
This story is currently trending. Operatives of the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) have arrested Mustapha Abdullahi, Director-General of the Energy Commission of Nigeria, over alleged money laundering involving more than N500 billion.
Thank you for reading this post, don't forget to subscribe!Obviously, such a scale of fraud raises questions about possible collaborators. The sheer magnitude of the funds also fuels concerns about whether they may have impacted political activities, including contaminating politics in Enugu State.
It should be noted that Abdullahi was appointed in October 2023 by President Tinubu.
Reports indicate that allegations against him were first raised in December 2025 by a civil society organisation, which accused him of orchestrating a scheme involving the award of solar streetlight contracts to multiple companies allegedly linked by common ownership, similar addresses, and coordinated registration timelines.
Given that the fraudulent activities date back to 2023 and were flagged as early as 2025, it is reasonable to ask under whose ministerial watch they occurred. Be it noted that the Energy Commission of Nigeria is a parastatal under the Federal Ministry of Innovation, Science and Technology.
However, it is evident that the humongous fraud predates the current Minister, Dr. Kingsley Udeh, SAN, who only assumed office precisely on November 6, 2025.
Accordingly, the alleged fraud did not occur under the tenure of the taintless, incorruptible, and highly cerebral Dr. Udeh, whose administration has been reform-oriented and firmly focused on advancing the core mandate of the ministry, namely the promotion of research and development, technological advancement, innovation-driven growth, and the application of science and technology to national development. Not enabling corruption or the laundering of public funds to serve political ambitions.
When fully unravelled, alongside the other sensational ₦800 billion scandal, the financial trail could well prove both staggering and deeply unsettling, raising serious questions about the extent of financial abuse and the desperation of certain political actors.