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Ex-Air Force Chief, Umar Forfeits Five Mansions To FG

Bildergebnis für Chief of Air Staff, Air Marshal Mohammed Umar
A former Chief of Air Staff, Air Marshal Mohammed Umar (rtd.), facing trial for monumental corruption, has temporarily forfeited five properties to the Federal Government.

Umar is accused of stealing N9.7bn from the account of the Nigerian Air Force and standing trial before Justice Nnamdi Dimgba of Abuja Federal High Court.

According to court documents sighted by the Punch, the properties forfeited include four mansions and a castle with a mosque.

Three of the properties are located in the upscale areas of Maitama and Asokoro in Abuja while two others are located in Kaduna and Kano.

The properties are: A six-bedroomed duplex with two-bedroomed ‘boys quarters’ located at 14 Vistula Close off Panama Street, Maitama which he allegedly bought for N700m; a castle with a swimming pool and a mosque located at 1853 Denf Xiao Ping Street, Asokoro Extension which he allegedly purchased at N860m and renovated at the cost of N66m in 2012.

Other properties include a four-bedroomed duplex with a ‘boys quarters’ located at Road 38, Street 2, Ministers’ Hill, Mabushi which he allegedly bought at a cost of N500m; a three-bedroomed duplex and a three-bedroomed guest chalet located at 8 Kabala Road Unguwan Rimi, GRA, Kaduna State allegedly purchased at the cost of N80m while between N75m and N80m was spent on the renovation.

Umar also forfeited a six-bedroomed duplex with ‘boys’ quarters’ and a two-bedroomed guest chalet located at 14 Audu Bako Way, Nasarawa GRA, Kano State.

Justice J.T Tsoho, based on an EFCC’s affidavit, ordered an temporary forfeiture of the assets and the stoppage of any disposal, conveyance, mortgage, lease, sale or alienation or otherwise of the assets or properties.

The judge also authorised the chairman of the EFCC to appoint competent persons or firms to manage the assets and the proceeds realised from them to be lodged in an interest-yielding account pending the conclusion of Umar’s trial.

But Tsoho ordered the EFCC to file an undertaking to compensate Umar if it turns out that the forfeiture order ought not to have been granted.

While Umar served as Air Chief between September 2010 and 2012, he allegedly diverted about N558m from the Air Force account monthly.

At the last hearing on February 13, 2017, an EFCC witness, Air Commodore S. A. Yusahau (retd.), who is a former Director of Finance and Accounts, told the court how Umar used NAF funds to acquire the properties.

He said, “I receive all money of the Nigerian Air Force and disburse it as authorised by the defendant. The Nigerian Air Force received its funds to the tune of N4bn monthly.

“Of the N4bn, the actual figure used in paying staff salary was between N2.3bn and N2.4bn. Out of the remaining N1.6bn, N558.2m was usually set aside for upkeep of the defendant (Umar), while N120m was for the office of the DFA (Director of Finance and Accounts).”

Yusahau nararted how N558.2m that was set aside for the upkeep of the Chief of Air Staff’s office was always converted to its dollar equivalent and taken to Umar in his house.

Umar is among former security chiefs who saw public money as bonanza and allegedly crazily embezzled same.

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