Corruption Scandal Rocks Nigeria: Dangote Petitions ICPC Against NMDPRA Chief Over Alleged Fund Misuse

A significant dispute has emerged in Nigeria's petroleum sector, involving Alhaji Aliko Dangote, President of Dangote Industries Limited, and Engr. Farouk Ahmed, Chief Executive of the Nigerian Midstream and Downstream Petroleum Regulatory Authority (NMDPRA). This conflict centers on serious corruption allegations leveled by Dangote against Ahmed, leading to interventions from various bodies including student groups, civil society organizations, a coalition of lawyers, and the House of Representatives, alongside a formal petition filed with the Independent Corrupt Practices and Other Related Offences Commission (ICPC).
The genesis of the public feud traces back to a press briefing at the Dangote Petroleum Refinery in Lekki, Lagos, where Alhaji Dangote accused Engr. Ahmed of economic sabotage. Specifically, Dangote alleged that Ahmed was colluding with international traders and oil importers to deliberately frustrate local refinery operations. Further, he accused the NMDPRA boss of living far beyond his legitimate means as a public officer, citing a substantial sum of money — initially stated as $5 million and later detailed as over $7 million — allegedly paid for his four children's school fees at a secondary school in Switzerland, covering six years of education in advance.
Responding to these accusations, the National Association of Nigerian Students (NANS), in collaboration with the Coalition of Civil Society Organisations (CSO), issued a statement. Jointly signed by Com. Samson Adeyemi (NANS National PRO) and Mr. Humphrey Jonathan (CSO National Coordinator), the statement cautioned Dangote against calling for Ahmed's probe and urged the business mogul to embrace collaboration over confrontation with the NMDPRA boss. NANS emphasized the need for synergy between investors and regulators in the downstream sector and reaffirmed its support for indigenous industrial growth. While supporting Dangote Refinery's operational take-off, NANS declared it would not endorse allegations that foster division between the refinery leadership and the NMDPRA. The student body advocated for peaceful engagement, dialogue, mutual respect, and institutional integrity to resolve the feud, steering regulatory matters away from media space to avoid unnecessary tensions and potential unrest. They lauded NMDPRA's commitment to transparency, particularly the publication of regulatory reports, viewing it as a positive step towards global best practices.
Further escalating the matter, Dr. Aliko Dangote formally filed a petition with the ICPC through his legal team, led by Dr. Ogwu James Onoja, SAN. Submitted on December 16, 2025, the petition called for the arrest and prosecution of Engr. Farouk Ahmed, reiterating the allegations of living beyond official means, abuse of office, corrupt enrichment, and embezzlement of public funds. Dangote specifically detailed the alleged expenditure of over $7 million in tuition fees for Ahmed's four children in Switzerland, providing their names and the schools attended as evidence. He argued that such an amount could not have been legitimately funded through Ahmed's career earnings solely within the public sector. The petition invoked Section 19 of the ICPC Act, which prescribes a five-year imprisonment term without a fine for such offences, urging decisive action from the commission. Dangote also expressed his readiness to personally appear before the ICPC to substantiate his claims with documentary and other evidence, highlighting the broader public interest in transparency and accountability under President Bola Ahmed Tinubu's administration.
Concurrently, a coalition of 40 lawyers, operating under the aegis of Lawyers in Defence of Democracy and Anti-Corruption, publicly condemned Dangote's allegations. At a press conference in Abuja, Barrister Emeka Okafor (National Coordinator) and Barrister Mohammed Bello (Secretary) described the accusations as frivolous, baseless, and unfounded. They vehemently opposed what they termed
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