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Creativity and business must go hand in hand. The Story of the Epic Battle Between King Sunny Ade and Chief Bolarinwa Ab...
08/04/2022

Creativity and business must go hand in hand.

The Story of the Epic Battle Between King Sunny Ade and Chief Bolarinwa Abioro.
It was in 1974 that the news broke. Chief Bolarinwa Abioro, the Balogun of Ipokia, the Chairman of African Songs Limited, had taken his star musician to court! Everyone who knew KSA knew Abioro. Everyone who knew Abioro knew Sunday Adeniyi. Sunny was the son. Abioro was the father. What could have gone wrong between father and son?

KSA was the second artiste to be signed on to the stable of African Songs Limited. Ayinde Bakare was the first. Sikiru Ayinde Barrister was the third. Like most creative people, young Sunny Ade was more concern about his passion and less concern about the business aspect of music. His passion was to play music and to excel as a musician.

It was enough that Abioro – one of the biggest men in the music industry at the time – was ready to promote him. They brought documents for Sunny and his band boys to sign. They called it a contract. It could have been called any other name for all that KSA cared. Won ni ko wa je saara, o ni ojo ti wonu ju. Se ata ni won ni ko mu wa ni, abi iyo. You are invited to a free feast, you are complaining about the short notice, are they asking you to bring salt or pepper? Sunny Ade and his boys didn’t hesitate. It is doubtful if any of them read what the contract said. The most important thing was that they were going to become recording artistes. Sunny signed. His band boys signed. Everybody was happy.

The contract was for 5 years. However before its expiration, KSA had become a household name. His album, Challenge Cup, sold in excess of 500,000 copies. It was certain that King Sunny Ade was going to dominate the music scene for a very long time to come. African Songs Ltd knew a good product when it saw one. The management of the company didn’t wait for the first contract to expire before they brought a new contract.

The new agreement was carefully worded. KSA and his band boys agreed to perform and record exclusively for ASL for a period of five years. ASL had full copyrights to all compositions and recordings of Sunny Ade. ASL was entitled to the sole right of production, reproduction, and use of King Sunny Ade’s performance throughout the world. That was not all. During the period of the agreement, KSA was prohibited from rendering any performance whatsoever to himself, any company or group of persons.

The contract also stipulated that ASL had the option to renew the agreement at its expiration for a further term of two years or for any longer period. Sunny Ade had no such right.

That was not all. On the sale of every album which price was then fixed at N6.00, KSA and his boys were entitled to a princely sum of 20 kobo. Yes, you read that right. African Songs would go home with the remaining N5. 80 kobo. Onigegewura’s mathematics has never been good. He is just an amateur historian. You can do the sum yourself.

Still basking in the euphoria of his growing fame, Sunny gratefully signed again. His band boys signed. 20 kobo was still something. Orogun iya re da sokoto fun o, o ni ko bale, melo ni iya to bi o da fun o? You are complaining that the trousers made for you by your step-mother was not long enough, where is the one your own mother made for you?

They were expecting their 20 kobo royalty on every album. Well, when the time came for actual payment, it was then discovered that mathematically and arithmetically, it was not supposed to be 20 kobo. They had not factored the cost of publicity and promotion! And since it was the artiste that was being promoted, he must be the one to bear the cost! After the addition and subtraction, Sunny was given 15 kobo per album.

KSA was not Chike Obi, the mathematician. But he knew that 20 kobo and 15 kobo were not the same thing. Compared with his contemporaries in the music industry, KSA realized that he was holding the short end of the stick. His colleague, Baba Commander, Chief Ebenezer Obey was earning as high as 70 kobo per album. Others were earning between 35 kobo and 60 kobo.

That was when Sunny decided to ask Chief Abioro for a raise of the royalty payment. The chairman listened patiently to KSA and his colleagues. He was nodding as they canvassed one reason after another why a raise was in order. When they finished, Chief Abioro flipped open a file he had on his table.

He brought out a bundle of documents. Even from where he was seated across the table, Sunny saw that it was a copy of the contract he signed. “An agreement is an agreement. It is a binding contract!” The chief informed them. “This is what you signed. This is what you are entitled to! No more, No less.” He returned the documents to the file. Case dismissed.
But Sunny was not done. “Chief, this is not about contract. You are our father. Our request is for adequate compensation! Let’s leave the contract aside.” Chief Abioro looked at the young star the way a parent looks at a child asking for another candy. “Leave the contract aside? We should leave the contract aside?”

The chairman asked incredulously. “You know, it would be nice to leave the contract aside. But you know what? That would be illegal!”
Haba! Illegality ke! . It was then that someone brought up the idea of requesting some of his friends to plead their case. Sunny agreed. After all, Eni ti o mo oju Ogun, ni pa obi ni ‘re. It is the person who is conversant with Ogun, the god of iron, that is usually given the duty to administer its rites. They went to meet Prince Okunade Sijuwade who would later become the Ooni of Ife.

They also met with Chief Afolabi Joseph. Even Chief Ebenezer Obey was also requested to intervene as well as Chief Nurudeen Alowonle.
The eminent persons appeared in the court of the Balogun of Ipokia as ‘amici curiae’ on behalf of the musicians. Amici curiae are lawyers invited by the judge(s) to assist in filling briefs that may be helpful to the court in deciding a case. Our eminent persons argued their case like experienced advocates. They cited relevant sections of the unwritten Yoruba constitution.

They cited Yoruba proverbs. They made reference to the story of Oduduwa. The presiding chairman listened to their submissions and summarily dismissed the case. Contract is contract!

Chief did not only dismiss the request for a raise. He opened another file on his table and brought out a new set of documents. Your guess is right! A new five-year contract! By now, Sunny Ade had learnt enough law. He had become a professional mathematician. He had obtained his Master of Business Administration from practical experience. He knew the implication of putting pen to paper. He applied for an adjournment.

The King of African Beats found himself in a quandary. His new songs were ready but Chief had threatened not to release any new album until he signed the new contract. And KSA was not ready to sign any new contract until the issue of royalty was resolved.

KSA remembered his grandmother’s proverb. Ti abiku ba gbon ogbon ati ku ni igba erun, iya abiku a gbon ogbon ati sin oku e si etido. If an abiku decided to die during the dry season when he knew that the ground would be hard to dig, his parents would also decide to bury him by the riverside where the ground would not be hard to dig.

Sunny Ade decided to release his record with another company. His plan was to use the album to bargain for a better deal with African Songs. Instead of the measly 20 kobo, he was confident that the chairman would be ready to pay him at least N1.00 per copy. The album was recorded in Nigeria but taken to London for mixing. What Sunny Ade did not know was that Chief Abioro was a master at the game. Before Sunny could get a copy of his own album, Chief Abioro was already in possession of the new record.

Baba Ibeji was composing fresh materials at home when the court bailiffs arrived. They served him with an order of interim injunction! The court order was as comprehensive as it was broad. Sunny Ade was prohibited from sale, distribution, marketing, dealing, etc. etc. of the record. He read the order again. Even without being a lawyer, he knew the implication of the document he was holding.

With palpable emotion, his mind went back to how he came to Lagos from Abeokuta with only one shilling and eighteen pence! He remembered his years with Baba Sala. He recalled how he got stranded with Baba Sala’s travelling theatre in Jebba and Kano. How he did not see his mother for two years whilst he suffered to make it as a musician. He recalled how his first album sold only 13 copies. Now when he was at the threshold of success, this court order! With grim determination, he knew he couldn’t afford to quit.

He remembered his first day at Oshodi when he missed his way trying to locate Moses Olaiya’s house and how he was directed instead to Dr. Victor Olaiya at Tinubu. He recalled how he knelt down in the dust of Oshodi to pray.
Immediately he knew what he must do. Sunny went down on his knees and with an emotional voice, he prayed and prayed. It was not the Sunday Adeniyi that knelt down to pray that stood up. He had become empowered. He had become emboldened. That same evening, he established his own label.

Sunny Alade Records was born! He didn’t bother to sit down again. He remembered the threat of Chief Abioro to bring him down at all cost. He needed a lawyer who knew his law and who would be prepared to fight his cause against the Magnate. He went off in search of Gani Fawehinmi.

Gani collected the court papers and looked at the claims. He looked at his client. He looked again at the claims. Chief Abioro was not leaving anything to chance. He knew what he wanted from the court. His lawyer had read the agreement between African Songs Limited and Sunday Adeniyi.

Chief Abioro wanted only four things from the court: a declaration that the agreement between ASL and Sunday Adeniyi and his boys was still subsisting; an injunction restraining Sunny Ade from distributing or selling the record; an account of all sales of the record; and N1 million for breach of contract.

I hope you are not sneering at the N1 million as being ‘chicken change’. Remember this was in 1974. The price of a brand new Volkswagen Beetle car was about N500 at that time. N1 million in 1974 was a princely sum!

On the day of the trial, the court was filled to capacity. Gani Fawehinmi was armed with every conceivable legal authority. The law books he brought to the court were more than enough to open a library. There were books on Contract. There were books on Human Rights. There were volumes on Intellectual Property. Gani even brought some books on Slave Trade.

The first application Gani brought before the court was for an order to compel African Songs to produce its statement of account over the preceding three years. The court granted the order. It was discovered that the company was making almost N900,000 every year from the sale of Sunny Ade Records.

It was also discovered that the total sum that KSA received was N62,000 in the almost ten years he was with the company. How can you be asking me what is 900,000 divided by 62,000? I have told you that I’m not a mathematician. Please don’t ask me about percentages or fractions.

Gani did not forget to raise the issue of how 20kobo became 15 kobo. He also cross examined Chief Abioro at length on the onerous terms contained in the contract. Gani put it to the chief that the contract was in restraint of trade and that it was therefore null and void as it amounted to colonization of King Sunny Ade, a free citizen of the Federal Republic of Nigeria and a citizen of the Commonwealth!

My Lord Justice L. J. Dosunmu listened patiently to the parties. His Lordship also asked the witnesses some probing cases. The court thereafter adjourned the matter to February 14, 1975 for judgment. It did not even occur to the King of African Beats that the day was St. Valentine’s Day.

His only preoccupation was to find out the direction in which the pendulum of justice was going to swing.

On February 14, people started arriving at the court as early as 7am. The court officials had hectic time controlling the mammoth crowd that had come to court to witness the historic decision. In His Lordship’s judgment, Justice Dosunmu held that although some of the terms of the contract were stringent, that was not a ground for holding the contract invalid.

In effect, the contract between ASL and KSA was therefore valid. As the court pronounced on the validity of the contract, Sunny looked at his lawyer. Gani signaled to him to be calm, the court had only resolved one issue out of four.
With regard to the second claim, the court held that since the records in question had been distributed all over Nigeria, there was no way the court could order them to be recalled. The court therefore refused to restrain Sunny Ade and his marketer, M. Ola Kazim from distributing the album. A tiny smile crossed Sunny’s face.

You recall that Chief Abioro was asking for N1,000,000 as damages for breach of contract. The court ruled that for recording with another company during the subsistence of the contract, Sunny Ade was liable. He was asked to pay N300! Yes, Three Hundred Naira! From N1,000,000 to N300! Sunny smiled for the first time.

The court having found that the contract was still subsisting, KSA was ordered not to release another album pending the expiration of the contract with Chief Abioro’s company, which was due in six months. Six months! What am I going to be eating? Sunny thought. Apparently, this was the only part of the judgment that Anti Wura, Buroda Alani’s third wife must have heard, and heard wrongly too!

As if reading Sunny Ade’s mind, Justice Dosunmu said he realized that Sunny Ade would need to eat and feed his family in the six months that the contract had to run. His Lordship therefore held that the injunction was limited to only recording of albums and that Sunny Ade was free to do live performances for fees. His Lordship said that this was in order to avoid a situation where the King of Music would starve or be compelled to go back to Chief Abioro.

The judge had hardly risen before King Sunny Ade jumped up to hug his counsel. He was free! He gave Gani a bear hug. He had learnt his lesson. Creativity and Business must go hand in hand. Years later, the King of Music recalled: “The lesson I learnt from the episode is that if an artiste is churning out hit records, he needs to keep an eye on the business side of things. If not, he would be in a mess.

(Credit: Written and copyrighted by Onigegewura)Creativity and business must go hand in hand.

19/01/2022

Allocutus:

Example—Two.

AN AMAZING TOUCHING APPEAL TO THE COURT TO PASS A DEATH SENTENCE ON THE ONE WHO KILLED MR. PETERS

My Lord, the defense counsel has poured so much emotions to this court. We must not fall for it my Lord. I, in some measure, agree with the defense counsel that life is a precious thing and must be guarded even with the very last drop of our blood. It is a duty we owe to everyone, to you your lordship, to my wife, my children, even to Mr Peters. Your Lordship a man has lost a son. A knife, five inches long was pulled out of his heart with blood oozing by the same man who plunged it in. He stood and watched him die eyeball to eyeball in the most sordid and ungodly manner like a man without dignity. Peters died holding his wounded heart, waving a hand like a drowning man, but no one, not even the defendant, his killer, showed a pint of pity. He died struggling with life; he died in the pool of his own blood. The Accused was there enjoying as he gasped for breath! Lying now in the mortuary is the son of a weak mother whose life has been cut short by the same person, like everyone of us, who had a duty to save it ...a duty not just to Peters' but to the society; to that weak woman seated there with eyes filled with pains. She has been robbed of her child and joy. Ruthlessly. An able-bodied youth yet to have a family of his own died in cold blood. Worst still, in the hands of his own hearty Friend. We can lose many things to forget them, we can forget even ourselves sometimes, but our own blood, how do we forget this one? Peters died in his raging prime! Your Lordship I am not asking you to order any body's death; I am neither asking this court to deny anyone the benefits of a father, I am only scared of one who can kill with a knife, I am most scared of what he can do with a gun.

The writers of our laws did not see it in the standpoint of a sane man picking up a knife with great enthusiasm into the body of another man. But in this case, the killer of Peters was sane when he was digging out Peters' heart with the knife in his hand and he is still today, sane. What exactly did Peters do? Was he an offender? A rogue? A Criminal? Peters was none of these things. No criminal record, flings or the likes. He was as pure and saintly as he looked. He died of the envy of another man who wanted him dead in order to take his place as the Direction General of Wencoo Company. A man who was supposed to be his best friend, a confidant whom he told all his secrets. Same man; same best friend took his life. What life is worse than this? Just Envy. When has it become a crime to have a life just like everyone else? When has it become a duty to send people to their early graves and plead pity or mercy or forgiveness? Everyone is entitled to the same air, to the same peace, to the same long life that the defendant is seeking this court to grant him. Why then is Peters an exception to all these good things of life? Why Peters?

This is not what we think will be better for us. To keep and feed our own death-throb, to live closer to our own graves while alive. The defense counsel is telling us to send to prison a man who will come out tomorrow to aim our throats; to show the same mercy he didn't find worthy for Peters. This court is too sacrosanct to spill anybody's blood, but someone else's blood cries before God like the blood of Abel. Someone's blood cries down to us my lord. We Should be more wary of people who take the lives of others for the fun of it. Your Lordship these people are not insane, they are not schizophrenic, they are not paranoid. They are normal people just like everyone of us seated here today with reason and in full appreciation of what could be the natural consequences of their acts. They cannot be contained; they cannot be treated because nothing is wrong with them. Just like this man standing trial today, they just kill people. No reason. No fault. The defense counsel is asking for a space for him in prison. I only pray that our prison inmates this nation is spending so much to re-socialise are safe. Our law does not specify death penalty because it is a necessary thing to do. It is not for the purpose of killing anyone at random and could never have been! It is to give ourselves an answer to the most breaking questions like this: a thing not ever imaginable into any human mind that a human being can be slaughtered like a fowl not even in the manner Peters died. To kill another man's child, a good societal man with all vigor and reliving future, dreams, prospects and promises cut short. Without a reason. Just envy. We owe to everyone a duty of care, a promise from our deepest of heart to watch everyone's back, a true sense of brother's keeping! But look at Peters, poor boy lying miserably in state for doing nothing wrong!

This court has been urged forcibly to consider three little children and release to the society a terror. A first offender with Brutus's dagger, forcing a whole full knife into the heart of a defenseless man. Your Lordship this should worry us. If prison is what is good for people like this, let your Lordship consider it, but may it be finely placed in the record of this court for reference. To remind posterity what happened in this court today. That a sociopath was let loose upon them by the system, a court they have given everything in trust. No one has ever been born with a bloom of roses and even those born on fleece also cry. Our conscience should rather be put to check before it plunges us into irreparable damages. I agree that certain offenses require the intervention of conscience, for such matters we ordinarily would not know, not envy. Not killing people without offering at least a rebuttable explanations for this unmerciful killing. A secured society is safer for these children, safer for their mother and to the likes of Peters tomorrow. My lord this case has stood so many ears, so many vagabonds out there in the streets who are currently waiting for your judgement to draw their plans. I will call on this court not to wake to this bid of raising the animals that our laws have chosen to keep at bay. If we must show mercy for this heinous and and heartshredding crime, let this mercy also extend to those men whose crimes were not even anywhere closer compared to the merciless slaughter that Peters suffered. But they are waiting, one at a time for their death. What will our conscience also tell us here? Let this mercy be extended to everyone then we can see whether anyone can ever sleep again with his two eyes closed.

I beg your Lordship to follow the letters of the law and ensure justice in this case.

Abel

18/01/2022

Allocutus:

Example—Three

ADVOCACY:

(A plea of Allocutus for the one who r***d a lady)

I am grateful Your Lordship how insightful Your Lordship's judgment has well settled this matter. We can now allow the matter to rest. However, since in Your Lordship's grace, few minutes have been given to us to make our final statement, I can now say few things before I resume my seat again.

My Lord has found that Mr . Philip, my client, r***d the victim, and now let him be crucified. Our law says that people like him should be abandoned to waste their entire lives in prison. ButMy Lord, this is a boy who just turned 20 years. The trails of his birthday celebration still linger on the minds of everybody who attended that ceremony. A student of Economics who until the date of this charge against him was top of his class. The prosecution counsel is asking us to waste this talent in prison to satisfy the law and pacify the victim. I am not comfortable with r**e cases either but here we are challenged with values and time. The truth that all victims of r**e will be any better by confining the defendants! My Lord, what is true is that the society will always remember the victims of r**e even if the punishment for the likes of Mr. Philip is death. Throwing defendants of r**e behind bars will solve nothing beyond punishment of the perpetrators, it has never extended to the corrections of the victims. The experience remains alive and well. Our laws are made on the tenet of balance and more dependable on finding solutions for the one who has lost something. And imprisoning the defendant doesn't give this noble solution.

Your Lordship, it really has not come to wonder us why a young man with such a bright future would want to spend the rest of his life in the dungeon. 20 years of age! Worst things have happened in our world, r**e one of them, but there has never been anything worst than ending the clear future of a child. Our society frowns at wrongdoing but it has often bade us to tread with caution before pronouncing the end of another. There's nothing worst than death than turning a brilliant child to live out his whole life within the stinks of prison walls. Your lordship I have seen a man disinherit his child, but I have never seen a society prepared to sacrifice talents on the altar of reconcilable offences. If there's any clear case Your Lordship could temper justice with mercy, here it is. It is a common fact of life that all victims of wrongdoing wants restitution, and it remains the finest settlement of all time, where it is acceptable to the victim, to return her to the state she was wrongly denied. I think our laws are infiltrators of peace. We truly understand how it feels to be in the shoes of the victim. A young lady who so long had guarded her chastity only to be lost to a man she didn't have time to decide whether she could like. If I had a machete any closer I would put it in the hand of Miss Chioma. And I believe in her state she will use it on this boy. This is what happens where anger precedes reason. And it is such a bad pain even heavier than the crime on trial when Miss Chioma realizes someday, later in life, how much her overreactions rendered useless the life of a young boy she had in her power to save. My Lord sometimes I am lost trying to understand the better way to appease victims of certain circumstances and still obtain their forgiveness. I will rather choose that option if there is because it is not the spirit of a good law to resolve a dispute and keep an unending scar of enmity.

Sometime in the past I once entered an elevator in the 90s, and in this elevator was a very pretty young lady. Just the two of us. I had my hat in my hand and seated on the elevator stool, I dozed off. The beautiful lady woke me up and I saw my expensive hat on her head as she gave out such a wonderful smiley face that I nearly forgot she was wearing my hat. Then I thought I could have her or any other lady smile for me if I wanted with my hat on her head in all pleasant meetings like that in the elevator. We have thousand occasions like this that we never expected to be as much happier from a person we barely had met before, man or woman, the reason of a sole happiness we can let go even our greatest pains. My Lord, each of us has had a moment like this…I believe Miss Chioma, too. And in this, there is a call for us all. A call for me, a call for you your lordship... and a call for Miss Chioma. A call to have a bit in every corners of our hearts a pity for the frailties of man. A pity to that single weakness in us we wish we never had. It is a call for all of us, but a most important call for Miss Chioma. To look into the eyes of this young boy and see the pity; how sorry and broken he has become. I know that this matter, as a matter of principles, is no more in your hands, but your forgiveness can somehow help the court decide another way. Help us save a falling child. Your Lordship let's save this future. Let's do this Miss Chioma.

It is now important I end this here. I now let Your Lordship to decide Philip's future. To decide where is best suited for the fate of this bright future: dungeon or university of learning.

Thank you everyone for your time.

06/01/2022

Under Section 308 of the Nigerian Constitution, the governors of a state are conferred with immunity from both criminal and civil proceedings during their tenure in office. As a result of this, it is only after an individual's governorship term has lapsed that proceedings in court may be brought against him.

The Supreme court of Nigeria held in the case of JOSEPH NWOBIKE SAN VS. FEDERAL REPUBLIC OF NIGERIA that the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission has no power to prosecute offences that are not corruption cases. The court held that the only corruption cases it can investigate are cases involving movement of cash from Nigeria to foreign countries and corruption cases involving federal finances, being a creation of federal law.

Also, it was further held by the court that the EFCC has no power to look into the finances of states. This means that if a governor stole money from a state where he was governor, the EFCC has no power to prosecute that governor and that the Governor can only be prosecuted by the attorney general of the state or the Nigerian police or any other agency that is covered by the Criminal Code, Penal code or any other law.

Prior to this decision of the Supreme Court, it was not uncommon to hear that the EFCC has instituted an action against a past governor in terms of corruption while he was in office. This was as a result of Section 12 to 18, and Section 46 of the EFCC Amended Act 2004, which empowered the EFCC to prosecute all kind of cases whether emanating from the state or federal government.

However, the implication of this decision of the Supreme Court is that states are now free to make their own laws to establish anti corruption agencies to deal with corruption cases emanating in the states. Also, the police or attorney general of a state can be used to prosecute those suspected of corruption instead of the EFCC.

05/01/2022

EFCC has no right to arrest, prosecute state governors after their tenure – Supreme court rules

A supreme court sitting has ruled that The Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) no longer has the right to arrest or prosecute any state governor after his tenure.

This decision was made in the ruling of the case involving dr. Joseph Nwobike SAN vs. the federal republic of Nigeria, last week.

The supreme court has held that the EFCC does not have the powers to prosecute offenses that are not corruption cases and that the only corruption cases it can investigate are cases involving the movement of cash from Nigeria to foreign countries and corruption cases involving federal finances, being a creation of federal law.

The court also held that the EFCC has no power to look into the finances of states. Thus if a governor stole money from a state where he was governor, the EFCC has no power to prosecute that governor.

The governor can only be prosecuted by the attorney general of the state or the Nigerian police, or any other agency that is covered by the Criminal Code, Penal code, or any other law.

Thus the EFCC, by the judgment in the case of Dr. Joseph Nwobika SAN VS Federal Republic of Nigeria, can no longer hide under section 12 to 18, and section 46 of the EFCC Amended Act 2004, to prosecute all kinds of cases whether emanating from the state or federal government, as its powers are regulated by the global action against corruption as regulated by the United Nations conventions which Nigeria signed.

The federal government also can no longer use the EFCC to control the governors of the state and the federal government can no longer use the EFCC to persecute any politician that is not in its good book.

States are now free to make their own laws to establish anti-corruption agencies to deal with corruption cases emanating in the states, though the Criminal Code and penal code have provisions that deal with corruption..

On the other hand, states like Imo State where the sitting governor believes that former governor Rochas Okorocha stole from Imo State, can now use the police to investigate Rochas and prosecute him in the state High court for stealing Imo State money, if the investigation shows that he stole money.

This decision may have dwelt a very big blow to any fight against corruption as governors of the states can now steal as they like.

A governor and his cronies can now steal as much as they want from the State, and all he needs to do is to ensure that the new governor was installed by them and the new governor would watch the back of the old governor, although this is subject to the powers of the police to charge anyone to court but the powers of Nolle prosequi of the Attorney general of the state under section 179 of the Constitution of Nigeria 1999 and under the Criminal Code and penal code is still supervening and all-embracing.

Also, the EFCC can no longer investigate government contractors or anybody that was complicit in stealing or embezzlement of state money.

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