THE recently-uncovered financial
recklessness and obscene lifestyle involving Diezani Alison-Madueke is
truly the apex of cumulative impunity by the Minister of Petroleum
Resources. She is accused of living extravagantly at the expense of
Nigerians by wasting about N10 billion to maintain one of the three
private jets she is using for official and personal travels. More
shocking disclosures are still streaming in.
The details of the preliminary enquiry in
the House of Representatives are unnerving. The minister is said to
have spent €500,000 (N130 million) monthly or N3.21 billion in two years
to maintain a Challenger business jet. Every time she flies the second
jet on a round trip, taxpayers lose €600,000 (N137 million), while the
cost of the third aircraft is still to be ascertained. The irreducible
minimum Nigerians demand of the House Public Accounts Committee is to
establish the facts of the case.
Continue reading after the cut...
Continue reading after the cut...
But as usual, a duplicitous Nigerian
National Petroleum Corporation has attempted to turn the page on the
scandal by defending its deviant minister. It says, “It is standard
practice for a large oil and gas corporation such as the NNPC to make
use of the most efficient means of transportation to ensure the
effective and efficient coverage of the vast scope of critical oil and
gas assets under their purview.” The Presidency, also playing the
ostrich, claims it is not in possession of documents or papers or “has
any petition relating to such issue” and will “rather await the outcome
of the ongoing investigation by the House of Representatives before it
can undertake any reasonable action.”
The public is waiting, too. But the same
President Goodluck Jonathan did not bother to follow the due process in
line with the law and civilised practice before suspending Lamido
Sanusi, the Central Bank of Nigeria Governor, over allegations of
financial recklessness. How many probe reports will smear Alison-Madueke
before Jonathan saves his government from the NNPC’s serial graft
scandals?
Alison-Madueke’s tenure as Petroleum
Minister, which started in 2011, has been scarred by pains,
controversies, sickening graft at the NNPC and now, wantonness at the
expense of a country in dire economic straits. The 2011 petrol subsidy
scandal, in which the parliament approved only N245 billion for
payments, saw the government spending N2.5 trillion. The protests that
trailed the January 2012 petrol price hike and the subsequent
investigations made it obvious that the government used the humongous
amount to corruptly enrich Petroleum Ministry and the NNPC officials,
staff of the petroleum subsidy agencies, marketers and cronies, though
some of them have been undergoing lacklustre prosecution since 2012.
It is noteworthy that the government has
been spending about N971.1 billion annually since then to offset petrol
subsidy, showing that more than N1 trillion was plundered from the
nation’s coffers in 2011 alone on petrol subsidy under Alison-Madueke’s
watch. In 2012, the minister secured the approval of the parliament for a
loan of $1.6 billion to carry out Turn Around Maintenance of the
nation’s four refineries. Brimming with false excitement, she had
promised the nation that the refineries would function at 90 per cent
capacity after the repairs. But the best the facilities have averaged
since then is a measly 22 per cent.
Why has our Petroleum Minister, just
because the NNPC generates more than two-thirds of the country’s
external income, become so prodigal? Earlier this year, the nation
groaned helplessly with the unveiling of the kerosene subsidy scandal,
for which the NNPC has been deducting illegally from national revenues
in spite of a presidential directive that stopped the subsidy in 2009.
In February, the Senate uncovered how the corrupt oil corporation had
been spending N700 million daily to subsidise kerosene without the
product reaching consumers who pay as much as N150 per litre, instead of
the NNPC’s N55 per litre.
In a normal environment, the aggregate of
these misdeeds is enough to send a minister packing. In France, a
former president, Nicolas Sarkozy, is being tried for allegedly
receiving money illegally to fund his party’s campaign. Nigeria should
also be a society where anybody, no matter how highly placed, is subject
to our laws.
But, there is more. Sanusi, at a series
of parliamentary hearings this year, listed wide-ranging fraudulent acts
by the NNPC, the sum of which is that the rogue oil corporation has not
remitted $20billion of oil money it sold to the Federation Account. “It
is established that of the $67 billion crude shipped by the NNPC
between January 2012 and July 2013, $47 billion was remitted to the
Federation Account. It is now up to the NNPC… to produce proof that $20
billion unremitted either did not belong to the Federation or was
legally and constitutionally spent,” Sanusi said. The NNPC, which
Alison-Madueke supervises, has yet to give the nation satisfactory
answers to these posers.
The NNPC has been swimming in a sleazy
barter arrangement with some international companies over the 445,000
barrels of oil per day the government sets aside for domestic refining
though the four refineries have the capacity to produce just at 22 per
cent.
Corruption has never been so brazen and
sickening in the country as in recent times. Regularly, fresh
nerve-jangling allegations of venality in public office assault the
citizens. Unfortunately, the parliament, as usual, may just make futile
noise about this outrageous case, as many of such probes have been
prematurely interred in its burial chamber.
But Jonathan must know that it is hard to
move on when so many questions on graft involving his government are
still unanswered, foremost being what he has done with our oil money.
-Punch
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