EFCC Business News

Nigeria’s Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) Confiscates Assets Belonging To Erastus Akingbola, Former MD/CEO of Intercontinental Bank

Erastus Akingbola, Former MD/CEO, Intercontinental Bank

Erastus Akingbola, Former MD/CEO, Intercontinental Bank

Nigeria’s Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) has begun the process of seizing properties belonging to ex-Vice Chairman and Managing Director of Intercontinental Bank and ‘Church Elder’, Erastus Akingbola. Erastus Akingbola was among the first batch of CEOs sacked by the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) in August last year.

The agency on January 7th, 2010 sealed up his main house on 12, Ruxton Street Ikoyi, Lagos. 15 exotic cars found in the home were also seized.

A Lagos Federal High Court ordered the interim confiscation of Akingbola’s properties in Lagos, the United Kingdom, Dubai, and Accra.

Among the properties to be seized are Amazing Grace Plaza, Ligali Ayorinde Street, Victoria Island, Lagos; properties, cars, and personal assets on Milverton Road, Ikoyi; 2 Bedwell Road, Ikoyi, Lagos; 26 Chester Terrace, London; 65 Gove-End Road, London; and 8 Connaught Street, London. Read the rest of this entry »

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Central Bank of Nigeria’s Governor Lamido Sanusi: A Radical in a Conservative’s Job?

Lamido Sanusi, Governor, Central Bank of Nigeria

Lamido Sanusi, Governor, Central Bank of Nigeria

Lamido Sanusi is a very brilliant man. He writes the English language with remarkable authority, and even speaks it better.

This could however be both an asset and a liability. Too much love of ‘grammar’ could lead to an undue love for the podium and limelight, with attendant risks of gaffes in moments of rhetorical flourishes.

Central Bank Governors are thought to possess so much crucial information about their country’s economy that investors and analysts closely monitor their utterances even after they have left office. For instance, when Alan Greenspan, who retired as Chairman of the US Federal Reserve on January 31, 2006, predicted on February 26, 2007 that the US would enter into recession before or in early 2008, the Dow Jones Industrial Average dropped by 416 points (or 3.3% of its value) the following day. At that time, it was the worst one-day loss since September 17, 2001, when it lost 684 points (7.1%) after reopening in the wake of the 9/11 terrorist attacks. Read the rest of this entry »

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Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) Asset Management Company (AMC): Next Big Player in Nigeria’s Banking Sector, Says Lamido Sanusi

Lamido Sanusi, Governor of the Central Bank of Nigeria, has taken a tough line with the banks

Lamido Sanusi, Governor of the Central Bank of Nigeria, has taken a tough line with the banks

An Asset Management Company (AMC), to be floated soon by the Central Bank of Nigeria, is going to be the next big player in the regulation of the nation’s financial system.

The past five months since the appointment of Lamido Sanusi as CBN governor were dominated by the apex bank’s whirlwind intervention in nine banks, which saw the chief executive officers of those banks sacked and being prosecuted on sundry charges by the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC).

The AMC is Sanusi’s next move as he presses forward after the action described as the “Sanusi Tsunami.”

In an interview with a group of Nigerian journalists at the 13th Standard Bank Africa Forum, which ended in Cape Town, South Africa, last month, Sanusi explained that the AMC initiative is being currently articulated in the apex bank, which will subsequently seek approval for it from the National Assembly.

He said the AMC will serve both the banks and the stock market.

Explaining exactly what the company would be doing, the governor said its focus would first be on the marginal loans given by those banks that were badly hit by the capital market crash, because those are easier to value. Read the rest of this entry »

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Nuhu Ribadu, Former Chairman of Nigeria’s Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC), Tells of Nigeria Anti-Corruption Battle

Nuhu Ribadu, Former Chairman of Nigeria's Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC)

Nuhu Ribadu, Former Chairman of Nigeria's Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC)

Nuhu Ribadu is a man who continues to divide Nigerian public opinion two years after the anti-corruption campaigner was forced from his job.

His supporters portray him as a relentless pursuer of the thieves in high places.

As chairman of the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC), Nuhu Ribadu even sent his own boss – the inspector general of police – to prison.

He brought more than 1,000 cases to court, and secured 270 convictions.

Before his appointment no company in Nigeria had ever been charged for bribery.

However, his critics accused him of being a political hatchet-man.

They accused him of only pursuing cases against enemies of former President Olusegun Obasanjo and leaving Obasanjo’s friends untouched.

Shortly after Olusegun Obasanjo left office in 2007, Mr Ribadu was removed from his post and sent on a year’s “training course”.

“I was dismissed,” says Nuhu Ribadu. Read the rest of this entry »

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Nigeria’s Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) Shuts Down 800 Scam Web Sites

Farida Waziri, Chairperson of Nigeria's Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC)

Farida Waziri, Chairperson of Nigeria's Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC)

Nigeria’s anti-corruption watch dog, the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC), has shut down over 800 scam web sites and busted 18 syndicates of email fraudsters in a drive to check cyber-crime. “Over 800 fraudulent email addresses have been identified and shut down,” EFCC Chairperson Farida Waziri said in Las Vegas, United States, last week.

“There have been 18 arrests of high profile syndicates operating cyber-crime organizations,” she told a gathering of US mayors at the 35th Annual Convention of Black Mayors on Global Vision for Local Action: A Paradigm of Connectivity in the African Diaspora.

On a daily basis, Internet users in Nigeria and around the world receive scam emails from fraudsters who impersonate businesses like banks and mobile phone companies. These web forgeries are designed to trick people into revealing personal or financial information by imitating legitimate sources.

Some of the fraudsters hack into private email accounts of prominent personalities and send emails to their contacts claiming to be stranded and asking for emergency cash. Read the rest of this entry »

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What’s Next for Nigeria’s Banks?

The Central Bank of Nigeria has an important role to play in efficiently regulating Nigeria's banking sector.

The Central Bank of Nigeria has an important role to play in efficiently regulating Nigeria's banking sector.

Since the audit results of the remaining 14 Nigerian banks was announced earlier in the month, there has been much speculation about foreign take-overs of the troubled institutions, as well as mergers within the sector. Going forward, the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) will also have to actively manage the financial health of the banks and make sure they don’t find themselves in such a situation again.

After the audit findings on the first 10 of Nigeria’s 24 banks were revealed in the middle of August, the market has been holding its breath for the results of the 14 remaining banks.

On 2 October, the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) announced that four more banks – Bank PHB, Equitorial Trust Bank (ETB), Spring Bank, and Wema Bank – were undercapitalized, in a poor liquidity position, and in what the CBN called a “grave situation”. A fifth bank – Unity Bank – was adjudged to have insufficient capital but a healthy liquidity position.

The CBN said it will inject N200 billion (US$1.3 billion) into the four distressed banks to stabilize them. This is in addition to the N420 billion ($2.8 billion) released to the five banks – Oceanic Bank, Intercontinental Bank, AfriBank, Finbank and Union Bank – found to be in trouble after the first round of audits. The managing directors and executive directors of Spring Bank, Equitorial Trust Bank (ETB), and Bank PHB have also been removed. Read the rest of this entry »

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Nigeria’s Former Vice President, Atiku Abubakar, on Central Bank of Nigeria’s Debtor List

Atiku Abubakar is on the list with 600 other wealthy Nigerians

Atiku Abubakar is on the list with 600 other wealthy Nigerians

Nigeria’s former vice-president and opposition leader Atiku Abubakar is included in a list of major bank debtors released by the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN).

This list says Atiku Abubakar owes N111 million ($730,000; £450,000) and names 600 others who owe a total of $2.5 billion.

The non-repaying of these debts is a major factor in the recent government takeover of several banks.

The scale of the debt has created a scandal in Nigeria. The latest move by the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) marks the end of its forensic audit of Nigeria’s 24 financial institutions.

The scandal emerged in August as the government stepped in to take control of five banks – sacking their management teams.

Four chief executives were arrested – they are now being prosecuted on multiple fraud charges.

A fifth chief executive, Erastus Akingbola, former CEO of Intercontinental Bank, is on the run – he is thought to be in the UK.

The list of debtors to Bank PHB, Equitorial Trust Bank, Spring Bank, Wema Bank, and Unity Bank was made available on Wednesday evening.

Other powerful people on the list include: Read the rest of this entry »

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Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) Bails Out Four More Banks: Equitorial Trust Bank, Bank PHB, Spring Bank, and Wema Bank

Lamido Sanusi, Governor of the Central Bank of Nigeria, has taken a tough line with the banks

Lamido Sanusi, Governor of the Central Bank of Nigeria, has taken a tough line with the banks

The Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) has had to bail out four more banks and has sacked three of their chief executives. The rescued banks – Equitorial Trust Bank, Bank PHB, Spring Bank, and Wema Bank – have been given NGN 200 billion (USD1.37 billion; GBP861 million) in loans and support.

After an audit of their books, the CBN said they were “adjudged to be in a grave situation”.

Governor of the Central Bank of Nigeria, Lamido Sanusi, has been cracking down on the biggest banks as he seeks to clean up the system.

Lamido Sanusi, who only took office in June, has now completed an examination of all of Nigeria’s 24 banks.

The regulator removed the heads of Equitorial Trust, Bank PHB and Spring Bank and appointed new management to run them.

The Central Bank of Nigeria also said another bank, Unity Bank, did not have sufficient capital but had enough to avoid being in a grave situation.

In August, Lamido Sanusi injected a total of NGN400 billion into five banks – Afribank, Intercontinental Bank, Finbank, Oceanic Bank and Union Bank – after they were found to have very low cash reserves and fired their senior management. Read the rest of this entry »

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VIDEO: Nigerian Bankers Face Charges

See more on Banking in Nigeria

Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) | Intercontinental Bank | Union Bank | Oceanic Bank | First Inland Bank (FinBank) | Afribank

Source(s): CNN

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Nigeria’s Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) Charges Top Officials of Five Banks

Court GravelNigeria’s financial crimes watch dog, the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC), charged top officials of five banks with multiple counts of offenses, including giving loans without required security, manipulation of stock prices, and failing to render accurate reports to regulators.

Among 15 people charged yesterday by the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) before Justice Dan Abutu of the Federal High Court in Nigeria’s commercial capital, Lagos, were former officials of FinBank Plc, Oceanic Bank International Plc, Afribank Nigeria Plc, Union Bank Nigeria Plc, and Intercontinental Bank Plc.

Lamido Sanusi, Governor of the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN), fired the CEOs of the banks in July, saying they were in a “grave situation” and injected NGN420 billion (USD2.7 billion) into the lenders.

Okey Nwosu, former CEO of FinBank and Sebastian Adigwe, who headed Afribank were among those charged. Also charged were Cecilia Ibru, former CEO of Oceanic Bank and Bartholomew Ebong, former head of Union Bank. All the accused pleaded not guilty. Former CEO of Intercontinental Bank, Erastus Akingbola, has reportedly fled the country.

Read more on Banking in Nigeria

United Bank for Africa | Guaranty Trust Bank (GTBank) | First Bank of Nigeria | Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN)

Source(s): Bloomberg News

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