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Nigeria's anti-graft agency to probe ex-oil regulator despite Dangote withdrawing a petition
Summary
Nigeria's ICPC said it will continue investigating former downstream oil regulator Farouk Ahmed after Aliko Dangote's lawyers withdrew the petition that prompted the probe, and said another agency has taken over parts of the case.
Content
Nigeria's anti-corruption agency said it will press ahead with an investigation of the former head of the downstream oil regulator despite a withdrawal of a complaint by businessman Aliko Dangote. The ICPC confirmed it received a January 5 letter from Dangote's lawyers withdrawing the petition that had triggered the probe. Dangote had filed the petition in December, raising governance concerns and alleging personal spending beyond declared income. The ICPC said the investigation is underway under its mandate and that another agency has taken over parts of the case.
Key points:
- The Independent Corrupt Practices and Other Related Offences Commission (ICPC) said it will continue its probe into former regulator Farouk Ahmed despite the withdrawal.
- The ICPC confirmed receipt on Jan. 5 of a letter from Aliko Dangote's lawyers withdrawing the December petition.
- Dangote's original petition cited governance concerns and alleged personal spending beyond declared income.
- Farouk Ahmed resigned late last year and has not publicly responded; the ICPC said another agency has assumed parts of the case.
Summary:
The ICPC announced the investigation is ongoing and parts of the matter have been transferred to another agency. Undetermined at this time.
