Tag: Ghana

  • FULL LIST: Identities of ministers, others who died in Ghana helicopter crash

    FULL LIST: Identities of ministers, others who died in Ghana helicopter crash

    The identities of the eight prominent Ghanaian Individuals, including two serving ministers and senior security officials whose lives were caught short following the crash of a military helicopter en route from Accra to Obuasi has surfaced.

    TheNewGuru.com(TNG) earlier reports that Ghana’s Minister of Defence, Edward Omane Boamah, and Minister of Environment, Science and Technology, Ibrahim Murtala Muhammed, died in the helicopter crash on Wednesday afternoon.

    Speaking, Ghanaian President John Mahama described the crash as a “national tragedy”, suspending all official engagements and ordering flags to fly at half-mast across the country.

    Following the crash, the authorities have released the names and designations of those who perished in the crash:

    Edward Omane Boamah – Minister for Defence

    Ibrahim Murtala Mohammed – Minister for Environment, Science, and Technology

    Muniru Mohammed – Acting Deputy National Security Coordinator and former Minister for Food and Agriculture

    Samuel Sarpong – Vice-Chairman, National Democratic Congress (NDC)

    Samuel Aboagye – Former Parliamentary Candidate

    Peter Baafemi Anala – Squadron Leader

    Manaen Twum Ampadu – Flying Officer

    Ernest Addo – Sergeant

    Recall, President Bola Tinubu of Nigeria joined other world leaders in expressing condolences to the people of Ghana over the incident, describing the victims as “heroes who died in the line of patriotic service.”

  • Tinubu commiserates with Ghana President over helicopter crash

    Tinubu commiserates with Ghana President over helicopter crash

    President Bola Tinubu has extended heartfelt condolences to President John Mahama and people of Ghana over a tragic helicopter crash that claimed the lives of eight Ghanaians, including two ministers.

    ‎This is contained in a statement issued by Presidential Spokesperson, Mr Bayo Onanuga on Wednesday in Abuja.

    ‎The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports that the crash, which occurred Wednesday in Ghana’s southern Ashanti region, killed all on board, among them Defence Minister Edward Boamah and Environment Minister Ibrahim Muhammed.

    ‎Tinubu assures President Mahama and all Ghanaian that the thoughts and prayers of the government and people of Nigeria are with them during the time of profound national loss.

    ‎The President urged the Ghanaian nation and the bereaved families to find comfort in the knowledge that their loved ones died in the line of patriotic service to the country.

    ‎“He prayed for the peaceful repose of the souls of the departed and strength for those they left behind.”

  • BREAKING: Ghana’s Defence, Environment Ministers die in helicopter crash

    BREAKING: Ghana’s Defence, Environment Ministers die in helicopter crash

    Ghana has been thrown into mourning following the tragic death of two senior government officials in a fatal helicopter crash on Wednesday afternoon.

    Ghana’s Minister of Defence, Edward Omane Boamah, and Minister of Environment, Science and Technology, Ibrahim Murtala Muhammed, died in the helicopter crash.

    TheNewsGuru.com (TNG) reports the Ministers died in the helicopter crash along with six (6) individuals on board the ill-fated aircraft.

    Details shortly…

  • “Nigeria must go,” Ndigbo Eze of Ghana and other matters – By Francis Ewherido

    “Nigeria must go,” Ndigbo Eze of Ghana and other matters – By Francis Ewherido

    I am not surprised about the recent “Nigeria’s Must Go protests in Ghana and the backlash against Chief Chukwudi Jude Ihenetu, aka Eze Ndigbo in Ghana.  This matter has been on for a while now. I have been following it on social media. I decided not to write about it because it had not reached the traditional media.

    But I did write a two-part article in 2024 where I highlighted the negative activities of Nigeria YouTubers based in Ghana (Reaction to Nigerian Youtubers based in Ghana (1) – Vanguard News and Reaction to Nigerian Youtubers based in Ghana (2) – Vanguard News). All they do is to denigrate Nigeria and engage in mumu propaganda.

    I cautioned them to promote and celebrate Ghana without denigrating Nigeria, but it fell on deaf ears. I even interacted with one of them and advised him, but he said he has to hustle and put food on the table. They have no formal training, but no excuses for denigrating your country.

    Those of you segregating on social media along ethnic lines should remember that you are all carrying the Nigerian passport. The same water washes the penis and the scrotal sac. Make una dey play. Majority of their subscribers are Ghanaians going by their names and comments.

    My only joy is that some Ghanaians don’t even know they exist. Some of those who know have also realized that they are just hustlers throwing Nigeria and Nigerians under the bus to get views and subscribers from haters and negative minds like them to make money. One neutral YouTuber went to interview students in a university campus.

    Their responses were positive, centred on Nigerian music and movies. They acknowledged that Nigeria was way ahead.  Of course, they voted Ghana jollof. The best jollof has become a banter, so no problem. But these are young minds these evil YouTubers could not penetrate with their pernicious propaganda.

    There are Ghanaian YouTubers whose channels are devoted mainly to dragging and denigrating Nigeria and Nigerians. I used to tackle them on their turf until I realized that their cases are hopeless and stopped wasting my time. They blame Nigerians for every crime in Ghana.

    There was a particular robbery that was being filmed live. One of them vowed that the robbers were Nigerians. It turned out they were Ghanaians, but did he come back to tell his audience that he misinformed them. Why should he? But some Ghanaian YouTubers are objective and also devote their channels to promoting Nigeria. But you know what? Ejayeta (let them talk ).

    Have you ever seen people throw stones at a barren tree? People only throw stones at fruitful trees to pluck fruits. Right now, Nigeria musicians are on world tours, selling out one big arena after the other. Nigeria Super Falcons just won the Women African Cup for a record 10 times. Yesterday (Sunday, August 3, 2025) our female basket team, D’Tigress, won the fifth consecutive FIBA Women’s Afro Basket title. These achievements are corrosive acid to the hearts of haters. Continue hating. 

    There are some Nigerians in Ghana who are into crime. Some have been involved in robbery, kidnapping, human trafficking and rituals, but so are Ghanaians. They always taunt us that their police are far better than ours and I tell them that their efficient police should track down the bad eggs in their midst and prosecute them.

    What is bad is bad. These wrong behavior is punished in Nigeria. Why should it be different in Ghana? My argument is that all Nigerians should not be stereotyped and Nigeria should not be dragged. Ghanaians have been caught in Nigeria for oil theft, gunrunning and smuggling. Nobody dragged Ghana. Among the terrorists trying to destabilize Nigeria are Nigeriens, Cameroonians and Chadians. We do not drag these countries. We expect our security agents to crush them and protect lives and properties in Nigeria. 

    These YouTubers and a couple of opposition Ghanaian Politicians are among the people who put fire on the tense situation that led to the “Nigerians must Go” protests. Before now there were issues between Nigerian and Ghanaian traders. They accused Nigerian traders of breaching their law which reserved retail trade for Ghanaians.

    There was a recent case of a Nigerian who was prevented from selling her wigs by Makola traders because she was selling below the price of the Ghanaian traders. As expected, the locals took side with the Nigerian trader because her products were cheaper. For me, if you are forbidden from engaging in retail trade of any item, respect their law, even though it looks strange to the average Nigerian, including me.

    On the Eze Ndigbo issue, it’s true he actually said in 2013 that he had acquired land to build an Igbo village in Ghana, but he abandoned the idea because he had issues with the land acquisition. Whoever dusted up the 12-year-old video was up to some mischief. Resentment had been building up against him because he carried himself as a royal rather than the leader of the Igbos in Ghana.

    The prestige and grandeur of royalty probably was too much for him to resist. There’s apparent self-aggrandizement, and his Ghanaian wife also lapped it. Difficult as it is, he has to leave royalty out of it and just be the leader of the Igbos in Ghana. In America, which is not used to monarchies, there are Igbo and Yoruba traditional rulers and villages which are tourist attractions. This is Africa with a different mindset. He should follow the wishes of his hosts and have his peace. 

    But truth be told, there is a tinge of envy and pettiness. Some Ghanaians are apparently not happy that he has access to their presidents, former and current; other top politicians, royal fathers in Ghana, and the high society of Ghana. 

    Some claim he started life in Ghana as a cassette seller before he became rich. Nigerians are used to rag to riches stories. Former President Goodluck Jonathan said he went to school on bare feet. Multibillionaire Cosmas Maduka always tells his rag to riches story.

    There is no shame in starting as a nobody. In fact, it is an inspiration to many from humble backgrounds. Some accuse him of human trafficking and all types of crimes. Hate blinds people. They are indirectly saying their security architecture is poor. They are also accusing their president and Ghana high society of associating with a criminal. It’s terrible when you give a dog a bad name to hang it.

    They also accused Nigerians of being too loud and extravagant. This one weak me. People should live their lives the way they want as long as it’s within the law. When I was in London, there was this house in the next street where they played loud music and partied all night. It was apparently noise pollution and I was shocked it was tolerated in London. But as they say, when in Rome, do as Romans do, Nigerians in Ghana, your hosts say you are too loud. Please tone and calm down.  

    Lastly, they complain about Nigerians and proliferation of prostitutes in Ghana. I refuse to comment on this until I am informed that only Nigerian men patronize these Nigerian prostitutes. If Ghanaian men also do, that is hypocrisy and I refuse to condemn them as Jesus also refused to condemn the woman who was caught in the act of adultery. Unfortunately, I don’t even have the powers to tell them to go and sin no more. By the way, is prostitution in the list of items non-Ghanaians are forbidden from retailing?

    My parting shot to Ghanaians is that the world is now interdependent and a global village. We also have an ECOWAS treaty that Nigeria and Ghana are signatories to. Calm down.

    Francis Ewherido is a Newsguru Columnist.

  • Nigerians must go saga: We’ll not allow xenophobia in Ghana-Mahama declares

    Nigerians must go saga: We’ll not allow xenophobia in Ghana-Mahama declares

    President John Mahama of Ghana has said that his country has no place for xenophobia in the country, assuring that his administration is committed to the safety of Nigerians and their businesses in the country.

    Mahama also restated his commitment to the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS) Protocols, especially the free movement of persons and goods in the region.

    He stated this when he received the Minister of State for Foreign Affairs, Bianca Odumegwu-Ojukwu, at the Presidential Palace, Accra.

    According to a statement signed by the Special Assistant on Communication and New Media in the Office of the Minister of State for Foreign Affairs, Magnus Eze, on Friday, Mahama urged President Bola Tinubu not to lose sleep over recent protests against Nigerian nationals resident in his country.

    He stated that Nigeria and Ghana have a shared history.

    President Mahama noted that the recirculation of an old video made by a Nigerian residing in Ghana over 10 years ago generated tension, but announced that the situation was swiftly managed.

    The Ghanaian president assured the envoy of the safety and protection of the lives, properties, and businesses of Nigerians in Ghana.

    Earlier, the minister thanked the Mahama for his hospitality since the Nigerian delegation arrived in Ghana.

    Odumegwu-Ojukwu was clear that their mission was to douse the tension in Ghana following a viral video against Nigerians.

    She said that every Nigerian back home was worried about the situation and concerned about the safety of Nigerian nationals in Ghana, their properties, and businesses.

    Odumegwu-Ojukwu also said that the visit was to facilitate the establishment of a permanent Nigeria-Ghana Joint Commission.

    She said that the joint commission would help in addressing the youth and the issue of migration caused by the huge demography of unemployed people under 45 years.

    “We are encouraging our youth to stay in Nigeria, and if it is necessary to migrate, they are to be great ambassadors,” Odumegwu-Ojukwu said.

    She informed the Ghanaian president that she was meeting with Nigerians in Ghana to urge them to adhere to the laws of Ghana.

    In a post on her X handle, she described the meeting as an engaging one.

    “The Ghanaian President is committed to promoting peaceful coexistence as had hitherto been the situation between Ghanaian citizens and the Nigerian community and to ensure that both citizens and non-citizens, including their properties and assets, are safe and secure,” she stated.

    The minister was accompanied on the fact-finding mission by the Director, Africa Affairs Department in the ministry, Regina Ocheni; Director, Office of the Minister of State for Foreign Affairs, Innocent Iwejuo, and Special Assistant (Administration) to the Minister of State, Ajuluchukwu Eze.

  • Ghana: Foreign Affairs Minister releases update on anti-Nigeria protests

    Ghana: Foreign Affairs Minister releases update on anti-Nigeria protests

    Foreign Affairs Minister, Amb. Bianca Odumegwu-Ojukwu, has appealed for calm following the tension that ensued over the purported demand by Ghanaians for the deportation of Nigerians from their country.

    Odumegwu-Ojukwu made the appeal in a statement issued on Thursday in Abuja by Dr Magnus Eze, the Special Assistant on Communication and New Media, Office of the Minister of State for Foreign Affairs.

    The statement was sequel to the joint news briefing which she had with Ghana’s Foreign Affairs Minister, Samuel Ablakwa, in Accra.

    According to her, there is no cause for alarm over the anti-Nigerians protests in Ghana.

    She noted that the viral videos showing the ensuing disturbances had caused anxiety, prompting President Bola Tinubu to dispatch her to the country for a firsthand assessment of the situation.

    Odumegwu-Ojukwu said: “We are here in Ghana on a fact-finding mission as special envoy of President Tinubu, as a result of recent disturbances that have made the rounds in Nigeria.

    “The government and people of Nigeria have been concerned with the widespread protests taking place in Ghana, requesting Nigerians to leave and dousing tensions in Nigeria, regarding the safety of lives and property of our nationals residing here in Ghana.”

    She expressed appreciation to Ghanaian President John Mahama for his warm reception, adding that she was pleased to note that things were now calm there.

    “Since we arrived, I haven’t seen people burning tyres in the streets or carrying placards everywhere calling for Nigerians to be deported.

    “This shows that the Ghanaian government and the president have stepped up to the situation.

    “I would say there’s no cause for alarm; they are handling the situation effectively and we will continue engaging stakeholders,” the minister said.

    She reiterated that the sights of inciting videos and rhetoric were capable of causing irreparable damage to the mutual relations between the two countries.

    The minister further said that Ghana’s Minister of Foreign Affairs assured on behalf of President Mahama of the safety of Nigerian nationals in Ghana.

    She admonished Nigerian citizens in Ghana to feel free and go about their daily activities without fear and anxiety, bearing in mind the history, references and painful memories of the past.

    Odumegwu-Ojukwu also underscored the need to institutionalise the Nigeria-Ghana Joint Commission, noting that such would help in engendering closer relations, including at the citizen-to-citizen level.

    Ghana’s Foreign Affairs Minister said the ministry was addressing the matter and had met with some leaders of the Nigerian community, as well as engaged positively with the citizens of Ghana.

    “The Ghanaian government will ensure that everyone in the country, citizens and non-citizens, is protected,” he said.

    He also assured that Ghana would protect everyone, and urged people to be law-abiding, avoid criminal activities and actions that could cause tension between both countries.

    The minister said the videos were not reflective of the actual situation on the ground.

    According to him, he met the Nigerian accused of attempting to form a kingdom in Ghana and was told that territorial ambitions were never the intention nor the plan.

    He said that Ghana has a lot of population in Nigeria, and that both countries share a lot in common.

    “Both nations need to manage their citizens’ relations very well, not to see to the recurrence of the Aliens Repatriation Order in Ghana and the Ghana Must Go protests of 1983 in Nigeria.

    “We are conscious of our history, that even though we have our historical backgrounds with lots of our ethnic groups having the same heritage and antecedents, we have so many anthropological antecedents which show we are one person.”

    “Let us remember that Ghana is the headquarters of Pan Africanism,” the minister was quoted to have said in the statement.

  • Nigerians must go ‘wahala’: Bianca Ojukwu meets with Ghana’s Foreign minister

    Nigerians must go ‘wahala’: Bianca Ojukwu meets with Ghana’s Foreign minister

    Minister of State for Foreign Affairs, Bianca Ojukwu, has met with Ghana’s Minister of Foreign Affairs and Regional Integration, Samuel Ablakwa, to tackle the recent wave of protests targeting Nigerians living in Ghana.

    In a statement shared on her official social media account on Thursday, Ojukwu disclosed that the meeting focused on concerns arising from the demonstrations, where some Ghanaian citizens accused Nigerians of contributing to rising crime levels.

    “Meeting with the Hon. Minister of Foreign Affairs of Ghana, Hon. Samuel Ablakwa, to address the situation of Nigeria-Ghana citizens’ relations in the aftermath of protests against Nigerians living in Ghana,” she wrote.

    She added, “The Minister assured that the lives, properties and businesses of Nigeria and Nigerians living in Ghana are safe and protected, and that there is certainly no threat of mass deportations of our nationals residing in Ghana.”

    Ojukwu’s meeting with the Ghanaian Foreign Minister comes just a day after she revealed, also via an Instagram post, that she had arrived in Accra at 9:30 p.m. and was received at the Kotoka International Airport by the Inspector-General of Police of Ghana.

    READ ALSO: [Ghana Protests] FG Calls For Calm, Faults ‘Blanket’ Generalisation Of Nigerians

    She noted that the Federal Government of Nigeria is exploring all avenues to bring a diplomatic resolution to the crisis, which stems from widespread protests in Ghana against Nigerian nationals following repeated incidents of criminal activities blamed on foreign residents.

    The protests, which were captured in a viral video, showed demonstrators calling on Ghanaian authorities to expel Nigerians over alleged misconduct.

    In response, the Nigerians in Diaspora Commission (NiDCOM) on Tuesday urged calm and condemned the generalisation of Nigerians as criminals. NiDCOM Chairperson, Abike Dabiri-Erewa, described the accusations as unfair and misleading.

    “Nigerians are not criminals. They are good ambassadors wherever they find themselves, while those bad ones should be fished out to face necessary sanctions,” Dabiri-Erewa stated in a release issued by the agency’s Director of Media, Public Relations and Protocols, Abdur-Rahman Balogun.

    She appealed to both Nigerians and Ghanaians to avoid inflammatory remarks that could escalate tensions, stressing that there was no verified evidence of attacks on Nigerian-owned shops or properties in Ghana.

    “There is no evidence to that, and we must at all cost try to prevent any reprisal attacks,” she said.

    Dabiri-Erewa also reassured the Nigerian community in Ghana that the relevant authorities were actively addressing the matter. “We urge our citizens not to be provoked or resort to violence,” she added.

    Meanwhile, the Chairman of the Senate Committee on Diaspora and Non-Governmental Organisations, Senator Aniekan Bassey, described the protests as “deeply disturbing and contrary to the spirit of African brotherhood.”

    In a statement issued on Tuesday, Senator Bassey — also a member of the 6th Legislature of the ECOWAS Parliament — called for sustained diplomatic engagement and regional cooperation.

  • Tension: Ghana, Nigeria are like siamese twins – NiDCOM

    Tension: Ghana, Nigeria are like siamese twins – NiDCOM

    The Chairman/CEO Nigerians in Diaspora Commission (NIDCOM), Abike Dabiri-Erewa, has stressed the need for calm,  urging Nigerians living in Ghana not to be provoked or resort to violence with anyone.

    Dabiri-Erewa gave the advice in a statement issued on Wednesday by Abdur-Rahman Balogun, Director of Media, Public Relations and Protocols of NiDCOM, following tensions between citizens of the two countries.

    The statement comes against the backdrop of a trending video on social media showing some Ghanaians demanding the immediate repatriation of Nigerians from their country.

    Abike Dabiri-Erewa said that the alleged call for the deportation of Nigerians from Ghana was already being handled at the diplomatic level by the Ministry of  Foreign Affairs.

    She said: “The attention of NIDCOM has been drawn to a disturbing video on social media showing protest by some Ghanaians, calling on the authority to send Nigerians back to Nigeria.

    “I appeal for calm and urge Nigerians living in Ghana not to be provoked or go into violence with anyone, as the issue is being handled at the diplomatic level by the Minister of State Foreign Affairs, Amb. Bianca Ojukwu.

    “Anyone using inciteful words, on both sides should  desist henceforth, as  such statements are capable of escalating the matter.”

    She urged Nigerians to disregard the videos circulating that Nigerians’ shops and properties were being destroyed by Ghanaians.

    According to the NiDCOM boss, there is no evidence to that effect and so Nigerians must at all cost try to prevent any reprisal attacks.

    She lauded the Ghanaian and Nigerian High Commissioners for their efforts to control the situation.

    Abike Dabiri-Erewa added that the Minister of State, Foreign Affairs was already in touch with Ghanaian authorities, and had taken some pro- active measures toward finding an amicable resolution.

    She stressed that the blanket outrage against Nigerians living in Ghana and branding them as criminals should be condemned by all.

    This, according to her, is because Nigerians are not criminals but good ambassadors wherever they find themselves.

    She advised that the bad ones among them should be fished out to face necessary sanctions.

    “Ghana and Nigeria are like siamese twins.

    “They are brothers, and  in the spirit of ECOWAS and regional integration, should continue to live in peace like brothers,” she added.

  • ECOWAS Court dismisses Shatta Wale’s discrimination claim against Ghana

    ECOWAS Court dismisses Shatta Wale’s discrimination claim against Ghana

    The ECOWAS Court of Justice sitting at Osborne, Lagos State, has dismissed a discrimination claim brought by a Ghanaian musician, Charles Mensah (also known as Shatta Wale), against his country.

    The court delivered judgment in suit No. ECW/CCJ/APP/25/24.

    The suit was filed by the musician against Republic of Ghana and its Gaming Commission,

    The court ruled against the applicant, holding that he failed to provide sufficient evidence of discriminatory treatment against him.

    The court also held that there was  lack of proof regarding correspondence with the gaming company.

    It added that the applicant failed  to disclose the identity of the company.

    Mensah had alleged that he was denied an endorsement deal by a gaming company in Ghana because of Guideline VII of Ghana’s Advertising Guidelines.

    The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports that the guideline  prohibits gaming operators from using celebrities in advertisements.

    Mensah claimed that the restriction violated his right to non-discrimination under the African Charter on Human and Peoples’ Rights.

    The Republic of Ghana denied the allegations, arguing that no celebrities were permitted to endorse gaming products under Ghanaian law.

    It challenged the musician to present evidence of celebrities who had been treated differently under a similar circumstance.

    In the judgment, the court held that the applicant failed to prove that there was any correspondence with the gaming company, adding that he  failed to show any directive from the government.

    The court also held that the applicant did not identify the gaming company which, it said, was a necessary party to the suit.

    The court also noted that the applicant did not present credible evidence of discriminatory treatment.

    The court declared that it had jurisdiction over the matter and found the application admissible but had to dismiss it in its entirety for lack of merit.

    The judgment was delivered by a panel comprising Justices Ricardo Gonçalves (presiding), Sengu Koroma and Dupe Atoki.

  • 231 Nigerians repatriated from Ghana

    231 Nigerians repatriated from Ghana

    The Nigerian government has welcomed the return of 231 citizens from Ghana, comprising 204 victims of human trafficking and 27 individuals suspected of involvement in cybercrime and trafficking-related offenses.

    The returnees arrived in Lagos on Friday and were received by officials from the National Agency for the Prohibition of Trafficking in Persons (NAPTIP) and the Nigerians in Diaspora Commission (NIDCOM), in collaboration with Ghana’s Economic and Organised Crime Office (EOCO). Wema Bank supported the repatriation by providing transportation, meals, and financial assistance to the returnees.

    According to Dominic Mensah, head of EOCO’s Anti-Human Trafficking Unit, the arrests followed a tip-off about a criminal syndicate operating within a 50-house estate in Ghana. The resulting operation, codenamed Rescue Shield, targeted 26 properties believed to be hubs for illegal cyber activities.

    “Out of 233 people initially apprehended, 204 were identified as victims, while 27 were confirmed as suspected traffickers and cybercriminals,” Mensah said. He added that the estate owner is currently under investigation for potentially facilitating the crimes.

    Most of the victims, many of whom are under 18, were reportedly smuggled into Ghana through unauthorized border routes after being deceived with fake job offers. Once in Ghana, they were trapped in forced cybercrime operations, with some being coerced into overseeing new recruits for traffickers based in Nigeria.

    Of the 204 victims, 76 hail from Edo State, while others come from states including Anambra, Delta, Bayelsa, Imo, Enugu, and Ebonyi.

    NIDCOM Chairperson, Abike Dabiri-Erewa, stressed the importance of public awareness in combating human trafficking. “Victims should be encouraged to tell their stories. Many of the traffickers are people they know—family or friends. These perpetrators must be publicly exposed, just like drug traffickers,” she said.

    NAPTIP’s Lagos Commander, Comfort Agboko, called on parents to be more vigilant, noting that traffickers often use deceptive promises of jobs in Lagos or overseas to lure their targets and instruct them to keep silent about their plans.

    NAPTIP confirmed that all returnees will undergo profiling and begin the reintegration process, while the suspects will be handed over to the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) for further investigation.