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Report Indicts NMDPRA Boss, Ahmed Farouq In $5.5m Children's Tuition fraud ...Recommends Prosecution, Urges President To Suspend Him Like Beta Edu




Oduduwa Solidarity Network has asked the Federal Government to suspend the Chief Executive Officer of the Nigerian Midstream and Downstream Petroleum Regulatory Authority, NMDPRA, Engr. Farouk Ahmed, over alleged $5 million fraud.

Speaking at a press conference in Lagos on Wednesday, the Convener of the group, Comrade Tunde Osinowo, said an Independent Report on the Allegations of Abuse of Office has indicted Ahmed of spending an estimated $5.5 million equivalent of N8 billion at current exchange rates on the elite foreign education of his children.

Osinowo said this expenditure, if left unaccounted for, strikes at the heart of Nigeria’s anti-corruption battle, making a mockery of the laws and the suffering of ordinary citizens.

He said: "This report arises from a growing crisis of confidence in the leadership of NMDPRA and by extension, the integrity of public finance management in Nigeria.

"At the centre of this storm are credible allegations that Engr. Farouk Ahmed funded the overseas secondary and tertiary education of his four children at some of the most expensive institutions in the world.

"These include Institut Le Rosey, widely regarded as the most elite boarding school globally; Aiglon College and La Garenne International School in Switzerland; Montreux Secondary School; and, most recently, Harvard University.

"Our concern is not with private ambition or parental pride, but with the disconnect between this extravagant expenditure and Engr. Ahmed’s known income.

"Nigeria’s civil service, for all its responsibilities, does not pay salaries that can sustain a $5.5 million outlay on education. And to our knowledge, there has been no public disclosure of business earnings, family inheritance, or blind trust that might explain this wealth.

"As an independent network committed to public accountability, we have subjected these claims to due diligence.

"Faisal Farouk, Ashraf Farouk, Farouk Jr., and Farhana Farouk have attended institutions where annual tuition, boarding, travel, and upkeep amount to over $200,000 per child.

"Over a six-year period per child, this easily totals $1.2 million. With four children, the bill escalates to $4.8 million—and rising.

"One of the children recently graduated from Harvard University, where tuition and associated costs reached $152,000 for a single year.

"Ahmed has spent his entire adult life in government employment, beginning his career with the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) and rising through the ranks to his current position at NMDPRA.

"There is no record of declared external income, shareholding in profit-generating entities, or high-value asset sales that would justify this lifestyle.

"The failure of the NMDPRA to sign its public response, the lack of itemised defence, and the absence of a personal affidavit from Ahmed himself, indicate not a willingness to engage, but a strategy of obfuscation.

"This pattern is deeply concerning for an office entrusted with oversight of trillions in petroleum revenue."

According to the group, Ahmed has breached the sacred trust of his office and he has failed the test of transparency.

"He has treated public office as a gateway to private luxury. And worse still, he has not even bothered to account for the excesses.

"Remember that in 2017, former President Muhammadu Buhari fired Babachir Lawal, then Secretary to the Government of the Federation, after he was implicated in a contract diversion scandal involving funds meant for internally displaced persons.

"Babachir was later prosecuted. In 2024, President Tinubu suspended Betta Edu, Minister of Humanitarian Affairs, over financial transfers lacking due process. Both cases were seen as a defence of public morality—and rightly so.

"Is Engr. Farouk Ahmed exempt from the same standard? Is the misuse of public funds only criminal when it concerns displaced persons or social intervention budgets—but not when it quietly funds elite education in Switzerland and Montreux?

"What message does this silence send to millions of Nigerian parents struggling to pay WAEC fees or school levies? What does it say to the civil servant earning N150,000 monthly, paying tax, and watching as the top of the system floats above scrutiny?

"We call on President Bola Ahmed Tinubu to suspend Engr. Farouk Ahmed from office pending the conclusion of a comprehensive investigation by relevant agencies.

"This is not unprecedented. Presidents before him have taken similar actions. In 2022, former Minister of Humanitarian Affairs, Betta Edu, was suspended over allegations of financial impropriety.

"In 2017, Babachir Lawal, then Secretary to the Government of the Federation, was removed for misuse of funds earmarked for internally displaced persons. The principle was the same: public trust must not be eroded.

"We urge the Code of Conduct Bureau, the EFCC, and the ICPC to open an immediate investigation into the source of funds used by Engr. Ahmed for his children’s education.

"His asset declarations should be examined for accuracy and cross-checked against known expenditures.

"Should any infractions be established, we expect swift prosecution in line with Nigeria’s anti-corruption laws. No official, no matter how highly placed, should be above the law.

"Let it be known that we approach this matter not with malice, but with fidelity to a country in search of rebirth. Our silence in the face of such glaring contradictions would amount to complicity.

"Engr. Ahmed must submit to the same rules he once swore to uphold. This is not persecution—it is the minimum standard of ethical governance."

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