The Securities and Exchange Commission has closed down
offices of New Nation Finance House in seven states of the federation, the News
Agency of Nigeria reports in a news monitored by SHOWBIZPLUS.
New Nation Finance House is one of
the leading fund management companies in Nigeria.
The SEC’s Assistant Director and
leader of the enforcement team, Mrs. Pamela Obioru, told NAN in Lagos on
Wednesday that New Nation Finance House was an illegally entity.
NAN reports that the closure
affected the company’s offices in Lagos, Akure, Bauchi, Birnin Kebbi, Calabar,
Kano and Makurdi.
The offices are to stop operations
by Feb. 7.
Obioru said that 14 of the company’s
officials had also been arrested by the police.
She said that the action was part of
SEC’s statutory responsibilities of regulating the capital market and
protecting investors.
Obioru said that the enforcement
exercise was necessary to protect innocent investors from falling into wrong
investment schemes.
“It is one of the routine exercises
of the commission to clamp down on illegal investment operators in the
country,” she stated.
Obioru said that Section 153 of the
Investment and Securities Act prescribed that operators of such firms must
obtain licence and file returns to the commission.
In Bauchi, Malam Bala Mohammed,
SEC’s enforcement leader, said that nationwide clampdown followed complaints
from the investing public.
“We received intelligent reports
about two months ago that a company called New Nation was involved in some
dubious financial transactions.
“It was gathered that the company
receives money from investors with promises of high returns on investment.
“Immediately, we swooped into action
and carried out surveillance.
“We discovered that the company had
branches in the 36 state of the federation, including the FCT, with headquarter
in Port Harcourt.
“Our findings also indicated that
the company was neither registered with the Central Bank nor with the SEC, the
two financial regulatory bodies in the country,” he said.
Mohammed said that before any
company could carry out any financial transaction; such a company must be duly
registered and licensed by SEC or the Central Bank.
Answering questions from the
commission’s agents, Tina Yohanna, the Branch Senior Client Analyst of New
Nation in Bauchi, said that the company was not into financial transactions.
She said that all she knew was that
the company, owned by Mr. Charles Dukwe, was involved in youth and women
empowerment programmes.
“Our main activity here is
empowerment of youths with basic computer skills to enable them earn a living
in a technologically driven world.
“We carry out computer training,
free of charge after the beneficiary obtains our application form at a cost of
N1,000.”
She said that about 100 people had
registered for the computer programme.
Some of the clients told NAN in
Bauchi that they knew about the company and its operations through their
friends.
One of the clients, Saidu Mudi, said
that he registered because he was told that the programme was free.
“I was at home when a friend of mind
came and told me that a company was training youths on computer education for
free, after obtaining an application form for N1, 000.
“After submitting the form, we were
told that we will be trained on computer skills for free and that those who
excel will be employed by the company while others will be given computers on
loan to start a business,” he said.
Another beneficiary, Franca James,
said she became interested when she was told that she would be trained on
computer for free and at the end of the training would be given a computer set
also for free.
In Birnin Kebbi, another SEC
Enforcement Officer, Mr Babakura Mohammed, said that the commission’s
enforcement and compliance department was on a national assignment to close
financial institutions that did comply with SEC Rules 2013, as amended.
Mohammed said that the illegal
operators’ target high networth individuals and companies in various states of
the federation.
One of the arrested agents, Sahabi
Emmanuel, said “the company targets women in oil business, and grey and
strong.”
Emmanuel, the New Nation company
client analyst in the state, said he personally lured 21 unsuspecting members
of the public into the illegal scheme.
According to him, a minimum monthly
deposit of N8, 700 was collected from various women programmed to receive N10,
000 monthly dividends after 12 months contribution.
Also in Calabar, the Branch Manager
of the illegal company, Mr Benjamin Effiong and an unidentified female staff of
the company were taken into custody after SEC sealed their office.
Mr Alani Falade, leader of SEC
enforcement team in Akure, advised the investing public to be wary of
investment opportunities that looked “too good to be real.”
The team which confiscated the Akure
branch operating equipment, after sealing the office, attributed the noticeable
success profile of New Nation to poverty and covetousness.
NAN quotes the enforcement team
leader of SEC in Kano, Mr Abubakar Bello, as saying that they had a court
warrant from Abuja, to visit the company’s offices across Nigeria, search and
seal them. Bello told newsmen in Kano that that the company was operating an
illegal collective scheme where members of the public were invited to make
investments. Mr Aminu Halilu, the Assistant Director, Legal Services of the
commission, who led SEC’s team in Makurdi, also said that the exercise was
carried out to protect innocent Nigerian investors. Halilu said the commission
had received complaints of illegal investment collections by the company from
unsuspecting members of the public against the provisions of SEC. Meanwhile, Mr
Sonnie Elimihe, who claimed to be the company’s legal adviser in Lagos, vowed
to challenge the commission’s actions in court. Elimihe said that New Nation’s
activities were duly registered by the Corporate Affairs Commission, stressing
that they were not into investment activities as alleged by SEC. He said that
the company was into buying and selling of blood pressure equipment under an
initiative tagged ‘Grey & Strong’ to cater for elderly people from 50 years
and above, among others. NAN reports that equipment and documents were seized
at the company’s branches in the seven states while the branch managers and
workers were handed over to the police.
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