Crime and Metro

JUST IN: EFCC Arrests BDC Operators In Abuja; Recovers Over $6 Million

In addition to seizing more than $6 million from BDC operators, the EFCC detained a currency speculator in Abuja.

On Wednesday, November 16, 2022, the Commission reportedly announced the arrest on its official Twitter account. The EFCC published a photo of a man who is alleged to have traded currencies. His name is Mustapha Naira.

The commission noted that the arrest was made as part of their mission to eradicate all forms of economic sabotage, including those that involve the foreign exchange market.

Statement from the EFCC: The EFCC claims that Mustapha was apprehended on Saturday in Abuja’s Wuse neighborhood.

“The EFCC has arrested one Mustapha Muhammed alias Muaspaha Naira as part of its ongoing operation to sanitize the foreign exchange market and rid it of speculators and all shades of economic saboteurs.”

“On Saturday, November 12, 2022, he was picked up by commission agents at Wuse Zone 4, the center of parallel market activity in the Federal Capital Territory.

“The suspect has made a useful statement while the investigation continues.”

In a related development, News One Nigeria reports that the EFCC said that some bureau de change operators who were recently arrested in Lagos, Abuja, and other parts of Nigeria were in possession of over $6 million.

The EFCC Chairman, Abdulrasheed Bawa, who made this known while speaking on the Nigerian Television Authority’s (NTA) radio, said that the arrests were part of efforts by the anti-graft agency to sanitize the foreign exchange sector.

Speaking on “Sanitizing Ungoverned Operators in the Forex Sector,” Bawa, who was represented by the Commission’s Director of Operations, Abdulkarim Chukkol, said that the EFCC’s arrest of BDC operators and currency speculators in the parallel market was not indiscriminate but a product of intelligence.

The EFCC Chairman said that “At the EFCC, we work with intelligence and with other stakeholders, and when we talk of illegal forex operators, you cannot just invite people on the street, even though sometimes you could, but generally you do not have a choice but to make an arrest.”

“Some were arrested with excess of $6 Million (Six Million United States Dollars), others with $2 Million (Two Million United States Dollars) and we know that these huge sums were not meant to be used in buying goods but stolen monies being laundered out of the country.”

The EFCC Chairman noted that the commission did not only recover some of the monies but secured their forfeiture to the Nigerian government while the culprits were prosecuted.

Bawa also emphasized the need for active inter-agency and stakeholder collaboration, pointing out that many of the over 6,000 registered BDCs do not belong to the Association of Bureau De Change Operators of Nigeria and are therefore out of the orbit of regulators.

The EFCC Chairman said that “the CBN guidelines are clear regarding returns by BDCs, but how many of them do this?”

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