FOR public officials and their cronies stealing the country blind
through the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation, the day of
reckoning beckons. The thumping victory of Muhammadu Buhari in the March
28 presidential election was followed last week by the World Bank’s
backing for his resolve to closely scrutinise the corporation. With
persistence, the reign of impunity and unbridled looting will,
hopefully, soon be over at the state-owned oil company. The incoming
government must ensure that everyone involved in corrupt practice in the
corporation is detected, investigated, prosecuted and punished.
Having coasted to victory on the promise
to halt the pervasive corruption that defines the current
administration and on his own reputation for accountability, Buhari has
no choice but to, first, undertake a detailed probe and audit of the
NNPC operations and account and, thereafter, break the corrupt monolith
into a lean holding company. The executives, petroleum ministry and
Presidency officials that have for so long gorged on the treasury
through the NNPC should not get away with their loot. The World Bank’s
backing should also put paid to some misguided calls that the in-coming
administration should not “waste” time on probes. We disagree.
The magnitude of NNPC’s malfeasance demands one. Corruption is
encouraged by both the incentives and opportunities to be corrupt. And
so, the World Bank’s Chief Economist for Africa, Francisco Ferreira,
said, “One norm that has to change is the norm of impunity.” A series of audits and reports has uncovered horrendous graft, unauthorised spending, alleged secret accounts and brazen theft. Described by The Economist of London as one of the world’s “most opaque” national oil companies, the NNPC unilaterally determines how much
subsidy and other items it is entitled to and simply deducts. Global
audit firm, KPMG, reported that between 2007 and 2009, for instance, it
over-billed the government by N28.5 billion in subsidy deductions. In
2013, Switzerland-based non-governmental organisation, Erklarung von
Bern, alleged that $6.8 billion was siphoned in crude revenues. The
Finance Ministry complained in September 2007 that the corporation
failed to remit $5.2 billion to the government.
For a company responsible for the country’s interest in the oil and gas
sector that provides over 70 per cent of government revenues and 90 per
cent of export earnings, this corporation must be made accountable. The
NNPC has become a law unto itself and, as noted by Democracy Network, an
NGO, “it is accountable to no one.” The veracity of this was confirmed
by Petroleum Resources Minister, Diezani Alison-Madueke, who pointedly
told a parliamentary committee
that the NNPC had the right under law to spend part of its revenue
without recourse to the parliament despite the constitutional provision
that all revenues accruing to ministries, departments and agencies of
the government must be remitted to the Federation Account.
An organisation rated by the Economist Intelligence Unit in 2007 to be
“a source of corruption and national shame” and in March this year, to
be “among the most secretive oil groups in the world,” can only continue
to be so only with presidential and ministerial complicity. Successive
Nigerian presidents have, according to an analyst, turned the NNPC into
their “personal ATM.” A former presidential media adviser, in his
memoirs, detailed how the then President would simply demand money from
the NNPC group managing director for activities that should normally be
funded by MDAs. There are allegations that the NNPC partly funds the
re-election campaigns of sitting presidents.
The scale of the impunity perpetrated by public officials is simply
awesome. What Nigeria needs is a holding company to manage her interests
in the oil and gas industry, not a corporate behemoth that oils the
machinery of graft. The reform should begin
with a total withdrawal from the downstream oil sector – pipelines,
refineries, depots and retail outlets should be privatised within six
months of the new administration taking office. Its production arm, the
NPDC, should also be privatised. Let the private sector run things,
while the government strengthens regulation and sees to the passage of
the Petroleum Industry Bill.
As the late Singaporean leader,Lee Kuan Yew, put it,“Singapore is what
it is today because of its system of transparency and integrity.” The
new government should break quickly with the inertia, impunity and
complicity of the President
Goodluck Jonathan administration and exhume the panel and audit reports
on the NNPC. Arising from the 2011 petrol subsidy scam where N2.53
trillion was paid in unbudgeted payments, four reports and committee
reports to review them have not been acted upon. The latest report by
the Nigerian Extractive Industries Transparency Initiative on the period
2009-11, said N4.42 billion, N3.71 billion, and $1.7 billion in
over-recoveries from marketers and use of expired memorandum of understanding
with joint venture partners were still outstanding. This is a firm
that, according to EvB, sells all of its crude through third parties,
which creates room for kickbacks and shady contracts.
Nigerians want to know how much is really missing from the NNPC: is it
$20 billion as alleged by the former CBN governor, Lamido Sanusi, or
$10.8 billion as the NNPC itself once admitted only to later say it paid
itself for kerosene subsidy? We need details of the refund of $1.48
billion recommended by PWC. What kind of accounting does NNPC operate
that the CBN, the government’s banker, cannot unravel and one where the
Finance Ministry, the Accountant-General and the apex bank have
conflicting figures?
But if ever the argument that a fine toothcomb needs to be run through
the NNPC is in doubt, Buhari needs only remember that despite producing
2.3 million barrels of crude per day, Nigeria imports refined petroleum
products, the victim of NNPC’s incompetent, corruption-ridden monopoly
in local refining.
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