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BURSTED: NSITF CEO MOVES On ₦297Billion Fund, Operates Over 100 Bank Accounts Linked To One BVN

by Leading Reporters February 9, 2026
written by Leading Reporters
The Managing Director/Chief Executive Officer of the Nigeria Social Insurance Trust Fund (NSITF) Oluwaseun Mayomi Faleye, is accused of operating more than 100 bank accounts linked to a single Bank Verification Number (BVN) and granting himself “unlimited spending powers” to siphon and misappropriate funds belonging to Nigerian workers.

Multiple internal documents, bank records, and testimonies obtained by allege that Faleye unilaterally conferred these powers on himself and authorised the disbursement of hundreds of billions of naira belonging exclusively to Nigerian workers, without lawful approval, board oversight, or adherence to federal financial regulations.

₦297 Billion Workers’ Funds, ₦243 Billion Allegedly Spent Without Approval

According to documents reviewed by US, between January 2 and October 9, 2025, the NSITF recorded total lodgments of ₦297,019,145,288.60.

The funds, insiders stressed, were derived entirely from compulsory employer contributions under the Employees’ Compensation Act (ECA), a statutory scheme designed to protect Nigerian workers injured, disabled, or killed in the course of employment.

Within the same period, records show that ₦243,203,518,621.17 was spent. Multiple senior officials alleged that a significant portion of this expenditure was carried out without the approval of the NSITF Management Board, in violation of the Act establishing the Fund and existing federal financial regulations.

“This is not government money. This is workers’ money, contributed mandatorily under the law,” one senior NSITF official said.

“Every kobo is supposed to be protected by layers of checks and balances. What we are seeing here is a complete collapse of those safeguards.”

‘No Approval Limit’: How Faleye Allegedly Gave Himself Unchecked Spending Powers

Central to the allegations is a document dated March 4, 2025, signed by Mr. Faleye and obtained by .

The document is an extract from the minutes of the 46th Executive Committee (EXCO) meeting held at the NSITF Boardroom, and chaired by Faleye, detailing approval limits for financial transactions within the Fund.

According to a document obtained by US, the EXCO resolution set clear limits for other officials: other general managers, ₦25,000; General Manager (Finance), ₦50,000; other executive directors, ₦750,000; and the Executive Director (Finance and Investment), ₦1,000,000.

However, under the same resolution, the Managing Director/Chief Executive Officer, Mr. Faleye, and the chairman, approved no limit for his own spending authority.

Nsitf

According to multiple sources, this effectively gave Mr. Faleye unrestricted power to approve payments of any amount, without recourse to the Management Board or external oversight.

“He simply wrote and signed a document granting himself ‘No Approval Limit’,” a senior official disclosed. “There is absolutely no legal basis for this in the NSITF Act or in federal financial regulations.”

Another insider added, “This amounts to usurping the powers of the President of the Federal Republic of Nigeria. Under existing rules, even Managing Directors of parastatals are capped. They cannot wake up and approve unlimited spending.”

Current federal thresholds reportedly allow Managing Directors to approve up to ₦30 million for works and ₦10 million for goods and services, and even those approvals remain subject to board oversight.

“What happened here defies every known rule of public finance management,” a source said.

Several NSITF insiders described deep distress over the alleged abuses.

“This is the most reckless abuse of power I have witnessed in over 20 years in the public sector,” a senior official told Our Reporters.

“He effectively sidelined the Board, ignored the law, and treated workers’ funds as personal cash. The emotional toll of witnessing this level of corruption is enormous. I can’t even sleep.”

Millions of Dollars Allegedly Traced to Faleye, Linked Entities

In a separate document exclusively obtained by SaharaReporters, investigators traced alleged inflows of millions of dollars and hundreds of millions of naira into bank accounts linked directly to Mr. Faleye and entities reportedly associated with him.

The transactions listed include: Faleye Oluwaseun Mayomisola, GTBank USD Account 0111206422 – $336,917.00

Faleye Oluwaseun Mayomisola, GTBank USD Account 0004754113 – $6,743,421.00

Faleye Oluwaseun Mayomisola, GTBank NGN Account 0004754096 – ₦291,182,605.00

Fides & Fiducia Client Account, Access Bank NGN Account 0718896883 – ₦584,950,000.00

Fides & Fiducia, Access Bank USD Account 0690403396 – $626,279.00

Fides & Fiducia, Zenith Bank NGN Account 1013806407 – ₦93,757,500.00

Pluschess Limited, Zenith Bank USD Account 071315271 – $20,000.00

Faleye Oluwaseun Mayomisola, GTBank USD Account 3001101016 – $75,558.00

Nsitf

The total dollar inflow alone is estimated at over $7.3 million, excluding naira-denominated transactions.

“These are not small transfers. The volume, frequency, and structuring suggest deliberate efforts to move and possibly conceal funds,” a source familiar with the documents said.

Over 100 Bank Accounts, One BVN

Perhaps most alarming is another document obtained by US, which reportedly shows more than 100 active bank accounts linked to a single BVN belonging to Mr. Faleye.

The BVN profile details are as follows: The registration date is June 10, 2015. The first name is Oluwaseun, the middle name is Mayomi, and the last name is Faleye.

Ndit

The date of birth is August 28, 1977. The enrollment bank is Guaranty Trust Bank, and the enrollment branch is Ajose Adeogun.

Sources allege that many of these accounts received funds traceable to NSITF operations.

“The scale is staggering,” one insider said. “You don’t run over 100 accounts accidentally. This points to systematic structuring.”

‘₦5.5 Billion Commission Payments Approved Without Board or Ministry’

Beyond personal accounts, sources allege that Mr. Faleye authorised speculative commission payments totalling over ₦5.53 billion without approval from either the NSITF Management Board or the Ministry of Labour.

The payments, allegedly ranging between 15% and 20% commission, include: “09/10/2025, Assurance Services ST ADBA Ltd: ₦1,379,186,010.00, 18/03/2025, TAGG Global Resources Ltd: ₦865,000,000.00, 17/09/2025, Rate Seal Support & Project Ltd: ₦683,777,666.40, 16/05/2025, Rate Seal Support & Project Ltd: ₦659,303,810.50.

“16/05/2025, Rate Gold Solution Nig Ltd: ₦648,750,000.00, 01/08/2025, Gold Solution Nig Ltd: ₦648,750,000.00, 01/08/2025, TAGG Global Resources Ltd: ₦648,750,000.00, Total: ₦5,533,517,486.90.

“This money was approved and paid without lawful authority,” a source said. “No board resolution. No ministerial approval.”

Board Absence and Alleged Exploitation of Governance Gap

Sources further disclosed that Mr. Faleye was appointed Managing Director in July 2023, while the NSITF Management Board was not constituted until around January 2025, a gap of more than one year.

“NSITF is not meant to operate without a board,” a top official explained.

“The Act expressly forbids Executive Management from spending funds without board approval. If there is no board, spending should not take place.”

Although the Ministry of Labour has historically attempted to fill temporary governance gaps, insiders insist this does not override the law.

“At no point has Executive Management been allowed to approve financial transactions for itself,” a source said.

“What happened here is unprecedented. This is not mismanagement. It is misappropriation and outright theft.”

‘This Is Workers’ Money, Not National Cake’

Multiple officials emphasised that NSITF funds are distinct from regular government revenue.

“Government contributes nothing except as an employer like everyone else,” one source said.

“Under the law, every employer pays one percent of payroll. The money belongs to Nigerian workers, not the government.”

However, to safeguard this fund, the Act established a strict tripartite governance structure. This structure involves three key stakeholders: the Nigeria Employers’ Consultative Association (NECA), the Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC), and the Federal Ministry of Labour.

“These stakeholders jointly crafted the law,” a source said. “The structure was deliberately designed to prevent exactly this kind of abuse.”

When we contacted the NSITF Chief Executive Officer, Faleye, he said he was not aware of the allegations.

However, when asked about the dollar account and how $7.3 million was allegedly transferred into it, he abruptly hung up the call.

Efforts to get him to respond to the allegations afterward were unsuccessful.

We also reached out to the Permanent Secretary of the Ministry of Labour, Salihu Usman, to ask whether they approved a ₦5 billion commissioning project and how ₦240 billion was allegedly mismanaged.

He denied being aware of the allegations.

When we contacted the Chairman of the NSITF Board, Shola Olofin, he said, “Please give me time to verify this information and claims.”
News credit: saharareporters.com

February 9, 2026 0 comments
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Over N17 Billion Looted Years After, Masterminds of the Snakes, Monkeys, Gorillas, Others, Fate yet on Known
Headlines

Over N17 Billion Looted Years After, Masterminds of the Snakes, Monkeys, Gorillas, Others, Fate yet on Known

by Leading Reporters September 11, 2022
written by Leading Reporters

While Nigerians continue to groan over economic hardship, animals, such as snakes, monkeys, gorillas and even termites have been feeding fat from the national treasury. In the last five years, animals have reportedly carted away at least N17,112,800,000.00. In this report, this online media chronicled how various corruption scandals in the nation have been tied to different animals. more importantly, the report x-rayed the status of the individuals behind the missing funds.

Snake Swallowed N36 Million Naira

In February 2018, Nigerians were dazzled by the jaw-dropping and bewildering report that emanated from the Benue JAMB Office, where it was revealed that a mysterious snake swallowed thirty-six million naira (36,000) – the incident had sparked a national outburst as many Nigerians suspected foul play. Recall that auditors from the capital Abuja had been sent to take inventory of funds accrued over the sale of scratch cards to students hoping to gain access to JAMB’s website to register or check status of their admissions. The audit came up after reforms by the current registrar struck out use of the cards. However, they were dazed by the then Clerk, Philomena Chieshe, who could not account for 36 million accrued from the sales of scratch cards.

Harping on the incident, JAMB’s head office in a statement had said “A sales clerk, Philomina Chieshe, told JAMB registrar and his team that she could not account for N36 million she made in previous years before the abolition of scratch cards. In the course of interrogation, Philomena denied the allegations that she stole the money but confessed that her housemaid connived with another JAMB staff, Joan Asen, to “spiritually” (through a snake) steal the money from the vault in the account office”.

EFCC’s Probe

More than a year after the revelation, Nigeria’s anti-graft agency, the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission launched investigation into the issue with a view to bringing the suspect(s) to book.

EFCC said Philomina Chieshe and five others were found complicit over the issue hence their arraignment before a High Court judge in the Federal Capital Territory, Abuja. The story nosedived and took a different twist during hearing. At the resumed hearing of the case involving Samuel Saleh Umoru and Philomina Chieshe, who were formerly Zonal coordinator and Revenue officer of the Joint Admissions and Matriculations Board, JAMB, respectively, on March 17, 2020, Stanley Ani, an investigator with the EFCC told the court that Umoru, at various times, instructed Chieshe to pay some monies into his bank account as a loan.

In his examination-in-chief led by Ekele Iheanacho, Ani, who led the team of investigators in the case, told the court that the second defendant, Chieshe, said in her volunteered confession statement that her coordinator, Umoru who is the first defendant had instructed her at various times to pay in some amount of monies into his personal account. “Chieshe submitted copies of tellers showing where she deposited monies into Umoru’s (first defendant) account on his instruction and other documents showing collection of ‘I O U’ by the first defendant from the proceeds of sales of e-facility cards”, a witness revealed. He further told the court that an extraction of details were done on the two bank accounts statements of Chieshe and it was discovered that out of the total Twenty Nine Million, Thirty Four Thousand, Two Hundred and Fifty Three Naira, Seventy Two kobo (N29,034,253.72) inflow that her Zenith Bank account received between January 2014 and February 2017, only Two Million, Ninety Four Thousand, Four Hundred and Thirty Three Naira, Seventy Two kobo (N2,094,433.72) were legitimate earnings that came in from JAMB in terms of salary, allowances and dividends from the cooperative society.

Ani then said a total of Twenty Six Million, Nine Hundred and Thirty Nine Thousand, Eight Hundred and Twenty Naira (N26, 939,820.00) were paid into the account by agents contracted by Chieshe to sell e-facility cards on her behalf. While also giving the analysis of the second defendant’s Eco Bank account statement, the witness said a total inflow of One Million, Seven Hundred and Sixty Eight Thousand, Four Hundred and Eighty Naira (N1,768,480.00) were paid into the account by various agents who sold the JAMB e-facility cards on her behalf. He further revealed that there were no transfer made to Jamb’s revenue account as remittance, instead almost all the monies were withdrawn through ATM.

However, till date, Nigerians are yet to know the fate of the clerk and the suppose accomplices. This has led to permutations that the issue has been compromised and swept under the carpet. Some school of thought also believe that it’s a case of delayed litigation. Recall that in 2021, Vice President Osinbajo had frowned at delayed litigations in Nigeria. He described the issue of delays in the judicial process as the ‘elephant in the room’, and wondered what would happen to the country’s legal profession in “another 50 years given the gridlock in processing cases through the courts and the question of the integrity of the legal process, or better still, the integrity of actors in the legal process in Nigeria.

” Monkeys Swallowed N70 Million naira In February 2018

A then serving Senator Shehu Sani, stated that a sum of N70 million, which was given to the Northern Forum of Senators, was swallowed by monkeys at Senator Abdullahi Adamu farm. Sani made the revelation shortly after Adamu was deposed as chairman of the Northern Senators Forum. Sani, told newsmen that under Adamu’s leadership, the forum could not account for part of the money inherited from the 7th Assembly. “There are some things that some of my colleagues cannot say but I’m not used to holding back what is the truth. When we resumed as senators, Sen. Ahmed Lawan tendered the sum of N70 million to the 8th Senate. That N70 million was monies gathered by northern senators from the 7th senate. So it was handed over to the 8th senators from northern Nigeria under the 8th Senate.

“I think this country is becoming a huge joke. First of all it was the rodent that drove away the President and we now have snakes consuming about N36 million, and you now you have monkeys,” Sani said. Adamu had reacted by noting that “In order to give a dog a bad name, they now went to say that they had N70m that I mismanaged or whatever.

The NSF, to the best of my knowledge, has never had N70m, at least not during my tenure that they purported it was mismanaged.” However, the issue was swept under the carpet as the nation’s anti-graft agencies did not make any move to probe the alleged missing funds. This is even as Adamu has emerged as the National Chairman of the ruling APC.

Gorilla swallowed N6.8 million naira in Kano zoo In 2019

A gorilla was accused of swallowing N6.8 million in the Kano Zoological Gardens. The finance officer, according to radio station in the state, Freedom Radio, said the gorilla “sneaked into their office” and carted away the money before swallowing it. The managing director of the zoo, Umar Kobo, confirmed that the money is missing and that the issue was being investigated. “The issue is under investigations for now and I don’t want to say anything on the matter, many journalists have come to meet me but I don’t want to talk anything.

What I can confirm is that money is missing,” he told the BBC Pidgin. It was also that 10 persons, including those on duty when the money went missing, have been arrested. However, three years after, Nigerians are yet to know the fate of the individuals that were arrested in connection to the missing funds.  This has led to permutations that the issue has been swept under carpet.

Termites Ate NSITF Vouchers of N17.1bn Spending In August 2022

The Nigeria Social Insurance Trust Fund has told the Senate that termites have eaten most of the vouchers containing details of how N17.158 billion yet to be accounted for was spent. As stated in the 2018 audit report, the N17.158 billion was the total amount of money transferred by NSITF from its Skye Bank and First Bank accounts into various untraceable accounts belonging to individuals and companies from January to December 2013. The auditor-general’s office had in the 2018 audit report raised 50 different queries bordering on alleged misappropriation of funds by management of the agency, which is under probe by the Senate committee on Public Accounts.

The report queried that “Management of NSITF as shown in statements of Account No. 1750011691 with Skye bank plc., for the period 1st January, 2013 to 20th December, 2013, and Statements of Account No.2001754610 with First Bank Plc. for the period 7th January, 2013 to 28th February, 2013, transferred amounts totaling N 17,158,883,034.69billion   to some persons and companies from these accounts”. The senate committee chairman, Senator Urhoghide, had ordered those involved in the jaw-dropping scandal to reappear before the committee with all the requested evidential documents unfailingly on September 22, 2022. However, many Nigerians worry that this may be swept under the carpet as common in the society.

September 11, 2022 0 comments
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Headlines

CORRUPTION: Termites Eat Up Documents On N17.158B Expenditure of Nigeria Social Insurance Trust Fund (NSITF)

by Folarin Kehinde August 15, 2022
written by Folarin Kehinde

The Senate Public Accounts Committee (SPAC) has put the current and past management of the Nigeria Social Insurance Trust Fund (NSITF) under scrutiny.

The committee said it discovered that the fund’s management failed to produce relevant documents to justify alleged spending of N17.158 billion in 2013.

Some of the documents to back the expenses were said to have been eaten up by termites.

The Office of the Auditor General of the Federation (OAuGF), in its 2018 audit report – now being considered by the Senate panel chaired by Senator Matthew Urhoghide (Edo South) – had queried the agency over the disbursed sums without appropriate supporting documents.

In his report, the AuGF said the N17.158 billion represented the total sum of money, transferred by the agency from its Skye and First Bank accounts, into various untraceable accounts belonging to individuals and companies between January and December 2013.

The OAuGF had, in its 2018 audit report, raised 50 different queries bordering on alleged misappropriation of funds against the agency.

The AuGF’s query reads: “Management of NSITF, as shown in statements of account number 1750011691 with Skye Bank Plc, for the period 1st January, 2013 to 20th December, 2013, and statements of account number 2001754610 with First Bank Plc for the period January 7, 2013 to February 28, 2013, transferred amounts totalling N17,158,883,034.69 to some persons and companies from these accounts.

“However, payment vouchers relating to the transfers together with their supporting documents were not provided for audit. Consequently, the purpose(s) for the transfers could not be authenticated.

“These are in violation of Financial Regulation 601 which states that ‘all payment entries in the cashbook/accounts shall be vouched for on one of the prescribed treasury forms. Vouchers shall be made out in favour of the person or persons to whom the money is actually due’.

“Under no circumstances shall a cheque be raised, or cash paid for services for which a voucher has not been raised.”

The Chairman of the Senate Committee, Urhoghide, had summoned and interviewed NSITF’s past and present managements on where the said N17.158 billion was transferred to between January and December 2013.

It was learnt that no official of the former management could offer satisfactory explanation on the alleged multiple transfers with necessary documents.

Members of management in charge of the agency in 2013 had told the committee that relevant cash vouchers pertaining to the transactions were left behind by them.

But the current NSITF Managing Director, Dr. Michael Akabogu, was said to have claimed that no such documents were in the organisation’s custody.

“The container the said documents were kept by past management has not only been beaten by rains over the years but even possibly been eaten up by termites.

“As directed by this committee, I told the past management officers on the need for them to help us out in answering this query with necessary documents which have not been made available for us,” Akabogu allegedly said.

The Managing Director of NSITF from 2010 to 2016, Mallam Umar Munir Abubakar, allegedly claimed that he was aware of the query and had no explanations to render since the audit exercise was not carried out during his tenure.

But his successor, Mr. Adebayo Somefun, who was head of the agency from May 2017 to July 2020, allegedly insisted that those in the agency’s account section should be able to trace the documents.

But the current General Manager Finance of the agency allegedly said that the container in question had been under lock and key and abandoned in an isolated area within the premises of the organisation in Abuja.

In his ruling, Urhoghide expressed worry over the development and ordered both members of past and present management of the NSITF to re-appear before the panel with all necessary evidence concerning the transactions unfailingly on Thursday, September 22, 2022.

Source: NigeriaDispatch

August 15, 2022 0 comments
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