A Federal
High Court sitting in Lagos, yesterday restrained 20 commercial banks
in Nigeria from allowing Dansa Foods and Bulk Pack Services Limited, two
companies owned by Sani Dangote, the younger brother of Alhaji Aliko
Dangote, from withdrawing money from theaccounts.
The court also restrained the banks from honouring cheques to withdraw from the accounts.
The restraining order, Justice Okon Abang said was to be in force
until September 11, 2014, when all applications filed in a suit brought
by Union Bank against the two companies would be heard.
The banks are Access, CITI, Diamond, Ecobank, Enterprise, Fidelity,
First Bank, First City Monument Bank (FCMB), Guaranty Trust Bank (GTB),
Heritage, Keystone, Mainstreet, Skye Bank, Stanbic IBTC, Standard
Chartered Bank, Sterling, United Bank for Africa (UBA), Unity, Wema and
Zenith.
The judge also ordered the banks to file affidavits to show the true
position of the companies’ accounts with them within five days.
Justice Abang, however, ordered Union Bank to file an undertaken to
indemnify the defendants in the event that the freezing order ought not
to have been made.
“In line with Order 28 rule 2 of the rules of this court, an interim
order is hereby made restraining the banks from allowing the defendants
to operate their accounts with them, especially honouring withdrawal of
funds.
“I think the dictate of justice demands that a preserving order
should be made to preserve the res (subject matter) of this suit,”
Justice Abang held.
Union Bank had sued Sani Dangote and his companies over alleged
failure to liquidate about N5 billion debt despite repeated demands.
The bank,
in two separate suits against Dangote and his companies, had sought a
mareva injunction restraining all commercial banks in Nigeria from
allowing withdrawal of funds from their accounts pending the
determination of the suits.
When the
matter came up for hearing on Thursday, the motion could not be heard as
the defendants had filed objection challenging the jurisdiction of the
court to entertain the suit.
Out of all the banks, Diamond and Zenith appeared before the court
yesterday and explained that Dangote was equally indebted to them.
But while stating that he would entertain all the applications filed
in the matter on September 11, Justice Abang said there was an urgent
need to preserve the res in view of the allegation that the defendants
were about to move the funds abroad.
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