A former governor of Lagos State and a Chieftain of the All Progressives Congress (APC), Bola Tinubu, on Saturday explained his visit to the Chief Whip of the Senate, Orji Kalu, in his Abuja residence.
Tinubu, believed to be nursing a presidential ambition in 2023 arrived Kalu’s residence at 4:25 p.m. and left at about 6:45 p.m.
He said that his meeting with the former governor of Abia “centred on the development of the country”.
“We discussed the way forward for the country and this country is important and greater than any one’s personal ambition.
“We have been together and concerned about the stability, progress, development and security of the country.
“The future of our youth is more critically important than selfish and personal intentions,’’ he said.
The Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) had recently urged the Court of Appeal, Abuja to nullify the Federal High Court ruling that stopped the retrial of Kalu, over a N7 billion fraud case.
This was contained in a notice of appeal filed by EFCC against the September 29, 2021 judgment of Inyang Ekwo of the Federal High Court in Abuja prohibiting the commission from retrying Kalu.
The commission similarly filed a separate notice of appeal in respect of Kalu’s firm, Slok Nigeria Limited, which Ekwo also shielded from retrial.
Previously convicted of the charges, Kalu, a serving senator representing Abia North, was already serving a 12-year jail term for the offences when the Supreme Court, on May 8, 2020, nullified the proceedings leading to his and his co-defendants’ conviction.
The Supreme Court’s judgment delivered on an appeal by Kalu’s co-defendant, Ude Udeogu, also ordered a retrial.
The apex court anchored its decision on the grounds that the trial, the previous trial was unconstitutional because the trial judge, Mohammed Idris, lacked the jurisdiction to conduct the proceedings and deliver judgement after he had been elevated to the Court of Appeal.
Kalu, the incumbent Chief Whip of the Nigerian Senate, got out of prison on the apex court’s judgment by citing it in an application he filed before A.M Liman of the Federal High Court in Lagos, who promptly quashed his conviction and ordered his release.
But as soon as EFCC made a move to enforce the apex court’s order for a retrial, Kalu and his firm quickly filed separate applications before Justice Ekwo, to whom the criminal case was reassigned, to stop their retrial.
Ruling on the separate applications filed by Kalu and his firm, Ekwo held on September 29, that the applicants cannot be prosecuted afresh in the absence of any specific order directed at them.