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River Park Estate Founder Ogunmuyiwa Refutes Resignation Claim, Accuses Ghanaian Counterpart of Forgery and Corporate Hijack Plot
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River Park Estate Founder Ogunmuyiwa Refutes Resignation Claim, Accuses Ghanaian Counterpart of Forgery and Corporate Hijack Plot

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The founder of River Park Estate, Adrian Ogunmuyiwa, has refuted reports suggesting his resignation from the company’s board, describing the claims as false, malicious, and part of a wider scheme to fraudulently take over the firm.

The controversy erupted after Sahara Reporters published a letter circulating on social media, purportedly showing Ogunmuyiwa’s resignation. He, however, declared the document to be a forgery allegedly masterminded by his Ghanaian counterpart, Kojo Mensah.

In a strongly worded statement issued yesterday, Ogunmuyiwa clarified: “I want the world to know the truth situation that I never resigned. The purported letter released on publication by Sahara Reporters is fake.”

The founder of River Park Estate, Adrian Ogunmuyiwa, has refuted reports suggesting his resignation from the company’s board, describing the claims as false, malicious, and part of a wider scheme to fraudulently take over the firm.

He alleged that the resignation letter was not an isolated case but one of several falsified documents, including board resolutions and forged signatures, notably that of John Townley Johnson. Ogunmuyiwa maintained that these documents were produced as part of an elaborate plan to unlawfully wrest control of Houses for Africa Nigeria Limited.

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He further disclosed that the alleged conspirators illegally inserted an individual who, according to Corporate Affairs Commission (CAC) records, ceased to be a director and shareholder as far back as 2008. A CAC status report in 2020, he emphasized, still recognized him as a director of the company.

“The Ghanaians completely removed all Nigerian board of directors from Houses for Africa Nigeria Limited, leaving only themselves as board members,” Ogunmuyiwa lamented. “This criminal act was first conducted in February 2024, as shown by the police report and CAC status report. If I resigned in 2017, why was I removed in 2024? In other documents they produced, as shown in the extracts of the Nigerian Police forensic report, they claimed I also resigned in 2013 and now again in 2017.”

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According to him, the pattern of forged documents and illegal corporate filings demonstrates a coordinated attempt to strip Nigerian stakeholders of their rightful positions, a move he vowed to resist.

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