Ex-Minister Mike Aondoakaa Sues U.S. Government Over Visa Revocation
Disgraced
former Attorney General of the Federation and Minister of Justice,
Michael Aondoakaa, has sued the American government, seeking explanation
for the revocation of his U.S. non-immigrant visa.
The
U.S. government had revoked Mr Aondoakaa's visa and those of members of
his family soon after he left office due to his alleged link to
corruption.
An
unnamed U.S. diplomat confirmed that the former minister's visa was
revoked under Proclamation 7750 that empowers the U.S. authorities to
bar anyone with links to corruption from entering the U.S.
However, further details about the revocation were not disclosed.
The
former minister filed a case against the State Department after a
Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) request he filed was turned down.
He
then approached a United States District Court asking it to compel the
U.S. to release documents related to the revocation of his visa to him,
according to court papers.
The
suit, filed in a US district Court, District of New Jersey, by Mr
Aondoakaa's U.S. attorney, Thomas Moseley, was instituted few weeks
after the ex-minister denied he was banned from entering the U.S.
"I
have not been banned from entering the United States and I have my visa
intact," Mr Aondoakaa had said in a statement released on June 26,
2010.
"Secondly,
none of my relatives has a student visa to the United States as claimed
by some publications. Therefore, the US Government cannot revoke what
they did not issue."
However,
the court documents shows that on August 10, 2010, Mr Moseley filed the
FOIA suit against the US Department of State asking for the release of
documents showing reasons why his client's visa was revoked.
"This
is an action under the Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) as amended, 5
U.S.C & 552 et seq. to enjoin the defendant from withholding certain
records sought by the plaintiff including document relevant to the
reasons for which his non-immigrant visa was revoked," the court
documents read.
However,
the Department of State did not provide the details sought by Mr
Aondoakaa after the expiration of 20 days statutory period for the
documents to be provided.
Mr
Aondoakaa therefore asked the court to order the State Department to
make the documents he sought available to him in "their entirety". He
asked the court to award him the cost of disbursement plus attorney fee
as well as expediting the proceedings of the complaint.
The
documents also included an unsigned court summon ordering the
Department of State to provide Mr Aondoakaa the information he sought.
"A
lawsuit has been filed against you. Within 21 days after service of
this summons on you (not counting the day you received it) – or 60 days
if you are the United State or a United State agency or an officer or an
employee of the United State… you must serve on the plaintiff an answer
to the attached compliant or a motion under rule 12 of the Federal Rule
of Civil Procedure."
"If you fail to respond, judgement by default will be entered against you for the relief demanded in the complaint."
It is unclear whether the State Department eventually provided my Aondoakaa the details he sought.
The State Department and the United States embassy in Nigeria did not respond to emails sent to them.
Mr Aondoakaa, who is believed to be
nursing a governorship ambition in his native state of Benue, couldn't
be reached on his mobile phone number for comment on the suit. He didn't
answer or return calls.
His attorney, Mr Moseley, also did not respond to our email neither did he return our calls.
The many sins of Aondoakaa
Mr Aondoakaa, a prominent member of
late President Umaru Yar'Adua's government, was notorious for his brash
support of the government and his shameless defence of corrupt former
governor of Delta State, James Ibori, who is now serving a 13-year
prison term in the United Kingdom for money laundering offences.
As Attorney General, Mr Aondoakaa did
everything to block the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC)
from prosecuting Mr Ibori and other corrupt officials.
He lied to British investigators
requesting information on the former governor under the Mutual Legal
Assistant Treaty between both countries.
Mr Aondoakaa also wrote a letter saying
Mr Ibori had not been charged to any court in Nigeria. That was after
the EFCC had charged Mr Ibori to court soon after he left office as
governor.
True to his nature, Mr Aondoakaa denied
writing any such letter but was forced to shamefully recant after a
copy of the letter was published in the media.
He also declined the request by the
London Metropolitan Police to allow officials of the EFCC to stand as
prosecuting witness against Mr Ibori.
On September 18, 2007, the former
minister wrote a letter to French authorities questioning the
appropriateness of prosecuting former oil minister Dan Etete, implicated
in the N155 billion Malabu Oil scandal, for money laundering since
Nigeria had neither complained nor investigated Mr Etete for the said
crime.
"Permit me to state for the avoidance
of any doubt that this office is unaware of any complaint or allegation
of money laundering against the petitioner (Etete) to warrant any
instruction to emanate from this office to any person howsoever called
or described to proceed against the petitioner in relation to the
ongoing prosecution in Paris," he wrote.
Mr Etete was later convicted for money laundering offences by a Paris court.
He also shielded the owners of Globe
Motors, Vaswani Brothers from investigation and prosecution. The
brothers were later indicted and deported by the government for gross
corruption on the Nigerian people.
Deliberately misinterpreting the law
As Nigeria's chief legal officer, Mr
Aondoakaa ironically showed a high disregard for the law of the country.
When he is not deliberately misinterpreting laws to shield his corrupt
cronies, he is busy displaying schoolboy ignorance of the tenets of
local and international laws.
One of Mr Aondoakaa's pastime as
Minister of Justice was his endless berating of UK authorities over the
indictment of serial fraudster, Mr. Ibori. Mr Aondoakaa argued that the
indictment of corrupt Nigerians by foreign authorities was a usurpation
of Nigerian jurisdiction. He apparently was unaware that international
law allows countries to assume jurisdiction for offences committed
outside their national boarders especially where such offences have
international implication.
Debarred
In 2010, the Legal Privileges Committee
(LPPC) suspended Mr Aondoakaa from using the rank of the Senior
Advocate of Nigeria for two years following a petition by the Committee
for the Defence of Human Rights (CDHR) and a ruling by a Calabar Federal
High Court on June 1, 2010, that he was unfit to hold the office of the
Attorney General or any public office in Nigeria.
The statement by the LPPC at the time
read, "After due consideration of the said response, has decided in its
wisdom, to suspend him [Aondoakaa] from the use of the rank of Senior
Advocate of Nigeria and all other privileges attached to that rank,
pending the outcome of the investigation by the sub-committee set up by
the legal practitioners privileges committee."
Source: Premium Times
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