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Okereke-Onyiuke blew N1.3bn on trips, spent N223m on wrist watches, luxury yacht

Okereke-Onyiuke blew N1.3bn on trips, spent N223m on wrist watches, luxury yacht 1
The House of Representatives Ad-Hoc Committee probing the capital market
yesterday resumed hearing on the near collapse of the sector. Director-General,
Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC,) Ms Aruma Oteh, was grilled by the
lawmakers.

She told the panel how a former Director-General of the
Nigerian Stock Exchange (NSE), Dr. Ndi Onyiuke-Okereke allegedly spent N1.3
billion on trips, N186 million on Rolex wrist watches and N37 million on a
luxury yacht.


She also disclosed how NSE Council and a few members shared
N1.7 billion amongst themselves, even as executives of four banks used
depositors’ funds to buy up over 7 billion units of their
shares.

Indicting the leadership of the NSE for the near collapse of the
market, she said her commission’s inspection report “showed that important
committees such as the Risk and Compliance Committee (of NSE) last met in 2007
while the Disciplinary and Rules Committee last convened in 2005.
She also
said: “N1.7billion of the 2008 operational surplus was distributed to council
members and employees in violation of CAMA and SEC rules which preclude the NSE
from such, given that the NSE is a company limited by guarantee.

She
alleged that “other notable fraudulent transactions include the
re-classification of N1.3billion originally expended on business travels. Of
this sum, N953million was re-classified under “Software upgrade” and
subsequently expended as against being capitalized.
According to Oteh, the
NSE “spent N186million on 165 Rolex wristwatches as gifts for awardees out of
which only 73 were actually presented to them (awardees). The outstanding 92
Rolex watches valued at N99.5million, remain unaccounted for.

“NSE
bought a yacht for N37million and wrote down the book value within one year by
recognizing it in the books as a gift presented during its 2008 Long Service
Award (LSA), yet there are no records of the beneficiary. These were the kinds
of financial imprudence that were perpetrated at the NSE,” she told the
pnel
She accused past managements of Union Bank, FinBank and the defunct
Afribank and Intercontinental banks for fraudulently using depositors’ funds to
buy up the banks’ shares.
On FinBank, for instance, the SEC boss narrated how
its executive in 2008, incorporated 95 companies and used nine of those firms as
fronts to buy up N25 billion shares of the same bank.

Union Bank, she
said, borrowed N30.4 billion from foreign banks, allegedly handed them to Falcon
Securities, which in turn bought N30.8 billion worth of the bank’s shares. A
chain of transactions by Falcon Securities, she alleged, drove up the bank’s
shares from N23.30, in January 2007, to N50.33 in November of the same
year.
She decried the activities of “Wonder banks”, assuring that SEC was
prosecuting some of their patrons.
Efforts to reach Dr. Okereke-Onyiuke
yesterday were futile as calls to her Airtel line were not answered even though
it rang severally.

At the NSE where Okereke-Onyiuke was the
Director-General for eight years, Daily Sun was informed that the organization
could not speak for the embattled former boss since she had left the service for
over two years now.
However, a source close to Dr. Okereke-Onyiuke wondered
why such allegations are coming up now, saying that they are not
new.

“These allegations are not new. They have been bandied about since.
If a chief executive officer incurs expenses in the course of her job for the
organization, why should her name be dragged into the mud.”
According to the
source, Dr. Okereke-Onyiuke worked tirelessly to uplift the NSE, helping the
market to hit N15.64 trillion capitalization and bringing in 319 securities from
the 19 before her tenure into the market. He said it was also during her tenure
that the banking industry raised over N500 billion through the capital
market.

Chairman of Progressive Shareholders Association, Mr. Boniface
Okezie said instead of raising spurious allegations against the former DG, the
current Director-General of SEC should address the root causes of the market
collapse and how to restore investors’ confidence.

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