SaharaReporters has
reliably learned that Captain Sagir Koli, the whistle blower who exposed
a plan by high-level officers of the Nigerian Army as well as top
officials of the Peoples Democratic Party to rig a governorship election
in Ekiti State, has returned to Nigeria.
SaharaReporters exclusively published audiotapes recorded by Captain
Koli in which the PDP’s governorship candidate, Ayo Fayose, the then
Minister of Police Affairs, Jelili Adesiyan, former Defense Minister
Musiliu Obanikoro, former Governor Iyiola Omisore of Osun State, and a
military officer, Brigadier General Aliyu Momoh, discussed strategies
for rigging the governorship election in Ekiti State.
Captain Koli had to flee Nigeria once PDP top officials as well as
the military realized that he had secretly taped conversations of the
highly criminal conspiracy to intimidate voters in Ekiti State and to
thwart the reelection bid of then Governor Kayode Fayemi. The tapes,
which revealed the PDP officials trying to blackmail General Momoh
whilst also offering him financial inducement, created a political
scandal known as Ekitigate.
After the whistleblower eluded the ferocious military and PDP dragnet
that sought to capture and punish him, military authorities detained
his younger brother and harassed other members of his family.
A source at Aso Rock told SaharaReporters that Captain Koli had a
brief audience with President Muhammadu Buhari upon his return to
Nigeria.
The Nigerian military source also established a board of inquiry to
“investigate, among other things, alleged malpractices and involvement
of military personnel in Ekiti and Osun States’ Gubernatorial Elections
in 2014.”
The army recently redeployed Brigadier General Momoh, the lead
military player in the Ekiti electoral fraud, to the Training and
Doctrine Command (TRADOC) in Minna, Niger State. General Momoh’s new
post is seen as a demotion, said an army source.
SaharaReporters was not able to determine the exact location of
Captain Koli in Nigeria. However, our military source disclosed that the
army was in touch with the captain.
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