EFCC Explains Why It Fought With DSS, NIA ~ Nigerian News > 26/01/2018

The Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) has explained why its personnel engaged in a brawl with operatives of the Department of State Services (DSS) and the National Intelligence Agency (NIA) in Abuja this week.

On Tuesday, November 21, 2017, the EFCC stormed apartments of immediate past Director of the DSS, Ita Ekpeyong and sacked DG of the NIA, Ayodele Oke, in the Asokoro district of Abuja.

The mission was to arrest both men and spirit them out of Asokoro for grilling.

However, it didn’t quite pan out that way.

EFCC personnel were stopped from gaining access to the property of both men by gun wielding DSS and NIA agents.

Guns were cocked, muscles were flexed and shouting matches rented the Abuja skyline as agents from the security agencies battled for some supremacy.

Declining invitations

The brawl was arguably the most discussed subject on Nigerian social media all Tuesday.

EFCC operatives who spoke to Pulse on the basis of anonymity explained that they had valid warrants of arrest with them.

Former DSS boss Ekpeyong had been on the EFCC radar for alleged complicity in the $2.1B arms scandal which starred former NSA Sambo Dasuki, Pulse was told.

“Both men had declined repeated invitations to our offices. They left us with no choice”, Pulse was told.

Oke was going to be arrested for the N13B found in an Ikoyi apartment back in April.

During an event in Abuja on Wednesday, acting EFCC chairman Ibrahim Magu declared that no one was above the law while referencing the ugly incident.

A bunch of unnamed EFCC operatives told Punch newspaper that DSS and NIA personnel who prevented them from effecting the arrests, went beyond their briefs.

“Mr. Ekpeyong Ita is being investigated for offences bordering on alleged theft and diversion of public funds. Shortly after we arrived, the DSS reinforced its security presence at the property, with the deployment of about 30 armed operatives.

“The refusal of the DSS operatives to allow the EFCC execute valid search and arrest warrants is really worrisome. I don’t know whether it is within their brief to prevent a law enforcement agency from executing arrest or a search warrant on a property belonging to a retired member of staff of the agency.

“The suspect in question is not a serving officer of the DSS, which makes this action particularly reprehensible.”

‘No wrong done’

However, there are reports that the DSS and NIA operatives said they were acting on “orders from above” when they stood in the EFCC’s way. They said they had done no wrong.

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