.... Two Courts to Rule on Bail Application
Former
National Security Adviser Colonel Sambo Dasuki, the former Minister of
State for Finance Mallam Bashir Yuguda, former Governor of Sokoto State
Alhaji Attahiru Bafarawa and three others have denied allegations of
diversions, misappropriation and breech of public trust in respect of
N19.4B criminal charges brought against them by the Federal Government.
The six accused persons are on trial for allegedly misappropriating the huge sum.
They were arraigned on 22 count charges before Justice Peter Affem of the Federal Capital Territory (FCT) high court.
When the charges were read to them, all the accused persons denied the charges one after the others.
Counsel
to the Federal Government Mr Rotimi Jacobs SAN requested for an
adjournment of the trial till next year to enable him assemble his
witnesses.
However, Counsel to Dasuki Mr Ahmed
Raji SAN raised the issue of bail for the accused persons adding that
motions for their bail have been filed and served on the prosecution.
The
prosecution lawyer Mr Rotimi Jacobs confirmed that he has been served
with application for bail of all the accused persons and with the
consent of all the lawyers in the trial, the trial judge, Justice Peter
Affem adjourned hearing in the bail application until Wednesday the 16th
of December 2015.
He also ordered that the
accused persons be kept in the custody of the Economic and Financial
Crimes Commission (EFCC) until their bail is decided tomorrow.
Meanwhile in another High Court of FCT presided by Justice Sani Yusuf, the court adjourned its bail ruling till Friday.
Mr.
Dasuki, who was arraigned before Justice Sani Yusuf, alongside a former
director of finance at the office of the NSA, Shuaibu Salisu, and a
former Group General Manager of the Nigeria National Petroleum
Corporation, NNPC, Aminu Kura, and two firms, Acacia Holdings Limited
and Reliance Reference Hospital, had on Monday filed for bail after
pleading not guilty to the 19-count charge preferred against them by the
Economic and Financial Crimes Commission, EFCC.
After
over two hours of arguments and counter-arguments from counsel to both
parties, Mr. Yusuf adjourned bail ruling to Friday. Mr. Dasuki will
remain in EFCC custody.
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