Governor Dave Umahi of Ebonyi State has refuted claims by his
predecessor, Martin Elechi, that he was the brain behind a number of
petitions before the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission, EFCC,
against Elechi and some of his children, stressing that he had
personally appealed to the anti-graft agency to leave Elechi alone
because of his age.
The governor spoke in reaction to a letter written to him by Elechi,
rejecting a Toyota V8 SUV gift he gave to him. The letter, which was
copied to the Speaker of the State House of Assembly, the state Chapter
of the Christian Association of
Nigeria, CAN, and the Department of
State Services, DSS, in the state, was leaked to the press.
But speaking at an Agriculture Summit organized for clerics in
Abakaliki, the state capital, Umahi said his government had resolved to
ignore the letter but decided to put the facts straight since the
immediate past governor had decided to make it public.
According to him, “I would not have commented on the letter of my
former boss if it had not been published. We agreed in the Exco that we
should ignore it but when I started seeing it published, I felt that in a
public gathering like this, we have to clear some certain issues.”
Umahi admitted that vehicles were purchased for former governors,
including Elechi and former Senate President, Senator Anyim Pius Anyim,
but that rejecting the car was not the best option as Elechi had written
to him shortly after he left office to give his wife two cars which he
obliged.
He went on to explain that some of the petitions that made Elechi a
regular visitor to EFCC office were written when both of them were in
government as governor and deputy governor respectively “by someone who
is now in his (Elechi) camp.”
While insisting that his administration never wrote any petition
against the former governor, he said he had told the commission to leave
Elechi alone that if he was found wanting in anyway, he would pay back.
He, however, added that Elechi’s children were allegedly involved in
contract scams and would have to answer for their actions, if found
guilty.
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