College provost jailed for 4 years over N3.3m fraud
A
day after Nigerians expressed outrage over the light sentence given to a
former director of the Police Pension Fund,John Yakubu Yusuf over a
N27billion theft, a court in the Western Nigerian city of Ibadan has
demonstrated the partiality of justice in Nigeria, with the jailing for
four years of the Provost of the Federal Cooperative College, Eleyele,
Ibadan over a N3.3million fraud.
The provost Ruth Aweto, was
jailed without the option of fine by the state High Court sitting in
Ibadan. Justice Mohammed Talba of the Federal High Court Abuja gave
Yusuf two year jail sentence, with the option of fine.
Also sentenced to four years imprisonment without option of fine was the Bursar, Adekanye Komolafe.
The
duo were sentenced by Justice Moshood Abass who found them guilty of
four out of the eight-count charge of fraud leveled against them by the
Independent Corrupt Practices and other Related Offences Commission
(ICPC).
The judge, however, said the sentence would run concurrently on each of the four-count charge.
The
convicts between October 2005 and January 2006 were said to have
conspired to mislead the Federal Government by submitting a defective
budget proposal for the year 2006.
In the budget proposal, the
convicts claimed that 41 casual workers were permanent staff of the
college and entitled to N7million rather than the N3.7 million they were
genuinely expected to collect.
Delivering his three-hour
judgment, the judge said the prosecution had proven that both principal
officers of the college betrayed the trust vested in them by
government.
“You have used your positions to mislead and defraud
the government of the money put under your custody for the smooth
administration of the college,” he said.
The convicts had told the
court that they agreed to present and submit the misleading budget
proposal of N7million based on the fact that an interview had already
been conducted for the said 41 casual staff.
The said interview
was purportedly conducted under the leadership of one Mr Ubedie in
preparation for the conversion of the casual workers to full staff of
the college.
The convicts, however, admitted not returning the
balance of N3.3million to the coffers of the government, saying it was
used to off-set the outstanding salaries of 2004.
Abass, however,
said that the convicts failed to show any document or give the name
of a superior officer of the Federal Government who might have given
them the authorisation to convert the balance as claimed.
The
convicts committed an offence contrary to Section 26 (1) ( c ) and
punishable under Section 17 (1 ) ( c) of the ICPC Act 2000.
The
judge said that although the offence carried a five-year jail term
without an option of fine, he took into consideration the fact that
they were both first time offenders.
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