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Timipre Sylva 'I don't own 48 houses in Abuja or anywhere,' Ex-Gov says.

Sylva described the report as “strange, speculative and malicious”, saying he only has three houses in the Federal Capital Territory.

Former Governor of Bayelsa State, Timipre Sylva, has denied owning 48 houses in Abuja.
Pulse, citing a Punch report, had on Monday, October 3, reported that Silva had retrieved his 48 houses seized by the Economic Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC).

The houses were said to have been seized from the former governor during former president Goodluck Jonathan administration over corruption allegations.
Sylva described the report as “strange, speculative and malicious”, saying he only has three houses in the federal capital territory.

He said the courts never confirmed his ownership of 48 houses and threatened to take legal action over the report.

In a statement issued by  Doifie Buokoribo, his media adviser, Sylva he does not own such a number of houses in Abuja or anywhere in the world.

He said: "We have read a report in a national newspaper, which was reproduced by a few online publications and in the social media, claiming that Chief Timipre Sylva had ‘retrieved 48 of his properties which the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission seized during the administration of Goodluck Jonathan.

"We view this report with disgust, given its unconcealed speculation and vindictiveness regarding such a sensitive matter.
"For the avoidance of doubt, Sylva does not own 48 buildings in Abuja or anywhere in the world. So the issue of reclaiming ‘48 houses’ does not arise. He has only three houses in Abuja, which he built before he became the governor of Bayelsa State.
"This point has been made several times before, and neither EFCC nor those who had used EFCC as a tool of persecution against Sylva during the Goodluck Jonathan administration have contradicted this fact.

"EFCC had taken their allegations of property ownership against Sylva to several courts without establishing anything against the former governor during the Jonathan era. Beyond the commission’s routine media prosecution, no court of law has found Sylva guilty of any crime.
"Indeed, in the course of the trials at the Federal High Court, Abuja, owners of some of the properties wrongfully attributed to him joined to claim their houses. The court ruled on the matter of the said 48 properties since 2013. Why is it now a subject of media attention? Clearly, this is a sponsored publication.

"Sylva takes great exception to the wholly speculative and vindictive report on the matter. He frowns on the malicious audacity of the publishers of such a story, or their sponsors, despite warnings by the courts against media prosecutions and persecutions like this one, and the attempts by the EFCC to burnish its image that was mindlessly battered during the last administration.
"After failing to prove any crime against Sylva in a democratic court of law for the past four years, this latest media show is another desperate attempt to rubbish him politically.
"To correct the wrong impression that sponsors of the falsehood against him are, obviously, trying to create, Sylva has instructed his lawyers to take legal action against publishers of the fake story."


The EFCC had arraigned Sylva before three Federal High Courts in Abuja on 50 charges bordering on corruption.
The case was later struck out as Silva claimed he was being witch-hunted by the anti-graft agency, and accused it of political persecution.

Source:Pulse

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