In January 2024, Gambaryan was detained by law enforcement
officials in the country.
In a long social media post, he claimed the experience
involved shady dealings, international tensions, and the figure of Nigeria’s
National Security Adviser, Nuhu Ribadu.
According to Gambaryan, several lawmakers set up a meeting
and demanded a $150 million bribe, which was to be paid in cryptocurrency into
their personal wallets.
Gambaryan wrote: “The DSS was involved in the House of
Representatives matter. We met with them at their office on Friday, January 5,
2024, as a prerequisite to our meeting with the House of Representatives. They
alluded to the fact that we had to comply with whatever the House members
instructed us to do.
“At the House meeting, there were three members present. Two
of them were Peter Akpanke and Philip Agbese, both working under the leadership
of Ginger Obinna Onwusibe. There was a third House member, but I don’t recall
his name.
“They set up fake cameras and media to make the meeting
appear official, but the cameras weren’t even plugged in. As you may already
know, this ended with them asking for a $150 million bribe, paid in
cryptocurrency into their personal wallets. A Mickey Mouse operation at its
best.
“@NuhuRibadu invited us to the official meeting and worked
through Sa’ad Abubakar. Another key figure in this situation was Hamma Adama
Belloji. Ogunjobi was just a pawn; they used him too.
“This was sold as a friendly meeting with the NSA, the head
of the SEC, and the CBN governor and included the discussion of the bribe that
was solicited by the House of Representatives.
“The $26 billion figure they kept pushing publicly as some
mystery money escaping Nigeria is complete BS. This information was provided in
response to their request and was simply cumulative trade data for Nigerians on
the platform. This money didn’t leave Nigeria — it was just people buying and
selling crypto.
“For example, if you trade $100 a hundred times, that’s
$10,000 in trade volume, but in reality, you only used $100. Again, just
another example of them lying to cover up their BS investigation.
“They lied about Nadeem escaping during mosque prayers. In
reality, he returned and escaped afterward. I don’t know exactly how he managed
to flee. He emailed me in November, but we haven’t discussed the details of his
escape. It’s possible he paid someone off, but I have no proof.
“If Belloji had simply checked his passport for a visa, he
would have realized that Nadeem did not use that passport to travel to Nigeria.
“They sent a letter to the U.S. Embassy and the British High
Commission, falsely claiming that we were voluntarily participating in
strategic talks. This was a blatant lie.
“Nadeem did not escape lawful detention — we were being held
illegally. Belloji even admitted that he would fabricate evidence to obtain a
court order to detain us for 14 days.
“Once the court order expired, they were unable to get an
extension from the judge. At that point, they continued holding us illegally
and had no justification for doing so.
“There was a lot of noise about using Interpol to capture
Nadeem. As someone who has been involved in multiple extradition cases, I can
confidently say this was a joke.
“Extradition is a lengthy legal process, and no rational
judge in Kenya or wherever would ever approve extradition for someone who
escaped illegal detention at the hands of rogue law enforcement — especially
when that detention involved holding employees hostage to pressure their
employer. All noise.
“They tried to use us to violate international privacy laws
by demanding user data on all Nigerians to target opposition members allegedly
‘manipulating the price of the naira.’ However, they all knew that the naira’s
devaluation was a direct result of Tinubu’s monetary policy, which depegged the
naira from the dollar.
“I’m not saying this policy decision was wrong, but everyone
understood that removing government intervention would lead to extreme
devaluation. Instead of acknowledging this, they used Binance as a scapegoat.”
In October 2024, DAILY POST reported that the federal
government had withdrawn the money laundering charges filed against Gambaryan.
The Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) had, in
April 2024, arraigned Binance and Gambaryan over alleged money laundering.
This followed a clampdown on the cryptocurrency firm over
alleged manipulation of the naira.
Also, recall that the Nigerian government and Binance had
been at loggerheads after Olayemi Cardoso, the Governor of the Central Bank of
Nigeria, said $26 billion was funneled through Binance without a trace.