Contrary to the reports circulated earlier (if you missed it, read here), new report has emerged.
A top official of the State Security Service familiar with the SSS’ raid
of the Akwa Ibom Government House has told PREMIUM TIMES the Service
found no arms and ammunition in the complex, but stumbled on “shocking
stockpiles of U.S. dollars”.
The State Security Service (SSS) had on Thursday raided the Hilltop
Mansion in a joint operation carried out by operatives from the agency’s
headquarters in Abuja and a detachment from the Akwa Ibom State Command
of the Service.
Some operatives had earlier told this newspaper they found arms and ammunition in one of the rooms in the complex.
But another top official of the Service said Friday night the claim
by his colleagues was an exaggeration. He requested not to be named
because he was not authorised to speak on the matter.
“Our men went there expecting weaponry but we didn’t find arms,” he
said. “Instead, we stumbled on a room filled with stockpiles of
dollars.”
The official said the SSS team however left the dollars untouched for
fear of the “political backlash that might result if we evacuate it.
They had no instruction to evacuate it”.
One of our sources had earlier said the operatives initially wanted
to evacuate the dollar notes but received instructions from their
superiors in Abuja to let the notes be.
The secret police was said to have stormed the Hilltop Mansion based
on security reports that suggested arms and ammunition were stored in a
room there.
After ransacking the entire residence of the governor, which is yet
to be occupied by the serving Governor, Udom Emmanuel, the operatives
moved to guest houses and the presidential lodge, said to be currently
in use by ex-Governor Godswill Akpabio.
It was in one of the guest houses within the expansive complex, the
source said, that the dollars were found locked up in a room.
The SSS could not be immediately reached to officially comment on the
operation. The agency does not have a known spokesperson that could be
reached for comments.
And its Director General, Lawal Daura, did not answer or return multiple calls to his telephone.
The raid has attracted harsh reactions from the leadership of the opposition Peoples Democratic Party, PDP.
The Acting Chairman of the party, Uche Secondus, while hosting
Bayelsa State governor, Seriake Dickson, in his office Friday, described
the raid as a civilian coup d’état.
Mr. Secondus said the action is part of the strategy of the ruling
All Progressives Congress, and the Muhammadu Buhari-led government to
forcefully take some states won by the opposition PDP.
On his part, the Ekiti State Governor, Ayo Fayose, demanded
immediate sack of the Director General of the SSS, Lawal Daura, who he
accused of being behind the operation.
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