The Code of Conduct Bureau has filed a 13-count charge against the
Senate President, Bukola Saraki, at the Code of Conduct Tribunal.
Saraki is said to have made false declaration of his assets.
The PUNCH learnt on Wednesday that the trial of the senate president will begin on Friday in Abuja.
The Deputy Director in the office of the Attorney-General of the
Federation, M.S.Hassan, filed the charges against Saraki on September
11.
The Senior Special Assistant to the Senate President, Mr. Yusuf
Olaniyonu, confirmed to one of our correspondents that Saraki had been
served notice of the charges.
“Yes. We have been served,” Olaniyonu said.
The charges against Saraki include false declaration of assets,
alleged acquisition of assets beyond his legitimate earnings and keeping
foreign accounts while holding public office first as Kwara State
governor in 2003 and later as a senator.
“That you, Dr. Bukola Saraki, whilst being the governor of Kwara
State on or about 16th September, 2003 within the jurisdiction of this
honourable tribunal did make a false declaration in the asset
declaration form for public officers on assumption of office as Governor
of Kwara State by an anticipatory asset declaration,” the charge sheet
read in part.
The Senate president was said to have claimed to have ownership of a
property on N0. 15A and 15 McDonald, Ikoyi, Lagos, said to have been
acquired through his company, Carlisie Properties Limited, in 2000.
Reacting to the charges in Abuja, on Wednesday, Saraki described them as frivolous.
He said the allegations were a reflection of the saying that “each
time you fight corruption, the system will fight you.” Saraki spoke
during a brief encounter with correspondents covering the Senate in
Abuja.
He said, “Most of them (charges) are frivolous and not true. This
sounds like issues of affairs. If you say a statement over 13 years, it
has been there since 2003 and you wake up 13 years after and you wonder.
I have always done my declaration. We will continue to do our job.
“There is no doubt that it is mischievous. It is not current. The
issues are not true. As far as we are concerned, we are not shaken. We
will focus on what we have come to do as elected by my colleagues to do
in the interest of the country.”
The Senate President then referred reporters to a statement from his media team.
The statement signed by Olaniyonu said Saraki was being treated unfairly because of his recent stance on national issues.
“We also note that anytime you try to fight corruption or insist that
the right thing should be done, the system will always come after you.
This is another case of desperation to fight Dr. Saraki because of his
recent stance on national issues,” the statement partly read.
The Senate President’s media team noted that at the time of writing
the statement Saraki had not been served the court processes but that as
a public officer he owed members of the public explanation on the
allegations contained in the charge sheet.
The statement by Olaniyonu added, “That we believe that the Code of
Conduct Bureau, following their processes in which after a declaration
is submitted to the bureau they carried out verification of the assets
and ascertained the claims made, should not wait till 12 years later to
be pointing out alleged inconsistencies in a document submitted to it in
2003.
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