Samuel Ortom |
The Governor of Benue State, Samuel Ortom, has vowed that no amount of
“torment or persecution”, will make him reconsider his defection from
the ruling All Progressives Congress (APC).
In a statement issued by his Chief Press Secretary, Terver Akase, the
governor accused the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) of
being a strike squad of the ruling party.
Ortom also alleged that the federal government had been using the anti-graft agency to “cripple governance in the state.”
“After succumbing to nationwide condemnation of its illegal freezing
of Benue State Government accounts, the Economic and Financial Crimes
Commission, EFCC has resorted to yet another shameful act in its
desperation to cripple governance in the state,” the statement read.
“The anti-graft agency’s latest move is the bandying of figures in
national dailies claiming that such figures are those of transactions in
the accounts owned by the Benue State Government.
“It released figures allegedly withdrawn from the Benue State
Government accounts without disclosing the dates of the withdrawals and
the period during which they were made.
“The commission has also not been able to state accounts into which
such monies withdrawn were paid to prove that the funds had been
diverted.
“EFCC is contented with publishing the figures without stating how impropriety has been established.
“Are government monies supposed to be kept in the accounts
indefinitely without expenditure? Their objective is apparently to give
Governor Samuel Ortom and his administration a bad name.
“On this score, it is clear that the EFCC has now become both a
strike squad of the APC for torment, and their law court for the trial
and conviction of political opponents.
“The commission may torment and persecute Governor Ortom and his
subordinates on the directives of the powers that be as much as it
serves their purposes, but he will neither be distracted nor reconsider
his defection from APC.”
No comments:
Post a Comment
Disclaimer: Comment expressed do not reflect the opinion of African Parliamentary News