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Alleged bribery trial: How Diezani Alison-Madueke confronted tycoons who bribed her

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A United Kingdom court has heard phone recordings of a former Nigerian oil minister allegedly confronting two oil tycoons from whom she is accused of accepting bribes, after their relationships had broken down.

Recall that prosecutors allege that Diezani Alison-Madueke was provided with “a life of luxury” in the UK, which they say was paid for by those who sought lucrative oil contracts from the Nigerian government.

According to the BBC, in one conversation recorded on her phone, the 65-year-old Alison-Madueke could be heard saying: “I will be happy to escort all of you to jail along with myself.”

The former Nigerian minister of Petroleum has denied five counts of accepting bribes and a charge of conspiracy to commit bribery.

The Southwark Crown Court heard how a Samsung phone belonging to the former minister was seized by UK investigators during her arrest in London in 2015.

On the phone were recordings from the previous year of two conversations Alison-Madueke had had, first with Olajide Omokore and then with Kolawole Aluko.

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The two oil moguls linked to the case are not on trial, but prosecutors allege they paid bribes to Alison-Madueke during her time as Nigeria’s petroleum resources minister, between 2010 and 2015.

The conversations were said to have taken place when Alison-Madueke allegedly believed both Omokore’s wife and Aluko were telling people they knew of information that could “take her down”.

In the first recording, from April 2014, Alison-Madueke could be heard telling Omokore: “We who are managing the thing have kept quiet. We’ve kept quiet… while people like your wife are busy singing all over the place.”

Raising her voice, the former minister said: “I do not react well to being blackmailed.”

The BBC also reported that the court also heard a second conversation, recorded one month later, between Alison-Madueke and Aluko, who could be heard being searched before the meeting began.

On the recording, Alison-Madueke expressed concern that Aluko’s “lavish, lascivious lifestyle” had attracted attention on the internet.

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“As far as everybody’s concerned, you’re a playboy,” she told him, accusing him of “parading” his relationships with people including British supermodel Naomi Campbell.

“Naomi Campbell, these are not the people for you to be parading… Other men do these things, but they don’t parade them. They do them quietly because the time for parading these things was not now.”

The former minister told Aluko she had already spoken about his “general behaviour, acquisition of assets, etc, asking you to be careful because intelligencer will start following you”.

Alison-Madueke said she was “really annoyed” to hear “this take her down, and information that you have on me”.

“I will be happy to escort all of you to jail along with myself,” she added. “You will be shocked what I will do because when it comes to that, I will come out and tell the Nigerian people this is what happened.

“Oh yes, I will blame myself… but I will come out openly and say it so they can judge me openly. And then all of us go and sit on the gate. Let us see who survived, me or you.”

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On the recording, Aluko could be heard saying: “I never ever mentioned your name or any other name.” He told Alison-Madueke he had placed some material in a safety deposit box, including “whatever I thought could save me, what could save me from jail”.

He described himself as having “a million flaws” but being “loyal like a dog”.

Previously, the defence lawyer for Alison-Madueke told the court his client had not requested or received any financial advantage from the men and that they have not been charged or extradited.

Also on trial is oil industry executive Olatimbo Ayinde, 54, who denies one count of bribery relating to Alison-Madueke and a count of bribery of a foreign public official.

Alison-Madueke’s brother, former bishop Doye Agama, 69, denies conspiracy to commit bribery.

The trial continues.

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Ex-IGP Egbetokun expresses happiness Tunji Disu is taking over, says they both benefitted from Tinubu mentorship

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Former inspector-general of police (IGP), Kayode Egbetokun, has said
he is happy that Tunji Disu is taking over from him as the country’s police chief.

Egbetokun spoke on Wednesday at the State House, Abuja, during the swearing-in and decoration of Disu as acting IGP.

The former IGP resigned from his position on Tuesday following a directive from President Bola Tinubu.

“I am happy that he is the one taking over from me. My advice to him is that he already knows all the things we have been doing together — strengthening operations, enhancing intelligence coordination, improving the inter-agency deployment model, dismantling several criminal syndicates, and improving our intelligence response mechanisms. I am sure he will continue to do that,” the former IGP said.

Egbetokun advised the new acting IGP to continue to remain committed to his duties, noting that Disu has been part of his administration from the beginning.

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“He was my principal staff officer; he was commissioner of police in Rivers state and in the FCT; he was assistant inspector-general in charge of my special protection unit,” Egbetokun said.

“When the president gave the presidential directive to withdraw police officers from VIP protection, he was the person I called upon to ensure that the directive was fully complied with, and he did it very well.”

Egbetokun said he is “particularly excited” to hand over to Disu, noting that they share “unique history” and both benefited from the mentorship of Tinubu during his tenure as governor of Lagos state.

“I remember learning many things from him (Tinubu), but there is something in particular I recall,” he said.

“He once said that a good leader should have a successor and a succession plan and must invest in his likeliest successors.

“I invested in likely successors in the Nigeria Police Force, and I am happy that one of those I invested in has been found most suitable for the job and has been decorated today.”

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Egbetokun thanked the president for trusting him with different positions, especially when he appointed him as his chief security officer when he was governor of Lagos state, and subsequently as IGP when he became president.

“I am deeply grateful to him,” Egbetokun said.

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Ex-NNPC GM jailed 7 yearsin US over $2.1m bribe from Chinese oil firm

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A United States district court has sentenced Paulinus Okoronkwo, a Nigerian American, to 87 months in prison for receiving a $2.1 million bribe from Addax Petroleum, a subsidiary of Sinopec, a Chinese state-owned petroleum and gas conglomerate.

Okoronkwo is a former general manager of the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC), now NNPC Limited.

In a statement on Monday, the US government said John Walter, the district judge, ordered Okoronkwo to pay $923,824 in restitution to the Internal Revenue Service (IRS).

The judge also ordered the forfeiture of $1,039,997, which is the net proceeds of the sale of a home belonging to the ex-NNPC general manager.

In August 2025, Okoronkwo was found guilty of transactional money laundering, tax evasion, and obstruction of justice.

According to US prosecutors, while serving as NNPC’s upstream division general manager, Okoronkwo abused his position by accepting a $2.1 million payment from Addax Petroleum, the Switzerland-based subsidiary of Sinopec.

The prosecutors said the money, wired in October 2015 to his law firm’s trust account in Los Angeles, was disguised as payment for consultancy services but was a bribe to secure favourable drilling rights in Nigeria.

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The prosecutors had presented evidence that Addax executives falsified records to show the payment as legal fees, dismissed internal staff who raised concerns, and provided misleading information to auditors.

Okoronkwo, who practised immigration, family, and personal injury law in Koreatown, was said to have later used nearly $1 million of the bribe money as a down payment on a home in Valencia, California, while failing to declare the income on his 2015 tax return.

In October 2025, a US court granted the forfeiture application filed by the US government against Okoronkwo’s property.

The property is located at 25340 Twin Oaks Place, Valencia, California 91381.




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Tinubu charges acting IGP Tunji Disu to lead with discipline, rebuild trust in police

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President Bola Tinubu has charged Tunji Disu, the acting inspector-general of police (IGP), to lead with discipline and rebuild public trust in the Nigeria Police Force (NPF).

The president spoke at the State House on Wednesday during the decoration of Disu with his new rank as the acting IGP, following the resignation of Kayode Egbetokun.

Tinubu also told the new acting IGP to confront the escalating threats of banditry, terrorism, and other criminal activities across the country head-on.

“I expect you to strengthen the discipline, enhance interagency collaboration, and restore public confidence in Nigeria police,” the president said.

“Lead firmly but fairly, demand professionalism at every level and ensure that safety of lives and property remains your highest priority.”

Tinubu praised Disu as a “straightforward individual, committed and respected,” with sufficient discipline, urging him to draw from Egbetokun’s experience and “make it better than you met it.”

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“Nigeria is challenged right now with banditry, terrorism and all sorts of criminal activities,” he said.

“You’ll be part of the thinking, and you’ve been part of the innovation. The challenge as you hold the baton of this leadership is the belief that you will excel and Nigeria will prevail.”

The president appreciated Egbetokun for his “dedication in service” and “good leadership attributes” in maintaining law and order.

“Nigeria is a grateful nation to you,” he said.

“You have not succeeded without a good successor. Therefore, the success of a Tunji Disu IGP, when confirmed, is part of your responsibility.”

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