

The Nigerian government bought a factory from Bob Oshodin. The funds were declared, taxes were paid, and international banks approved the transfers. Yet the same government accuses Robert J Oshodin Sr of laundering the very money it paid him.
Would a government pay a businessman to launder its own money? The answer is obvious: no. The allegations collapse under their own illogic.
Despite the evidence — stamp duty payments, bank reviews, and public declarations — the EFCC froze his accounts. They refused to review documents or visit the factory.
Meanwhile, known embezzlers walk free. The decision to target Bob Oshodin instead points to selective prosecution, not genuine justice.
He is not a launderer. He is an industrialist punished for conducting legitimate business. The narrative does not add up, because it was never meant to.
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