Central
Bank of Nigeria (CBN) Governor Sanusi Lamido Sanusi appeared before the
Senate’s Investigative Public Hearing on unremitted oil revenues, where he alleged that $20 billion is still unaccounted for. He also provided
a detailed explanation about the irregularities in the accounting system of the
Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC), presenting evidence showing that
NNPC, has in violation of the law and constitution, been diverting money from the
Federation Account, and involving itself in activities that warrant full
investigation.
In
his 30-paged memorandum, Sanusi claims that:
“That NNPC, in paying
what it calls kerosene subsidy, is confessing to a number of serious
infractions. First, I have shown, based on NBS data, that kerosene is not a
subsidised product, and, therefore, the so-called subsidy is rent generated for
the benefit of those in the kerosene business. Second, I have produced evidence
that President Yar’Adua had issued a presidential directive eliminating this
subsidy payment as from July, 2009. Third, these huge losses inflicted on the
Federation Account have not been appropriated”.
The latest revelation of massive corruption and financial malfeasance in NNPC
provoked a heated debate in the 6,100-member Spaces for Change’s (S4C’s) discussion
forum, generating over 300 comments. On February 4, S4C admin published the
blow-by-blow account of the Committee hearing, including the CBN Governor’s memorandum
and other evidential materials on its online portals and discussion forums. Reactions
poured in from young Nigerians across the country and in the diaspora both in
support and against the CBN’s governor’s spirited steps to entrench
accountability in oil sector governance.
Here are the
excerpts from the conversation:
Pamela Braide: First off, let
me share a few excerpts from Sanusi’s submissions to the Senate Committee on
Finance:
NNPC itself has submitted that it
lifted $67b worth of Crude between January 2012 and July 2013. Of this, we have
been able to agree that the following amounts have been remitted to the
Federation Account:
1. $14 billion as equity crude
2. $15 billion as payment to FIRS by IOCs. They paid in crude which was lifted by NNPC on behalf of FIRS. There was nothing in our records linking the two transactions.
3. $2 billion Royalty payment to DPR by IOCs under similar arrangements as in (2) above.
4. $16 billion out of the 428b taken as Domestic Crude Paid in Naira, not dollar.
The following items are outstanding and need to be proven by NNPC:
1. $12 billion out of domestic crude sales yet to be remitted. NNPC has already disclosed N180 billion as subsidy payment in Q1.2012. If PPPRA confirms this number, we will adjust the balance accordingly. As for the balance of $10.8 billion, NNPC has publicly disclosed that 80 per cent applied to petrol and kerosene subsidy. We have already explained why this explanation is untenable and NNPC needs to provide the relevant proofs.
2. $6 billion shipped on behalf of NNPC. We have explained why some this belongs to the Federation and the need to investigate and audit the SAAS to recover amounts unconstitutionally diverted.
3. $2 billion “third-party” financing” we have not been given any documents explaining or proving this along with other claims around pipeline repairs, maintenance, strategic reserves etc.
There was no appropriation for these expenses and NNPC also needs to substantiate them.
In summary, it is established that of the $67 billion crude shipped by NNPC between January 2012 and July 2013, $47 billion was remitted to the Federation Account. It is now up to NNPC, given all the issues raised, to produce the proof that the $20billion unremitted either did not belong to the Federation or was legally and constitutionally spent. There is no dispute that $20 billion out of $67 billion has not been paid into any account with the CBN.
1. $14 billion as equity crude
2. $15 billion as payment to FIRS by IOCs. They paid in crude which was lifted by NNPC on behalf of FIRS. There was nothing in our records linking the two transactions.
3. $2 billion Royalty payment to DPR by IOCs under similar arrangements as in (2) above.
4. $16 billion out of the 428b taken as Domestic Crude Paid in Naira, not dollar.
The following items are outstanding and need to be proven by NNPC:
1. $12 billion out of domestic crude sales yet to be remitted. NNPC has already disclosed N180 billion as subsidy payment in Q1.2012. If PPPRA confirms this number, we will adjust the balance accordingly. As for the balance of $10.8 billion, NNPC has publicly disclosed that 80 per cent applied to petrol and kerosene subsidy. We have already explained why this explanation is untenable and NNPC needs to provide the relevant proofs.
2. $6 billion shipped on behalf of NNPC. We have explained why some this belongs to the Federation and the need to investigate and audit the SAAS to recover amounts unconstitutionally diverted.
3. $2 billion “third-party” financing” we have not been given any documents explaining or proving this along with other claims around pipeline repairs, maintenance, strategic reserves etc.
There was no appropriation for these expenses and NNPC also needs to substantiate them.
In summary, it is established that of the $67 billion crude shipped by NNPC between January 2012 and July 2013, $47 billion was remitted to the Federation Account. It is now up to NNPC, given all the issues raised, to produce the proof that the $20billion unremitted either did not belong to the Federation or was legally and constitutionally spent. There is no dispute that $20 billion out of $67 billion has not been paid into any account with the CBN.
Chyke Nwokedi
The
CBN Governor might have got the figures wrong, but the focus should be on the
process. Huge sums of money are being paid out without congressional approval.
Ngozi-Okonjo
Iweala (NOI) confirmed that $10 billion is unaccounted for and awaiting
reconciliation, but that is not the point. The point is whether approval
according to the constitution was gotten from relevant authorities and the
answer is no. The irony of this is that the president is lending credence to
this unconstitutional approach by retaining the Minister who ought to know
better before spending money without appropriation and due process!
Paul
Izevbizua
Sanusi
started with $49.8billion, came down to $12billion and when superior argument
established $10.8 he concurred. Now he has gone up to $20billion....Doesn’t
this inconsistency give him away as a big joke?
The
NNPC does have a mandate to import fuel to meet consumption demand and maintain
national strategic reserve. The FG settles them from the budgetary allocation
for fuel subsidy after congressional approval. The NNPC does the imports guided
by our national consumption requirement...
On the
so-called presidential directive on kerosene subsidy, the NNPC spokesman
affirmed moments ago (AIT news) that at no time was such a directive
communicated to the NNPC. The onus is now on Sanusi to prove that the directive
indeed got to the NNPC.
Wale Edun This happened in the early
80's and when we got stuck, we resorted to borrowing from the International Monetary
Fund (IMF) with strong conditions attached to the loans. This is the same
pattern we are following till this day. But this time, it will be far much worse;
Paris club will ensure we are squeezed hard to extract as much as they can
given the competition with the West and East blocs. The country will soon go
bankrupt with this behaviour.
Segun A. Akindele More
investigations will produce more revelations? There are four main issues to unravel:
1) NNPC failed to render accounts as at when due.
2) CBN calculations are based on limited facts available
3) NNPC till this moment has failed to reconcile figures
4) NNPC has put forward false explanations and rationalizations to cover up its acts (naming kero-subsidy is just so lame, you must agree)
Denying these facts is tantamount to hiding behind a finger.
1) NNPC failed to render accounts as at when due.
2) CBN calculations are based on limited facts available
3) NNPC till this moment has failed to reconcile figures
4) NNPC has put forward false explanations and rationalizations to cover up its acts (naming kero-subsidy is just so lame, you must agree)
Denying these facts is tantamount to hiding behind a finger.
Gbelela Olabisi Michael From
Obasanjo to Yar'Adua to President Goodluck Jonathan..they have finished this
country with the flippant, floppiness and open-faced stealing of oil proceeds!
I am not surprised at the volte-face reaction of the CBN governor! He knew
about this flippant and irresponsible attitude ab initio yet kept quiet until
now. This episodic impropriety Tsunami of a case is a reminder to every would-be
leader to be ready for the task of leadership very well. Imagine with the array
of "Harvardians" and "Ivy Leaguers" strolling the seat of
power, this government could not prepare a sustaining budget that will reflects
prevailing socio economic reality! This government is a lost cause!
Nurudeen Toba Tiamiyu
I
don’t subscribe to arguments that suggest that the passage of the Petroleum
Industry Bill (PIB) will help clean the rot in the oil and gas sector. You don't
need a PIB to know that its wrong to allocate 450, 000 barrels daily to a non-functioning
refinery in Nigeria, nor need it to understand you have over paid subsidy in
previous year.
Pamela Braide Where is the
money? Why is it taking NNPC 5 months to find tens of billions of dollars?
Let’s buy torchlight and share to Petroleum Ministry so they can find 20bill
USD.
The
main issue is: does NNPC have the right to bypass both the federation account
and the appropriation processes? See how long it is taking them to account for
money spent... billions of dollars didn't leave a trail of minutes of meetings,
vouchers, receipts, invoices, bank transfers etc? Even with all their expensive
consultants and highly paid staff they have... its taking so long...Why?
Without
a PIB, the country spent N300billion a year on subsidy under OBJ. Now, we spend
trillions.... Its beyond PIB. Its just open season! Even with privatization, if this free-for-all
looting isn't contained, the rot will continue no matter what corporate
structure and nomenclature we adopt.
NNPC
‘s laughable attempt to write off 10billion dollars for a non-existent kerosene
subsidy and even attempt to backdate it to 2007 should be rejected by CBN as an
excuse for not remitting said billions into the federation account. NNPC must
show where it got the authority to buy kerosene at N150 and sell at N40, and
then put the burden of loss on the federation account.
In the latest ongoing $20billion saga, there are contentious issues SLS is raising that bothers on ownership and proceeds of NNPC/Shell JVC the latter pulled out from while the former took over the blocks, transfer same to two indigenous firms.
The proceeds from these multi-billion dollar transactions and the opaque arrangement are suspect. SLS, in his words before the Senate committee, has sought three legal experts and other professional opinion on this issue and was advised accordingly on what should accrue to the federal government.
My suspicion (not conclusion) is those two companies might be holding those blocks in blind trust for some interest while also fleecing the nation of valuable resources
Bologi Jimada
At
a congressional hearing over the sub-prime mortgage scam that led to the 2008
crash, Allan Greenspan confessed that they don't get it right all the time. If
they get it right all the time, the world economies won't be where they are
today.
That
said, I wonder why no one is asking who leaked SLS's letter which is supposed
to be a private communication with the President. Who stood to benefit from the
leak which took more than two months (enough time to cook the books, anyway)
and which was conveniently timed to coincide with OBJ's letter? Why is it
convenient to find SLS the villain here while ignoring those who are supposed
to have remitted the funds without stories in the first place? The crime
committed against the state is worse than tax evasion for which offenders
attract long term jail sentences.
Is
it implausible that Sanusi made his observations known to the president based
on information from NNPC for which NNPC subsequently refused to give details of
transactions? It is within the realm of strong possibilities that the public
was never to have known about this, except that some people panicked at the
implication if it ever got out. As has been the tact in Nigeria, if you rubbish
the whistle blower hard enough, people will forget what it was all about.
Omotayo Aremu
It
is too hard to believe that any individual or group in government can divert
US$20billion or US$10billion without the approval or consent of the Minister of
Finance and the Presidency.
David Akata
After
the last account reconciliation that was necessitated by SLS’ leaked memo,
several accounting formula that defies public expenditure logic and common
sense has been flying left right center from NNPC.
In the latest ongoing $20billion saga, there are contentious issues SLS is raising that bothers on ownership and proceeds of NNPC/Shell JVC the latter pulled out from while the former took over the blocks, transfer same to two indigenous firms.
The proceeds from these multi-billion dollar transactions and the opaque arrangement are suspect. SLS, in his words before the Senate committee, has sought three legal experts and other professional opinion on this issue and was advised accordingly on what should accrue to the federal government.
My suspicion (not conclusion) is those two companies might be holding those blocks in blind trust for some interest while also fleecing the nation of valuable resources
Bologi Jimada
Section
80-(1) of the Constitution explicitly says that "All revenues or other
moneys raised by the Federation (not being revenues or other moneys payable
under this constitution or any act of the National Assembly into any other
public fund of the Federation established for a specific purpose) shall be paid
into and form one Consolidated Revenue Fund of the Federation" and Section
80-(4) states: No moneys shall be withdrawn from the Consolidated Revenue Fund
or any other public fund of the Federation, except in the manner prescribed by
the National Assembly" and this is through an appropriation Act of the
parliament. Anyone or body who does contrary is committing an unlawful act against
the Constitution. The Petroleum ministry or NNPC have no right to deduct
anything, be it subsidy, repair of burst pipes or JV cash calls etc from
whatever comes to them as revenue until such moneys are paid into the
Consolidated Funds of the Federation and such funds appropriated through an Act
of parliament signed into law by the president.
Igodan Victor
I
am getting tired of the sleaze happening every minute in this country. Stella
Oduah's matter… subsidy thieves matter…Farouk case …..Arumah Oteh case, pension
scam, and so many others...All of them have been swept under the carpet... Even
this current one, nothing will happen.
Izu Akabogu
I
am sure in the last view days of this expose, some receipt printers, documents
and signature forgers will be smiling to the bank, thanks to NNPC's document
desperation right about now. What a comedy of errors.
Sunkanmi Adesina
Where
is the voice of Minister of Petroleum in all this brouhaha? Is it only NOI that
should take the sticks? Is her job limited to signing and approving memos? Or
has she been telling people to "do the needful" behind the scenes?
What is her job specification, if someone may ask?
Niyi Karunwi
But
has the President spoken or acted since these revelations were exposed? Is he
not the principal of all these ministers? Is he not concerned?
Adesoji Adebisi
"The Chairman, House Committee on Petroleum (Downstream), Mr. Dakuku
Peterside recently condemned this as wasteful spending. He also said N110bn was spent on kerosene
subsidy in 2010, N324bn in 2011 and N200bn in 2012, which came up
to N634bn in the three years. So how can they tell us that they're paying
subsidy arrears again, when the money has been paid every year until date.
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