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Court Grants Suspended DG Of SEC, Mounir Gwarzo N25m Bail

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Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC),Mounir-Gwarzo,ICPC.Federal High Court,
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ICPC Arraigns Gwarzo Today ( photo file)

ICPC Arraigns Suspended Director-General of the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), Mounir Gwarzo, Zakawanu Garuba For Fraud, Grants Both Bail Of 25 Million Naira

Suspended Director-General of the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), Mounir Gwarzo, today was arraigned by the Independent Corrupt Practices and other related offences Commission (ICPC), on a five-count charge for alleged fraud.

Zakawanu Garuba a commissioner at the commission was also arraigned along side the suspended SEC DG.

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Both men, who pleaded not guilty, were accused of abusing their offices and breaching public trust by diverting over N114 million while they served as officers of the commission in June, 2015.

After an application by Mr Gwarzo’s lawyer Abdulhakeem Mustapha, the defendants were granted bail of N25 million each.

They are to produce two sureties in like sum. The sureties must be civil servants, not below the rank of deputy directors and working under the employment of the Federal Civil Service.

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The sureties must also have landed properties in Abuja. The defendants were also asked to submit their international passports to the court registrar.

The judge, Hussein Baba-Yusuf, later adjourned the matter till June 28.

According to the charge, Mr Gwarzo is facing trial for  embezzling  N104.9 million which was paid to him as severance allowance while he was still in active service at the commission.

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He is also accused of enriching himself with N10 million paid in excess of his official car allowances.

Mr Garuba was accused of abusing his office by allowing the payments to Mr Gwarzo who was indicted in three of the counts while Mr Garuba faces the last two counts.

Naija news recalls that Mr Gwarzo was suspended from the commission in November, by the Finance Minister, Kemi Adeosun.

Soon after his suspension, Mr Gwarzo accused Mrs Adeosun of punishing him for refusing to stop an ongoing probe of oil firm, Oando Plc.

Mrs Adeosun, however, denied the allegation, saying Mr Gwarzo had threatened to sabotage her integrity if she proceeded with a proposed investigation into allegations of fraud against him.

Mr Gwarzo has since challenged his suspension in court.

The probe of Oando, Nigeria’s largest indigenous oil firm, is still on.