As the asset forfeiture case involving Chief James Ibori, continues in
London, the British Crown prosecution has denied suggesting that the
former governor of Delta State owns 30 per cent of Oando Oil.
Giving
evidence yesterday, while under cross examination from QC Krolic, James
Ibori’s counsel, detective constable, Peter Clark, stated: “Your
honour, Mr. Krolic should use the correct statement used by the
prosecution…The crown has carefully chosen their words; it may well not
be correct to say that the crown said Mr. Ibori owns 30 per cent of
Oando.”
On this, Krolic said: “Your honour, I recall Mr. Bailey,
counsel to Oando, asking the prosecution to withdraw what she said about
Ibori, owning 30 per cent of Oando. If my learned friend (Wass) Sasha,
did not allege that Mr. Ibori has 30 per cent share in Oando, there
would have been no need for Oando’s counsel, QC Bailey, to be sitting
here in the court.”
The judge, Anthony Pitts, trying to save the
situation, said: “The prosecution did not suggest that Mr. Ibori owned
30 per cent of Oando.”
Relying on the sudden turn and retraction
from the prosecution and confirmed by the judge, Krolic said: “It
appears that there are those that are involved with the media that have
concluded that Mr. Ibori had 30 per cent of Oando. If, in fact, my
learned friend (referring to the crown prosecutor), Sasha Wass, did not
say or mean that, the media should be corrected.”
At the start of
the confiscation hearing last week Monday, some media houses in
Nigeria, relying on Reuters News Agency’s report, copied and published
verbatim the story, which allegedly said Ibori had 30 per cent equity in
Oando, which has now been denied by the British Crown prosecution at
the ongoing asset confiscation hearing.
In his reaction, Ibori’s
solicitor, Jonathan Epelle, said: “It is very unfortunate that the media
have been sensationalising this case, which has, in many aspects, since
it began on Monday, opened up a lot of hidden facts that have been
misrepresented in the public glare.”
After the court returned
from the 10 minutes break, following the confusion created as a result
of the British Crown Prosecution retraction of statement, linking Ibori
to 30 per cent ownership of Oando, the court could not continue with the
day’s proceeding and had to adjourn.
Also at the hearing, the
British Investigating Officer, DC Clark, was forced to admit that he had
been unable to establish any link between funds, originating from Delta
State accounts into any account owned by Ibori or any of his
associates.
It will be recalled that DC Peter Clark, the British
police financial investigator in this case, admitted, under
cross-examination, that the prosecution used Mr. Gohil’s forged
documents, ledgers and backdated letters to prosecute Ibori.
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