This is a look at the life of Orji Uzor Kalu, the Nigerian man who went from being a governor to a senator and a prisoner.

On Thursday, the Federal High Court in Lagos sentenced a serving senator and former governor of Abia State, Orji Kalu, to 12 years in prison after convicting him of N7.65 billion fraud.
Justice Mohammed Idris pronounced Mr Kalu guilty of the charge in a trial that lasted for 12 years.
Mr Kalu was tried alongside his company, Slok Nigeria Limited, and Udeh
Udeogu, who was Director of Finance and Accounts at the Abia State
Government House during Mr Kalu’s tenure as governor.
In this analysis, PREMIUM TIMES looks at the rise and fall of Mr Kalu
who has been in politics since the return of democratic rule in 1999.
The rise
Born on April 21, 1960, the year Nigeria became independent, Mr Kalu was elected governor of Abia State in the 4th republic.
He served two terms as governor of Abia State from May 29, 1999, to May
29, 2007, under the umbrella of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP).
Prior to his election, he served as the chairman of the Borno Water
Board and the chairman of the Cooperative and Commerce Bank Limited.
Mr Kalu is the chairman of the Daily Sun, a Nigerian daily print
newspaper published in Ikeja, Lagos, Nigeria. The newspaper was
incorporated on March 29, 2001, and began production as a weekly on
January 18, 2003, and as a daily on June 16, 2003, while he was serving
as governor.
He also doubles as the chairman of the New Telegraph which targets
domestic and foreign readers in major urban centres throughout the
country and covers political, social, and cultural issues.
These two newspapers emanated from SLOK Holding, a conglomerate that
consists of a number of companies, including the Ojialex Furniture
Company, SLOK Nigeria Limited, SLOK United Kingdom Limited, Adamawa
Publishers Limited, SLOK Vegetable Oil, Aba, SLOK Paper Factory, Aba,
SLOK United States Incorporated, SLOK Ghana, Togo, Cotonou, Guinea,
South Africa, Liberia, Botswana, SLOK Korea, Supreme Oil Limited, SLOK
Airlines, and First International Bank Limited.
The Trial
On July 11, 2007, Mr Kalu was arrested by EFCC on charges of corruption while serving as the governor of Abia State.
He was later released on bail, and accused the Olusegun Obasanjo regime
of persecuting him during and after his tenure in office, an accusation
mentioned by former U.S. Ambassador to Nigeria John Campbell in his
book, “Nigeria: Dancing on the Brink.”
He faced prosecution alongside a former Director of Finance and Accounts
at the Abia State Government House during Mr Kalu’s tenure, Ude Udeogo,
and Mr Kalu’s company, Slok Nigeria Limited.
Though he left office in 2007, in October 2016, EFCC renewed its
prosecution and preferred 34 count charges against Mr Kalu. But he and
Mr Udeogo pleaded not guilty to the charges and were granted bail.
The EFCC ultimately reactivated Mr Kalu’s case last year, filing amended
graft charges of up to N7.7 billion against him. In November 2018, a
judge frowned at Mr Kalu’s foreign travel without the permission of the
court and the EFCC.
Senatorial Bid
The fact that he was standing corruption trial did not deter the former
Abia governor from returning to Nigeria and successfully contesting a
senatorial election.
He had in 2015 lost his bid to be elected senator. But he returned in 2019.
He won the Abia North senatorial election on the platform of the All Progressives Congress (APC) in February 2019.
Mr Kalu won with 30,580 votes while the closest opposition candidate
from the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), Mao Ohuabunwa, recorded 21,940
votes.
He later emerged as the Senate Chief whip.
Mr Kalu is a staunch supporter of President Muhammadu Buhari. He once said the president is a “close friend and father, who deserves all the support to make Nigeria better.”
The Fall
After 12 years of standing trial, he was eventually sentenced to 12 years in prison on Thursday.
In one of the counts against him, the EFCC alleged that Mr Kalu “did
procure Slok Nigeria Limited – a company solely owned by you and members
of your family – to retain in its account, domiciled with the then
Inland Bank Plc, Apapa branch, Lagos, an aggregate sum of
N7,197,871,208.7 on your behalf.”
The prosecution claimed that the N7.1 billion “formed part of the funds
illegally derived from the treasury of the Abia State Government and
which was converted into several bank drafts before they were paid into
the said company’s account.”
The prosecuting counsel, Rotimi Jacobs, said the ex-governor violated
Section 17(c) of the Money Laundering (Prohibition) Act, 2004, and was
liable to be punished under Section 16 of the same Act.
Apart from the N7.1bn, which he was accused of laundering, the
ex-governor and the other defendants were also accused of receiving a
total of N460 million allegedly stolen from the Abia State Government
treasury between July and December 2002.
The prosecutor said they breached Section 427 of the Criminal Code Act,
Cap 77, Laws of the Federation of Nigeria, 1990. During the trial, the
prosecution called 19 witnesses while the defendants testified on behalf
of themselves.
Mr Kalu was found guilty of all the 39-count charge filed against him by the EFCC.
Mr Kalu, on Thursday. reportedly smiled at reporters and said, ‘2023,
here we come’ as he was led out of the courtroom by Correctional
Services officials after his sentencing.
He later reportedly said: “Where are you taking us to now? Please don’t handcuff me. I will follow you.”
***
Source: PREMIUM TIMES
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