Nigerian Court Sentences Ex-Power Minister Mamman to 75 Years in Prison for Fraud

ABUJA, May 13 (Reuters) – A Nigerian ⁠court ⁠on Wednesday sentenced ⁠former power minister Saleh Mamman to 75 ​years in prison after convicting him of laundering 33.8 ‌billion naira ($24.71 million), the ‌country’s anti-graft agency said, a rare ⁠conviction against ⁠corrupt officials in the West African nation.

* Justice ​James Omotosho of the Federal High Court in Abuja sentenced Mamman after finding him guilty on all 12 ​counts filed by the Economic and Financial Crimes ⁠Commission (EFCC), the ⁠agency said in ⁠a ​post on X.

* The EFCC charged Mamman with laundering 33.8 ​billion naira ⁠through private companies, funds that prosecutors said were proceeds of unlawful activity linked to government-financed hydroelectric projects, including the Mambilla and Zungeru power plants.

* ⁠Mamman, who served as minister of power in 2019, was ⁠sentenced in absentia under the law. The court ordered Nigerian and international security agencies to arrest Mamman and hand him over to correctional authorities to serve his sentence.

* Nigeria has long grappled with high-profile corruption cases involving public officials, with the EFCC tasked with ⁠prosecuting financial crimes. The Mamman case centers on funds meant for critical power infrastructure projects in Africa’s most populous nation, where electricity shortages ​remain widespread.

(Reporting by Chijioke Ohuocha in ​AbujaEditing by Matthew Lewis)

Copyright 2026 Thomson Reuters.

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