Tuesday, October 9, 2012

WTF! Diezani goes gaga

 

Minister of Petroleum Resources, Diezani Alison-Madueke, yesterday, barred reporters covering the Senate from recording verbal proceedings of her meeting with the Petroleum Resources (Downstream) Committee. The minister, who arrived late to the meeting fixed for 3p.m, blatantly turned down all entreaties by
reporters to record the proceedings of the meeting convened by the Senator Magnus Abe-led committee.

The meeting, Daily Sun learnt, was to proffer solutions to the perennial fuel scarcity across the country and disparity in the price of PMS. Meanwhile, three reporters had sought to have the minister on tape during the questions and answer session but the security details attached to her, seized their tape recorders and threw them away. When the matter was brought to the notice of the committee chairman, Senator Abe, ordered the minister’s security details to behave or be arrested.
By then, the minister had stepped out of the meeting. But when she returned to her seat, some reporters again, attempted to record the minister’s response to questions posed to her by the committee on the state of the promised Turn Around Maintenance (TAM) of the country’s oil refineries.
The attempt also met a brickwall as her security details, again, prevented the newsmen from recording the session. At that juncture, Senator Abe intervened and directed the reporters to position their recorders to record the minister. Rather than allow the midgets to be placed in front of her, the minister, this time around, seized the midget, belonging to the Daily Trust reporter and threw it away. The minister muttered that she wouldn’t want the voice recorders placed directly in front of her.
Another female reporter was outrightly blocked from placing her midget before the minister. It was that point that some newsmen got angry and stormed out of the meeting. Earlier, Senator Abe had queried the management of the Petroleum Products Marketing Company (PPMC) for ceding its power of allocation of petroleum products to oil unions in its locations.
This practice, the committee noted, had led to the disparity in PMS pricing across the country with some filling stations selling at N97 while others sell at between N110 and N115. This, the committee said was unacceptable. Abe said: “ Go back and address the problem at the depots; bring some sort of order to the loading points.

Culled-The sun

Share your thoughts...thanks!

1 comment:

  1. Hahaha even Cr7 dey protest fuel subsidy. i like that.

    ReplyDelete