Wednesday, 14 September 2016

$15m traced to my accounts was for medical bills – Patience Jonathan writes EFCC

patience-jonathan
Former First Lady, Dame Patience Jonathan, has claimed that she was using the $15m, traced to her account, which was frozen in four companies’ accounts, to settle medical bills while she was overseas. The ex-First Lady, therefore, urged the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission and Skye Bank to lift the embargo on the accounts.

Patience made this appeal in a letter with reference number GA/Abibo/00226/2016, written by her lawyers, Granville Abibo (SAN) and Co, which was addressed to the Acting Chairman of the EFCC, Mr. Ibrahim Magu.
According to the letter, “It is noteworthy to emphasise that the said accounts, which were in US dollar denomination, were card-based accounts and our client is the sole signatory to these accounts.

“However, our client has been operating the said accounts using the cards for her medical bill payments and purchases for her private purposes without any let or hindrance.

“Our client was therefore surprised when the said cards stop functioning on July 7, 2016, or thereabout. Our client immediately, thereupon, contacted Skye Bank Plc through our solicitors.

‘‘It was only then that the bank officials informed our client that the said accounts were placed on a ‘No Debit Order’ following investigations and instruction from your commission and this is without notice to our client by either the bank or the commission.
“It is in the light of the foregoing that we urge you to use your good offices to vacate the ‘No Debit/Freezing Order’ placed on the said accounts.”

She added, “Despite the foregoing, our client, who is a law-abiding citizen, had watched with surprise how efforts were being made surreptitiously to indirectly harass or harangue her and short-change her of her personal funds in breach of her fundamental human rights.

“We urge you sir, to kindly intervene to stop the untoward and wrongful actions of your officials to embarrass, inconvenience and short-change our client”, it added.

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