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EFCC appeals judgment awarding Olu Agunloye N10m over defamatory publication


 The Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) has appealed the judgement of a Federal Capital Territory (FCT) high court ordering it to pay Olu Agunloye, former minister of power, N10 million in damages over a defamatory publication.

 

In an 11-ground notice of appeal filed before the Abuja division of the court of appeal, the anti-graft agency asked the appellate court to set aside the entire judgement delivered by Peter Kekemeke, judge of the FCT high court, on July 8, 2026, describing the decision as erroneous in law and against the weight of evidence.

 

The commission also asked the appellate court to dismiss Agunloye’s suit in its entirety.

 

Kekemeke, in his judgement, had held that the EFCC’s publication titled “EFCC arraigns Agunloye over $6bn fraud” was false and defamatory, ruling that the former minister of power was not standing trial for fraud.

 

 

The judge subsequently ordered the commission to pay Agunloye N10 million in damages, publish an unreserved apology on its website and in two national newspapers, retract the publication, and refrain from making similar publications about him.

 

However, in its appeal, the EFCC argued that the trial court failed to properly evaluate the evidence before it and wrongly concluded that Agunloye had established a case of libel.

 

GROUNDS OF APPEAL

 

 

The commission contended that the lower court overlooked key documentary evidence and the testimony of its witness, Umar Hussain Babangida, an assistant commissioner of police (ACP), which, according to it, supported the publication.

 

“The totality of the credible oral and documentary evidence adduced before the lower court preponderated overwhelmingly in favour of the Appellant,” the EFCC said.

 

The anti-graft agency added that had the trial judge “properly evaluated the evidence on record, particularly Exhibits A, B, D and E and the testimony of DW1 (ACP Umar Hussain Babangida), it would have dismissed the Respondent’s claim in its entirety”.

 

The EFCC further argued that the trial judge failed to consider all the legal ingredients required to establish libel, particularly whether the publication was false and whether it was protected by lawful justification or privilege.

 

 

According to the commission, Agunloye failed to prove those essential elements.

 

The EFCC maintained that the publication substantially reflected the facts surrounding Agunloye’s arraignment over the Mambilla hydroelectric power project.

 

“The gist of the publication, namely that the Respondent was arraigned by the Appellant in connection with fraud surrounding the $6 billion Mambilla Project, was substantially true,” the commission argued.

 

It added that the court wrongly dismissed the publication as “a mere sensational headline” and placed undue emphasis on what it described as a semantic distinction between the value of the Mambilla project and the offences contained in the charge.

 

 

The commission also argued that its publication was protected by the defences of justification, qualified privilege and fair comment, insisting that informing Nigerians about corruption cases falls within its statutory responsibilities.

 

It said the publication “was a fair, accurate and contemporaneous report of the arraignment of the Respondent conducted in open court”, adding that the judge erred by holding otherwise simply because the EFCC is an investigative agency and not a news organisation.

 

 

The commission further challenged the finding that it acted with malice, arguing that there was no evidence of spite, ill will or improper motive.

 

It submitted that its investigating officer testified that the publication was based on official investigation records and court proceedings, while Agunloye failed to produce evidence capable of establishing express malice.

 

 

On the issue of damages, the EFCC argued that Agunloye did not prove that the publication diminished his reputation.

 

The commission noted that one of Agunloye’s witnesses admitted he continued to hold the former minister in high regard after reading the publication, while Agunloye himself remained the national secretary of the Social Democratic Party (SDP).

 

 

It argued that any damage to his reputation stemmed from the pending criminal proceedings rather than its report of those proceedings.

 

The commission also described the N10 million damages awarded by the trial court as “arbitrary, excessive, punitive and unsupported by any evidence”.

 

“The award is manifestly excessive and out of all proportion to the circumstances of the case, such as to warrant appellate interference,” it said.

 

The EFCC further faulted the orders directing it to apologise, retract the publication and refrain from making future publications concerning Agunloye, arguing that the injunction was vague and unduly restricted its statutory duty to inform the public about its activities.

 

It also contended that compelling the commission to apologise amounted to compelling speech despite what it described as documentary evidence establishing the substantial truth of the publication.

 

The anti-graft agency equally argued that Agunloye’s civil action ought not to have been entertained while his criminal trial over the Mambilla project remains pending.

 

“The respondent’s civil action was premature, the criminal charge against him being yet to be concluded and judgement delivered thereon,” the commission said.

 

It added that the trial court’s findings effectively prejudged issues that are still before another high court handling the criminal case.

 

Among the reliefs sought, the EFCC urged the court of appeal to allow the appeal; set aside the entire judgement, including the declaration that the publication was defamatory, the orders for retraction and apology, the perpetual injunction and the N10 million damages; and dismiss Agunloye’s suit in its entirety.

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