that it indicated that Maina’s violation of his bail conditions at that time was premeditated and in contempt of the order of the court.

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The EFCC counsel further stated that it was clear from the affidavit that, while the prosecution thought Maina was in Niger Republic, he also went to Chad at a time his American and Nigeria passports were in custody of the court. “The defendant is not the kind of person the court could take any chance of admitting to bail,” he added.

 

Justice Abang thereafter adjourned the matter till February 24 and 25 for continuation of trial and ruling on the application.

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