PFIPC Scandal: Video of โ€œghost agencyโ€ DG challenging Gbajabiamila resurfaces

PFIPC Scandal: Video of “ghost agency” DG challenging Gbajabiamila resurfaces

A press conference video of Prince Adeniyi Adeyemi Matthew, the man at the centre of the alleged โ‚ฆ1.3bn ghost agency scandal, has resurfaced online, intensifying the controversy surrounding the disputed Presidential Foreign Intervention Promotion Council.

Disputed PFIPC DG Asks Tough Questions About CBN Accounts and Budget Process in Resurfaced Video

The video, recorded during a late June 2026 press conference, shows Adeyemi challenging the Presidency’s claim that the PFIPC is fictitious, Punch reports. He questioned how a supposedly non-existent agency passed through multiple layers of budget drafting, ministerial coordination, Budget Office review and National Assembly scrutiny to appear in official documents.

“At what point in this process did references to a non-existent agency allegedly enter the official record? And if they are indeed present in official documentation, what does that imply about the integrity of the process?” Adeyemi asked.

He also challenged the Presidency over the agency’s alleged Central Bank of Nigeria accounts. “The same acclaimed non-existent agency has a domiciliary account, a pounds sterling account and a Treasury Single Account, all domiciled in the Central Bank of Nigeria. Is it even possible to open an account with fictitious documents in a commercial bank in Nigeria today, let alone the Central Bank of Nigeria?” he said.

Adeyemi also alleged that Chief of Staff Femi Gbajabiamila demanded 48 per cent of the agency’s proposed โ‚ฆ27.4bn take-off grant, referencing an alleged demand of โ‚ฆ12.5bn โ€” a claim the Presidency has consistently denied.

The agency was allocated over โ‚ฆ1.3bn in the 2026 Appropriation Act, comprising โ‚ฆ803m for personnel, โ‚ฆ200m for overhead and โ‚ฆ300m for capital expenditure. Adeyemi faces an eight-count charge of forgery, impersonation and operating a fictitious government agency before the Federal High Court in Abuja, where the matter returns on July 27.

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