The move by SERAP to sue Akpabio and Abbas over the alleged ₦18.6bn scandal has now become a major test of Nigeria’s fight against corruption. The case, which focuses on the funds meant for the National Assembly Service Commission office complex, has raised questions about how public money is used and why basic transparency is still a struggle in a country desperate for accountability.
A Deepening Scandal
According to the details already before the court, SERAP took action after the Auditor-General’s 2022 report showed huge financial gaps. The most shocking part of the report is that more than ₦11bn was paid to a construction company that cannot even be identified clearly. For a project as big as a government complex, this kind of secrecy is disturbing. How can a country be modern and functional when billions are sent to a company nobody can fully name?
The report also states that the contract was increased by almost ₦7bn without proper documents. No Bill of Quantity, no breakdown, no pricing, no bidding process, no FEC approval, and not even a certificate of “No Objection.” It reads like a case study in how corruption operates in the open when officials believe nobody will challenge them.

The Missing Money
What SERAP is saying is very simple: tell Nigerians where the ₦18.6bn went. The Auditor-General fears that the money may have been diverted or stolen. If this fear is even half true, then something dangerous is happening inside the highest lawmaking institution in the country. The National Assembly should be the first place to obey rules, not the place where rules disappear.
Instead of clear answers, the public is left with numbers that make no sense:
- Billions paid without proper paperwork
- A “construction company” that feels like a ghost
- Contracts inflated without technical justification
- Funds were released before even confirming what work had been done
This situation is embarrassing for a country already fighting poverty, unemployment, and insecurity. Nigerians are tired of stories where billions vanish, and nobody is held responsible.
Why Nigerians Are Angry
In a time when ordinary people cannot afford food, when hospitals lack basic medicine, when schools collapse, watching ₦18.6bn move around like pocket change feels insulting. It shows a system where leaders do not fear consequences. It also shows why corruption keeps eating the country from the inside.
People want to know why a building project needed such huge amounts and why the process was so secretive. If the funds were actually used for the office complex, then there should be photos, progress reports, and clear documentation. Instead, all the public sees is silence.
SERAP’s Legal Strategy
SERAP is asking the court to force Akpabio, Abbas, and the NASC to open their books. They want the name of the mysterious company. They want the contract documents. They want the minutes of the tender board. They want proof that due process was followed. They also want details of any approval given by the Federal Executive Council.
Their argument is that allowing this case to go unanswered encourages corruption. It weakens democracy. It tells politicians they can do anything without consequences. SERAP says public money belongs to the people, and the people have a right to know how it is spent.
This position is correct. If ₦18.6bn can disappear without explanation, then anything can disappear.
This case is not only about two politicians. It is about a system that refuses to reform itself. Nigeria has too many stories of missing funds, inflated contracts, abandoned projects, and fake companies receiving huge payments.
By taking this matter to court, SERAP is challenging the culture of silence that protects corruption. They are forcing high-ranking officials to answer questions. They are reminding the nation that no leader is above scrutiny.
Effects on Public Trust
Every corruption case damages public trust, but a scandal inside the National Assembly is even more painful. This is the same institution that makes laws about accountability, transparency and governance. If such a place cannot manage its own funds, then how can it manage a whole country?
Citizens need reassurance that the system works. They need proof that justice is possible. They need to know that national resources are treated with respect. Without that, people lose hope in democracy.
A System Demanding Answers
The court case will reveal whether leaders are ready to defend their actions with real evidence or if they will hide behind technicalities. The unanswered questions include:
- Why was a major construction contract handled without a bidding process?
- Who approved the payments?
- Why was the contract inflated?
- Where is the completed building?
- Who are the real beneficiaries of the ₦18.6bn?
These questions cannot be avoided forever.
Bottom Line
The action taken by SERAP to challenge Akpabio and Abbas is a necessary step in a country tired of corruption stories. By pushing this case forward, they remind Nigerians that public funds must never be treated as private property. If the truth comes out, this could become one of the biggest corruption tests in recent years.














