Police have arrested a man who had been working in the Federal Ministry of Health as a doctor for nearly 10 years on a practice licence he allegedly stole from his friend.
Police have arrested Martin
Ugwu, who had been working in the Federal Ministry of Health as a doctor
for nearly 10 years on a practice licence he allegedly stole from his
friend.
The suspect was a top official of the
Nigerian Centre for Disease Control (NCDC), where he has worked since
2006 under the name of Dr George Davidson Daniel until his arrest on
Thursday in Abuja, officials told Daily Trust.
The
Medical and Dental Council of Nigeria, which registers all Nigerian
doctors and regulates their practice, called for his arrest after its
own investigations uncovered two Dr Daniels-the same name on two
separate identity photographs.
The council had
been petitioned to investigate complaints against Dr George Davidson
Daniel, who worked at NCDC, but the photo in its database was not
Daniel, the lead investigator told Daily Trust.
Lead Investigator, Dr Henry Okwuokenye, said:
“When
we looked at our archives, we discovered there is actually somebody
that bears the name Dr George Davidson Daniel but the picture is not the
same as was sent to us.
The Daniel under
investigation had a photocopy of a practice licence and a provisional
licence-the first temporary documentation for new doctors valid for only
two years-but the unique folio number matched the real Dr Daniel on
MDCN files.
The actual person that bears that name is a doctor doing his residency at teaching hospital in Jos."
Daniel,
based in Jos, appeared before the council on invitation, and identified
the ‘doctor’ under investigation as his childhood friend, Martin Ugwu,
and was the best man at his 2006 wedding.
Daniel
admitted he had lost his documentation when both men visited an uncle in
Abuja on a job hunt but did not report it stolen because he thought he
had misplaced them.
He said Ugwu returned the documents a year later, claiming a Good Samaritan had found them and sent them back.
Investigators believe Ugwu took on Daniel’s name and got employment between the times Daniel’s documents were lost and returned.
Since
then, he has been in the Federal Civil Service for nearly 10 years,
worked in the heart of the federal ministry of health headquarters in
Abuja, under the ministers of health and the head of the NCDC, beating
routine civil-service reviews, verifications and assessments and taken
his most recent promotion in 2010 thats placed him on a fast-track to
director cadre.
Ugwu was top on a government
committee that met more than 200 contingents returning from Liberia,
Sierra Leone and Guinea where they had volunteered to help fight Ebola
under an African Union mission.
Video footage
showed him ushering volunteers off their plane at 21.38 am on May 24 as
the Ethiopian Airlines flight landed and hurrying them through
interviews and onto buses waiting to take them to their hotels.
On
June 3, when news broke that volunteers were stopped from checking out
because their accommodation bills had not been paid, Ugwu as George
reportedly turned up at Summit Villa at Life Camp and placed a call to
permanent secretary Linus Awute who pleaded with hotel management to let
the volunteers go.
‘George’ had to deposit his
identity card with the hotel standing as surety, the same day he told
MDCN investigators searching for him that he was away on official
assignment in Bayelsa State, according to Premium Times.
In the lead up to his arrest, he had told AIG Medical, Dr Grace Okudo that he was in Minna.
On
Thursday, he was traced to Summit Villa from where plainclothes police
officers invited him for questioning at the Apo police division.
On the drive to the station, he phoned his friends and brother-in-law that he was being arrested.
“They
haven’t told me [the reason] but it cannot be unconnected with the N5
billion fraud I uncovered,” he said on his call to friends and
relatives.
He also called his wife, with whom he
has five children, sent N150,000 for her upkeep and told her: “I am not
calling you to be worried. It is not a big deal. I’m not a criminal, I
didn’t kill anybody. I am talking to you as your husband. You know what
is on ground right?”
But he became calm when confronted with allegations of working years while impersonating a registered doctor.
The council says it is investigating or prosecuting some 40 cases of quacks in courts so far.
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