By Clara Nwachukwu and Michael Eboh
In line with its
anti-corruption drive, the Federal Government has been challenged to
recover over N7.1trillion, being all the outstanding sums trapped in
among individuals and operators in Nigeria’s
petroleum industry.
The
charge comes as the President Muhammadu Bahari’s administration is
desperately looking for ways and means, including borrowings from
offshore to fund its N6.01 trillion National Budget for 2016.
The sum
comprises misappropriated and unremitted funds withheld by the
respective parties, which should have been paid into government coffers.
Sources of losses
· Illicit payments/withdrawals N2.5 trillion
· Foreign Exchange $1.03 million
· Marketers' violation N423 billion
· Unpaid Royalties $3.03 billion
· Domestic crude lifting N1.2 trillion
· Signature bonuses $755 million
· Differences from Swap N117 billion
· Concession payment $756 million
· Payments to 38 mktrs' 128 accounts N999 million
· NNPC's Kerosene subsidy claims N332 billion
· Subsidy double payments N848 billion
· PPPRA Admin charges N313 billion
The
charge was made in Abuja, Wednesday, by the Nigerian Natural Resource
Charter, NNRC, in collaboration with an international governance
watchdog, Natural Resource Governance Institute, NRGI, during the review
of the recommendations of various executive and legislative committees
with regard to the outstanding sums.
The groups argued that if
the recommendations of the various audit reports on the oil and gas
industry are implemented, the Federal Government would recover all the
N7.1 trillion from the repayments of illicit transactions, fines and
refunds for overpayment.
Reasons for misappropriation
NNRC
and the NRGI, in a report presented at a workshop, titled: ‘Policy
Dialogue on the Implementation of Key Recommendations of Past Oil Sector
Investigative Reports’, traced the sums to corruption; poor record
keeping; and manual and analogue data storage in the petroleum sector.
The
report stated that poor record keeping in the oil industry stems from
record disparities, unverifiable data in the sector and inter-agency
discrepancies. For instance, a one per cent error margin due to wrong
data is equal to a loss of $700 million annually.
Future progress
To
guard against future malfeasance the report advocated the provision of a
centralised portal for collating and disseminating revenue inflows
across the various government agencies.
They added that efforts
should be made to institute automated system that would support the use
of standardised formats such as cloud storage and other file types.
Commenting
on the findings of the report, former Chairman, Nigerian Extractive
Industries Transparency Initiative, NEITI, Prof. Humphrey Asobie,
accused past administrations of participating in corruption in the oil
sector, saying that almost all the past leaders from 1973, had been
indicted of one form of malfeasance or another in the petroleum sector
by various reports.
He also accused political parties of
complicity in the rot in the petroleum industry and other sectors of the
economy, saying that over the years, the Nigerian National Petroleum
Corporation, NNPC, had been a source of funding for political parties.
He
argued that although political parties included fight against
corruption in their manifestoes, the truth of the matter is that they
actually fund themselves through stealing public funds.
“And that
is the major problem. In other words, if you look at the NNPC, it has
been the source of funding for political parties all along, and where
they are not getting from NNPC, they are getting from other sources,” he
said.
Explaining further, he said: “in fighting corruption
anywhere in the oil and gas sector, the assumption is that there are
principals that are above corruption, and who, therefore, have an
interest in implementing anti-corruption measures.
That theory
is wrong in the Nigerian case, because historically, it has been found
through ad-hoc committees’ reports and so on, that the very head of
state, himself, is involved in the process, and that makes it even more
difficult for the head of state himself to lead the fight.”
He
maintained that for Nigeria to be able to address the fraud in the oil
sector, it should address the conflict of laws, and conflict of policies
in the sector, especially in the disparities between the laws guiding
the activities of the NNPC, and the constitution of the Federal Republic
of Nigeria.
He further criticised that using ad-hoc committees
to investigate malfeasance and malpractice in the oil and gas sector is
not healthy, particularly as the committees are dissolved after the
investigation is concluded and the report submitted, which ensures that
in most cases, the reports are not implemented.
In his own view,
Prof. Jibrin Ibrahim, Babcock University, noted that recommendations of
most of the audit reports in the petroleum sector were not implemented
because of political complicity, which involved people in power, who
exploited the system for their own benefits.
He called on civil
societies and organised labour to increase their citizen engagement,
ensuring that issues raised in the various reports are understood by the
generality of Nigerians, so that they can call for action and the
implementation of the reports.
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