Culled from Thisday                          
( Hon. Farouk Lawan)
 The report of the House of Representatives Committee on Ethics and 
Privileges that probed the allegations that the suspended chairman, 
House Ad Hoc Committee on the Monitoring of the Subsidy Regime, Hon. 
Farouk Lawan, collected bribe during its probe of fuel marketers, is 
ready for submission.
 The report, which THISDAY gathered might exonerate the beleaguered 
lawmaker, who was also suspended as the chairman, House Committee on 
Education, will be submitted any time after the House resumes plenary on
 November 8.
 The House in June had directed its Committee on Ethics and Privileges 
to probe the allegation that Lawan and the scribe of the committee, Mr. 
Boniface Emalano, collected $620,000 in three instalments from Chairman 
of Zenon Petroleum Limited, Mr. Femi Otedola, as part payment to remove 
Zenon’s name from the list of companies that collected foreign exchange 
from the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) without importing petroleum 
products.
The $620,000 was meant to be part payment for the $3 million bribe Lawan had allegedly demanded from the oil chief to delist his company.
The $620,000 was meant to be part payment for the $3 million bribe Lawan had allegedly demanded from the oil chief to delist his company.
 A member of the Ethics and Privileges Committee, Hon. Afam Ogene, told 
reporters yesterday in Abuja that the report had been ready for weeks.
 Ogene, who is also the Deputy Chairman, House Committee on Media and 
Publicity, said it would be submitted to the House as soon as the 
legislative chamber resumed from its current recess.
 Although Ogene declined to give further insight into the 
recommendations of the committee, a source said the report might 
exonerate Lawan.
 Since the cash-for-clearance scandal broke, Lawan, besides appearing 
before the House Committee, has also been investigated by the police and
 is currently on administrative bail.
 The embattled lawmaker, who had initially denied receiving the money 
from Otedola, changed the story as incontrovertible evidence of the 
scandal made its way into the public domain.
 When he appeared before the House Ethics and Privileges Committee, 
Lawan, who gave his testimony in camera, admitted to collecting $500,000
 from Otedola.
 Otedola, on the other hand, refused to give evidence in camera when he appeared before the committee.
 Sources told THISDAY that Otedola might have inadvertently given Lawan 
an escape route when he (Otedola) refused to hand over to the committee 
evidence to substantiate his allegations that Lawan and Emenalo received
 a total of $620,000.
 Otedola had argued that the committee had ulterior motives by its 
insistence on conducting the investigation behind closed doors.
 However, several probes have not been able to establish the whereabouts
 of the $620,000, as Lawan has stuck to his claim that he gave it to the
 House Committee Chairman, Narcotics Drugs and Financial Crimes, Hon. 
Adams Jagaba, while the latter has maintained that he did not receive 
any money from him.
 
 
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