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Sunday 16 April 2023

N3.4 Billion Debt: We want our money paid now, illegally sacked LG chairs tell Makinde






The N3.4 billion judgement debt was the balance of N4.9 billion the state government owed some former local government chairmen and councillors it sacked in 2019.


Former local government chairmen and councillors sacked on May 29, 2019, by Governor Seyi Makinde of Oyo State have disagreed with his proposed plan to pay the N3.4 billion judgement debt in instalments.


The affected ex-council chiefs, led by Bashorun Ajuwon, made this known in documents they filed before the FCT High Court against some earlier applications by the Oyo State government.


The N3.4 billion judgement debt was the balance of N4.9 billion the state government owed some former local government chairmen and councillors it sacked in 2019.


On March 2, Justice A. O. Ebong of the Abuja High Court of the FCT issued a garnishee order nisi blocking Oyo State’s accounts in First Bank, United Bank for Africa (UBA), Wema Bank and Zenith Bank.


The order followed the garnishee proceedings initiated by the ex-council chiefs to execute the judgement they got on May 7, 2021, at the Supreme Court against Mr Makinde and six others.


Listed as judgement debtors with the Oyo State governor are the state’s Attorney General, the Commissioner for Local Government and Chieftaincy Affairs, the Accountant General, the House of Assembly, its speaker, and the Oyo State Independent Electoral Commission (OYSIEC).


In response to the order nisi, the judgement debtors filed a series of applications, including one seeking to set aside the garnishee proceedings and another praying to be allowed to pay the debt within the next seven years by paying N250 million every six months.


But the ex-council chiefs objected to the application.


In one of the documents filed by their lawyer, Musibau Adetunbi, SAN, they stated that Mr Makinde had vowed not to pay the debt as ordered by the Supreme Court, except they decamped to his party (the Peoples Democratic Party) from their party (the All Progressives Congress).


They stated that even when the Supreme Court ordered the state government to pay within four months from the date of the judgement, Oyo State, by a letter dated December 13, 2021, (by the Attorney General), pledged to pay within six months.


Mr Ajuwon and others added that, while Imo and Katsina states (against which similar judgement was given by the Supreme Court for unlawful sacking of elected LG officials) had since paid, Oyo State only paid N1.5 billion and had continued to invent excuses to further delay.


Mr Ajuwon stated in one of the documents that “after the payment of N1,500,000,000 to us, and sometimes in late 2022, the first judgement debtor (Makinde) invited me and third judgement creditor (Hon. Oluyinka Jesutoye) to his office and told us that we should inform all our members to cross to his political party, which is the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) from our own political party, which is the All Progressive Congress (APC).


“We took his message to our members, who directed us to tell him that we could not accept his request. We delivered the reply of our members to him, and he told us that as long as he remains the executive governor of Oyo State, the balance of our money will never be paid.


“He (Makinde) further said after all, he has constitutional immunity; hence no court of law, not even the apex court of the land, could do anything to him. I personally told him in the presence of the third judgment creditor that Almighty God and the law will help us out.”


While objecting to Mr Makinde’s proposal to pay by instalment, the ex–council chiefs noted that at a payment rate of N250 million every six months, it would take the state governor six years to pay N3 billion and an additional one year to pay the balance of N374,889,425.60k, thereby making it seven years, long after he must have completed his second term.


They claimed that Mr Makinde “is maliciously using state power to coerce us, as members of an opposition political party, and has refused to pay our salaries and allowances despite the memos by the Ministry of Justice addressed to the first judgement debtor, the executive governor of Oyo State, to do so.”


The ex-council chiefs, who urged the court to ignore the state government’s requests and proceed with garnishee proceedings, also want the dismissal of the motion to show cause filed by Wema Bank (one of the state’s bankers) for allegedly containing falsehood.


They claimed that Wema Bank, in the motion, concealed information about the Oyo State government and its agencies’ accounts with the bank.


Mr Ajuwon stated in another document that the state government and its agencies maintain several accounts in Wema Bank.


He gave details of some of the accounts and the balance as of April 6, 2023, to include: Account No 0121754507 (with N41,435,133.10 balance);


0122500990 (N8,743,039.10); 0229068555 (N239,128.59); 0241073603 (N52,834.08) and account No:0229822360 ( with N190,413.15 balance).


He added that the state also maintained an Internally Generated Revenue (IGR) account, with number: 0121754507, with Wema Bank.


Mr Ajuwon stated that “the judgement debtors have boasted that they have the capacity to cause the garnishees (the banks) not to say the truth.


“The judgement debtors, who are interested in perverting the cause of justice, are making frantic efforts to carry some garnishees along. Indeed, some garnishees are already preparing fake loan papers.


“Aside from the accounts mentioned above, there are several accounts maintained with the 3rd garnishee (Wema Bank) by the judgement debtors in the name of ministry, commission and/or agency.”


The court will, on Monday, hear some pending applications filed by parties.


(NAN)


 




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