Chairman of the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC), Ola Olukoyede, has stated that he will retire if he does not complete the investigation of Yahaya Bello, former governor of Kogi state.
Olukoyede spoke in Abuja on Tuesday during an interactive session with journalists.
He said:
“If I do not personally oversee the completion of the investigation regarding Yahaya Bello, I will tender my resignation as the EFCC chair.”
The EFCC chairman stated that anyone involved in hindering Bello’s arrest from his Abuja home would face the full wrath of the law.
Olukoyede said he invited Bello to his office for a more “respectful and dignified” interrogation, but the ex-governor wanted EFCC operatives to grill him in his village instead.
He added:
“I called Yahaya Bello, as a serving governor, to come to my office to clear himself. I shouldn’t have done that.”
“But he said because a certain senator has planted over 100 journalists in my office, he would not come.
“I told him that he would be allowed to use my private gate to give him a cover, but he said my men should come to his village to interrogate him.”
Olukoyede said the EFCC did not violate any law while trying to arrest the former governor from his residence.
“Rather, we have obeyed the law. I inherited the case and I didn’t create it. Why has he not submitted himself to the law?”
“I have arraigned two past governors who have been granted bail now — Willie Obiano and Abdulfatah Ahmed.
“We would have gone after Bello since January, but we waited for the court order.
“As early as 7 am, my gallant men were there. Over 50 of them. They mounted surveillance.
“We met over 30 armed policemen there. We would have exchanged fire and there would have been casualties.
“My men were about to move in when the governor of Kogi drove in and they later changed the narrative.”
“If I can do Obiano, Abdulfatah Ahmed and Chief Olu Agunloye, my kinsman, why not Yahaya Bello?”
The EFCC is prosecuting Bello on 19 counts of suspected money laundering and theft of public funds totalling N80.2 billion.