President
 Goodluck Jonathan on Thursday said there was no truth in widespread 
insinuation that his government was orchestrating the $620,000 bribery 
scandal involving the Chairman of the House of Representatives’ ad hoc 
committee on the fuel subsidy, Mr. Farouk Lawan, and an oil businessman,
 Mr. Femi Otedola.
Jonathan said this in a statement by his Special Adviser on Media and Publicity, Dr. Reuben Abati, in Abuja.
The President’s aide described the 
insinuation that the scandal was a ploy by Jonathan and the executive 
arm of government to unseat the leadership of the House as “lame, 
diversionary, totally false and baseless.”
Abati also told our correspondent in an 
exclusive interview that despite the bribery scandal, Jonathan would not
 stop the action he had already initiated on the implementation of the 
report of the committee.
The President said notwithstanding the 
development on the scandal, his directive to the Attorney-General of the
 Federation, Mr. Mohammed Adoke (SAN), on the report of the probe 
committee, as adopted by the House, had not changed.
He said that he expected that all those 
indicted in the report would be duly investigated and prosecuted if a 
prima facie case of misconduct was established against them.
The presidential statement reads, “The 
Presidency denounces the lame and diversionary attempt by some 
newspapers to drag the person and office of the President into the very 
unsavoury bribery scandal involving the Chairman of the House of 
Representatives’ Fuel Subsidy Probe Ad Hoc Committee and a well-known 
petroleum products marketer.
“The mischievous insinuation in today’s 
editions of the newspapers that the entire affair, in which the two key 
players have publicly confessed their roles, is part of a plot by 
President Goodluck Jonathan and the executive arm of government to 
unseat the leadership of the House of Representatives, is totally false 
and baseless.
“For the benefit of unwary members of the 
public who may be deceived by the political innuendoes now being woven 
into the subsidy probe bribe affair, President Jonathan wishes to affirm
 that he has absolutely no reason or desire to meddle in the affairs of 
the House of Representatives and its leadership.
“Neither the President nor anyone acting on
 his request or order has anything to do with the scandal that has sadly
 engulfed the House ad hoc committee on fuel subsidy. The attempt to 
drag the Presidency into the matter is entirely speculative and without 
factual foundation.
“Against the background of its avowed 
commitment to the effective prosecution of the war against corruption in
 Nigeria, the Presidency notes with satisfaction that given the 
seriousness of the scandal, the House of Representatives has already 
recalled its members from recess for a special session to deliberate on 
it tomorrow.”
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