ALLEGED N750M POLYMER NOTE BRIBERY: FG MOVES TO EXTRADITE EX-MINT BOSS, OKOYOMON TO UK FOR TRIAL
 
  
Former
 managing director of the Nigerian Security Printing and Minting Company
 (NSPMC), Emmanuel Ehidiamhen Okoyomon is to be extradited to face trial in the United Kingdom.
 It was learnt that already the extradition process has been initiated 
through the office of the Attorney General of the Federation under a 
mutual legal assistance request by the British Government.
 Okoyomon,
 who holds dual Nigerian and British citizenship was the chief executive
 of the NSMPC until November 2013 when he was suspended by the board of 
the Central Bank of Nigeria in the wake of the N1000 notes disappearance
 scandal. He has however been under investigation since 2012 by 
Nigeria’s anti-graft police, the EFCC following a request for that by 
the British National Crime Agency.
 To facilitate his extradition 
process, a top official of the agency told iReports-ng.com in Abuja 
yesterday that Okomoyon may have been taken into custody preparatory to 
his appearance in court where a judge needs to approve of his 
extradition before he can be flown to face trial in the UK.
 The 
request followed the discovery by the Australian authorities that some 
Nigerian officials at the Central Bank of Nigeria and the Mint, received
 bribes from Securency Pty Limited, a polymer substrate producing 
company for the contract to produce N20 polymer notes for the Central 
Bank of Nigeria between 2006 and 2008. The bribes were routed through 
offshore accounts in the UK and other jurisdictions.
 The EFCC 
investigation was said to have uncovered a web of forgery, identity 
fraud and money laundering running into millions of naira. The erstwhile
 Mint boss allegedly used the names of his driver and clerk to open 
different bank accounts in which he diverted several alleged bribery 
funds without their knowledge.
 He allegedly forged a driver’s 
license with the photograph of his driver but bearing a different name 
belonging to his official clerk, to open the account, in which 
N368million proceeds of laundered bribery funds were traced, with 
Okoyomon as the sole beneficiary. Over N750million is alleged to have 
exchanged hands between officials of the CBN, the NSPMC and Securency 
International Pty of Australia, (now Innovia Security Pty Limited).
 

 
 
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