Tag: Alison-Madueke

  • Alison-Madueke returns to UK court over seized cash

    Alison-Madueke returns to UK court over seized cash

    Ex-minister to know fate on £27,000 found in her home

    Former Minister of Petroleum Resources Mrs Diezani  Alison-Madueke will today return to the Westminster Magistrate’s Court in London to answer for money laundering and bribery allegations.

    She was first arraigned in the court last October.

    Mrs Alison-Madueke was arrested along with four others by the United Kingdom’s National Crime Agency (NCA). She was granted bail  and told to come back today for a decision to be taken on the £27,000 seized cash and other charges made against her.

    The court ruled in October 2015 that the cash can be held for six months before she is arraigned after investigations.

    The court also granted the order that she should remain in London while investigations last.

    The NCA, which leads the UK law enforcement’s fight to cut serious and organised crime, is working in league with the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) in the probe of the former minister.

    While Mrs Alison-Madueke was battling arrest in London, her Abuja home was raided by the EFCC while her partners were stalked by the Interpol in Switzerland.

    The NCA has national and international reach and the mandate and powers to work in partnership with other law enforcement organisations to bring serious and organised

    criminals to justice.

    The Proceeds of Crime Act says: “The Proceeds of Crime Act 2002 (“POCA”) sets out the legislative scheme for the recovery of criminal assets with criminal confiscation being the most commonly used power.

    “Confiscation occurs after a conviction has taken place. Other means of recovering the proceeds of crime, which do not require a conviction, are provided for in the Act, namely civil recovery, cash seizure and taxation powers.

    The NCA found some of the ex-minister’s brothers and other business partners complicit in the money laundering allegation. She was arrested with her brothers.

    Messrs Abiye Agama and Somye Agama are Mrs Diezani siblings who operate some UK-based businesses that were hurriedly shut after the NCA and the EFCC searchlight became intense.

    The two brothers are directors of Hadley Petroleum Solutions Limited, a company the authorities believe to have been used for money laundering. The other directors are Ugonna Madueke and Abu Fari.

    The company was registered in June 2013 in Manchester, but was dissolved less than two years later last  February without filing any account.

    Abiye, 33, a point man of the firm, is a computer engineer and manager. He was a director in 11 other companies. He resigned from seven of them.

     

  • Crude swap: Reps invite Alison-Madueke

    Crude swap: Reps invite Alison-Madueke

    The House Representatives Committee on Crude Oil Swap yesterday invited the former Minister of Petroleum Resources, Mrs. Alison-Madueke to appear before it to “make clarifications” in the crude oil swap arrangement in which Nigeria lost billions of naira.

    In a February 22  letter by the chairman Zakari Mohammed, the former minister is to appear next month to explain the product swap arrangements with oil marketing companies.

    The letter was sent through the group managing director of the Nigeria National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC). The committee requested documents from the ex-minister, including: a brief on swap arrangements, a proof of Presidential /Federal Executive Council approval, NNPC board resolution on  the contract, evidence of the approval limit of the board, minister and GMD.

    Three former NNPC’s group managing directors had been questioned by the committee.

    Joseph Dawha, an ex-group managing director, exonerated himself on the controversial oil swap arrangement, explaining how he moved the NNPC from crude oil deals to Offshore Processing Agreements (OPA).

  • Diezani alone extended oil  contract, says ex-NNPC GMD

    Diezani alone extended oil contract, says ex-NNPC GMD

    Oniwon testifies before House probe panel on crude swap

    Former Minister of Petroleum Resources Diezani Alison-Madueke unilaterally extended crude oil for refined products (oil swap) contracts, a former Nigeria National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) Group Managing Director (GMD) Austin Oniwon alleged yesterday.

    Oniwon alleged that “the minister at the time extended the contract between the Petroleum Product Marketing Company  (PPMC) and its trading partners Duke Oil Company Incorporated and Trafigura Ltd, a non-resident trading company, without recourse to due process.

    He said the ministerial extension that was for three years, also had no formal contractual agreement guiding it.

    Oniwon, who appeared before the House of Representatives ad hoc Committee probing the oil swap arrangement, added that the initial contract was to last between October 2010 to October 2011.

    He said: “There was an approval for the extension by the minister. I believe the records are with the NNPC”.

    Oniwon said he was not responsible for the signing of the contracts since he was not at the helm of affairs at the time, but said he initiated a review of the arrangement due to the flaws he noticed in the contract.

    According to him, the two years he served as GMD were too little to carry out some necessary changes expected to reposition the organisation for effectiveness and efficiency.

    He said the two years he served as GMD was “too hot” before he was fired, despite not being ripe for retirement at the time.

    He however refused to disclose the reason for his dismissal from office.

    Oniwon said the normal tenure of an NNPC GMD should be five years because “a two year-tenure is too short to protect policies and programmes.”

    Another former GMD, Andrew Yakubu, said he set up a panel to review the oil swap arrangement but not allowed to see the outcome of its report after sending it to the Minister’s office.

    He was relieved of his appointment in 2014.

    “Sometime in 2013, my attention was drawn to the fact that the contracts needed to be renewed. By then, the issue of the swap had become a matter of controversy.

    “Based on concerns raised and the need to evaluate the contract, I set up a committee comprising legal, corporate and some stakeholders. The document never came back to me until I was disengaged in August 2014, he said.

  • Jonathan, Alison-Madueke named in Abuja land grab

    Jonathan, Alison-Madueke named in Abuja land grab

    I acted within my powers, says ex-Minister Mohammed

    The Senate is exploring ways and means of invoking sanctions against former President Goodluck Jonathan and some former ministers for allegedly appropriating reserved plots of land in Abuja.

    According to the Senate Committee on the Federal Capital Territory (FCT), the plots acquired by Jonathan and his ministers were designated as green areas, flood drains, city buffers, recreation centres, sewage lines, urban farming and city monuments.

    At a briefing yesterday, the chairman of the Committee, Senator Dino Melaye, said the illegally acquired areas fall within the highbrow Maitama District.

    Describing the action of Jonathan and his ministers as “satanic”, Melaye blamed the immediate past former Minister of the FCT, Senator Bala Mohammed, for the “indiscretion”.

    Besides Jonathan, the committee listed other beneficiaries of the “land grab” to include former Petroleum Minister Mrs. Diezani Alison-Madueke and former Justice Minister Mohammed Adoke.

    Other beneficiaries include former Trade and Investment Minister Olusegun Aganga; Acting National Chairman of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), Uche Secondus and FCT Executive Director Ismaila Adamu.

    Some of the beneficiaries have started erecting structures on the plots, which were “hurriedly allocated” in the twilight of the last administration. Certificates of Occupancy were hurriedly issued for the plots, the committee alleged.

    Melaye said: “Senator Bala Mohammed, in his bid to satisfy some powerful Nigerians before the end of his tenure, disregarded the wisdom of his predecessors and the vision of the founding fathers of Abuja.

    “He went ahead to implement Messrs Fola Consult Limited’s recommendation by allocating these important features/endowments, including the Maitama Hills, to these powerful Nigerians.

    “It is pathetic to state that one of the allottees has erroneously burst a sewage conduit pipe and the entire area messed up with offensive odour which could trigger off serious epidemic within that location.”

    Faulting Mohammed’s defence of the allocations, Melaye said the former minister’s action amounted to maladministration, adding that “it is satanic “.

    He added that the committee plans to put a Stop Work Order on the various construction sites on the plots. Besides, the beneficiaries are to replace all the trees they felled during construction.

    But Mohammed said the committee was misinformed on the allocations.

    In an advertorial published in some national dailies, the former Minister said he never acted outside the limits of his powers.

    In the advertorial, signed on his behalf by his Media Consultant, Mr. Emma Agu, Mohammed insisted that the Abuja Master Plan had never been inviolable.

    According to him, the Abuja Master Plan is a dynamic road map for the city’s land use and infrastructure development, guided by the demands of change and time.

    He added that his actions were informed by the need to ensure full utilisation of available resources and that the allocations were made in compliance with the Land Use Act.

    According to him, construction was approved after the allottees had obtained building plan approvals from the Department of Development Control of the FCT.

    He urged the Senate committee to seek adequate information from the FCT administration, stressing that the allocations could only be reversed by an incumbent Minister of the FCT.

  • Alison-Madueke is alive

    Alison-Madueke is alive

    Former Minister of Petroleum Resources Mrs Diezani Alison-Madueke is not dead, it was learnt last night.

    Sources close to the family denied the rumour of her death which was spread on the social media.

    Mrs. Alison-Madueke has been in the United Kingdom receiving treatment for cancer since May. In October she was arrested by agents of the National Crime Agency in the UK over an investigation for money laundering.

  • EFCC storms Diezani-Madueke’s house as UK agency arrests ex- Minister, four others

    EFCC storms Diezani-Madueke’s house as UK agency arrests ex- Minister, four others

    The Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) on Friday searched  the residence of a former Minister of Petroleum Resources, Mrs. Diezani Alison-Madueke in connection with ongoing investigation of alleged corrupt practices.

    The search coincided with alleged arrest of an ex-Minister and four others by the National Crime Agency (NCA) in the UK for alleged bribery and corruption.

    The NCA was yet to release the identities of the five suspects arrested across London on Friday.

    The British High Commission in Nigeria also  said it had been notified of the arrest of five suspects by the NCA.

    There were indications last night that the EFCC and NCA had been collaborating on investigation of some scandals in the nation’s oil sector during the administration of ex-President Goodluck Jonathan.

    According to investigation, EFCC operatives were drafted to the posh residence of the ex-Minister at about 5pm on Friday.

    Based on a warrant, the EFCC operatives were still searching the residence of the ex-Minister as at press time.

  • Jonathan, Alison-Madueke,  ex-CSO fingered in $6.9m scandal

    Jonathan, Alison-Madueke, ex-CSO fingered in $6.9m scandal

    •Security agencies probe purchase of mobile stages
    •How NNPC secret account was used

    Security agencies are now probing   how the administration of  former President Goodluck Jonathan allegedly withdrew $6.9million (N1.460b) from a secret account of the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation(NNPC) to buy three  12 meter (40 feet)  mobile stages for use at public events.

    The cash was said to be part of the unremitted funds into the Federation Account by NNPC.

    The purported purchase, according to investigation, did not pass through due process and was known only to Dr. Jonathan, his then Chief Security Officer, Mr. O.J. Obuah and former Petroleum Minister Diezani Alison-Madueke.

    Obuah, it was gathered, raised a memo to his boss for the purchase and the release of the money to that effect.

    Jonathan allegedly gave his approval and authorized the former minister to disburse the fund.

    Shedding light on how the deal was struck on October 17, 2011 through a curious memo from Obuah, a source familiar with the development said preliminary investigation suggested that there was no record of purchase of the said stages.

    It was learnt that the $6.9million was paid into a company’s account after NNPC directed that the money be taken from one of its accounts in New York CITIBANK with sort code CITIUS 33, and Routing number 021000089.

    The affected company, J. Marine Logistics Limited, Abuja, was purportedly registered by Obuah.

    The source said: “Between himself, his Chief Security Officer and the former Petroleum Minister, former President Goodluck Jonathan spent in just one shot deal a whopping $6.9 million dollars to buy three 40-feet mobile stages for use at public speaking events.”

    Federal government investigators and security agencies, sources added, believe this is just one of the tons of alleged corrupt practices frequently engaged in and condoned under the last president.

    “Besides the fact that the sum for the stages was incredibly inflated, according to mobile stage industry experts, government investigators say there is no evidence yet that any stage was purchased at all,” one source said, citing several documents.

    One of the documents says: “At the centre of the fraudulent financial ring was the former Chief Security Officer (CSO) to President Goodluck Jonathan, Mr. O.J. Obuah who initiated a memo to the former president on October 17, 2011 asking for the purchase of three mobile stages.

    “He said in that memo to the former president that this is regarding “my earlier discussion with Your Excellency on the security implication of your public appearances and your subsequent directive on the need to procure a secured presidential platform.”

    “And on the same day without any financial advice or purchase order reviews, the former president minuted his approval of the request to buy the three stages to the then Minister for Petroleum Resources, Mrs Diezani Alison-Madueke.

    “In his minute, the president said ‘we have discussed this, please deal.”

    “Right after that okay from the president, on the same October 17, the Senior Special Assistant to the President on Administrative Matters, Matt Aikhionbere did another letter on the strength of the president’s approval requesting the Petroleum Minister to take action on the request to purchase the stages for $6.9m.

    “By the next month, an NNPC payment voucher number 3840336 was already in place revealing that the money was released. NNPC directed that the money be taken from one of its accounts in New York CITIBANK with sort code CITIUS 33, and Routing number 021000089.

    “It was first routed from the US bank to an NNPC account in Zenith Bank account number 5000026593, Maitama branch in Abuja, from where the money was sent to a private account. The sum of $6.9m was then credited to a Sterling Bank account of one J. Marine Logistics Limited, Abuja, a company investigators say was registered by Obuah.”

    Responding to a question, the source said: “The $6.9miilion in question was promptly paid on November 29, 2011 into a private account belonging to the former CSO.

    “The former president approved the procurement of the mobile platforms without due process and bye-passing the Procurement Act neither was there an appropriation in the 2011 budget for such facility.

    “Neither the minister of Finance nor the Director-General of the Budget Office was aware of the deal.

    “There are no records of this purchase which was carried out late 2011.”

    The preliminary findings also indicated that the cost of the stages might have been inflated.

    The source said:  “According to the investigators, the cost of mobile stages depends on size and designs; only outlandish rock star musicians in Europe and the US spend hundreds of thousands on their huge stages way bigger than the 40-feet stages.

    “Even then, those musicians and super stars would not pay over $2m per stage, according to industry sources.

    “The process of procurement of the three mobile stages was not known to extant Nigerian laws and due process regulations, nor were the offices of the Auditor-General and the Accountant-General in the know.”

    It was learnt that the deal was one of the issues  for which the ex-CSO was grilled quizzed by the Department of State Security(DSS) during his recent arrest and detention.

    One of the officials handling the investigation added: “ The CSO himself according to investigators has not been able to show proof of the purchase and his memo irked his bosses at the SSS that he took the initiative to request  for the stages, an action which officials say was way above his pay grade.

    “It is not the duty or responsibility of the CSO to make the determination on that purchase. He was meant to have informed the service, which will then review the situation and act accordingly.

    “What has happened here is that the former president and the former minister with the collusion of the CSO decided to use public funds for other purposes since no one has found the stages as we speak.”

    “This is just one of the several instances where the Jonathan administration used secret NNPC accounts to fund questionable projects and for alleged personal financial aggrandizements.”

    It was gathered that some of these embarrassing issues were part of the matters raised by Jonathan with the National Peace Committee headed by the former Head of State, General Abdusalami Abubakar.

    The committee later facilitated a secret parley between President Muhammadu Buhari and ex-President Jonathan.

    But at the session, Buhari insisted that the law must take its course with  anyone found guilty of corruption.

    At the June 29th meeting of the National Economic Council at the State House, the council had raised questions over the non- remittance of the finances generated by the NNPC into the Federation Account.

  • Forensic audit: Minister directs NNPC to pay outstanding $1.48bn

    The Minister of Petroleum Resources, Mrs. Diezani Alison-Madueke, on Thursday directed the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) to defray the outstanding $1.48billion in the Nigerian Petroleum Development Company (NPDC) signature bonus, taxes and royalties in line with the recommendation of the forensic audit report.

    The forensic audit report on the allegedly missing $20billion oil revenue carried out by the reputable international firm, PriceWaterhouseCoopers had absolved the corporation of culpability in the missing fund, saying that what is due for remittance to the Federation Account is $1.48billion from NPDC.

    In a statement made available to journalists, the corporation noted that the release of the forensic audit report has finally laid to rest the controversy surrounding allegations of “missing oil revenue” or non-remittance to the Federation Account.

    NNPC explained that it was not true that it was indicted in the report as being speculated in some quarters, saying the $1.48billion that the audit firm recommended it to remit to the Federation Account was not part of the allegedly unremitted revenues from crude oil lifting.

    It explained that the $1.48billion was never in dispute as it is made up of statutory payments such as signature bonus, taxes and royalties which are statutory payments that come with assets acquisition.

     

  • Alison-Madueke appointed president of gas exporting countries

    Alison-Madueke appointed president of gas exporting countries

    Barely three weeks after her election as the first female President of the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC), the Minister of Petroleum Resources, Mrs. Diezani Alison-Madueke, has been appointed as the President of the Ministerial Meeting of the Gas Exporting Countries Forum (GECF).

    She is the first woman to be so appointed by the body, according to a statement issued by the Group General Manager, Group Public Affairs Division of the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation, Ohi Alegbe.
    The appointment was announced on Tuesday in Doha, Qatar, at the ongoing 16th Ministerial Conference of the GECF.

    Alison-Madueke, who could not attend the meeting because of her involvement in the ongoing negotiations to end the oil workers’ strike, was represented at the meeting by the Nigerian Ambassador to Qatar, Shuaibu A. Ahmed.

    The GECF is an inter-governmental organization established in Tehran, Iran, in 2001, to serve as a platform to promote the exchange of experience, views, information and coordination in global gas exploration and production trends.

    Its other objectives include addressing of current and anticipated supply-demand balance for gas, worldwide gas exploration, production and transportation technologies, the structure and development of gas markets (regional and global) and other common issues pertaining to exploration, production and trade in natural gas.

    The Forum is made up of 12 of the world’s leading producers of natural gas. It controls over 70 per cent of global natural gas reserves, 85 per cent of global liquefied natural gas production, and 38 per cent of global pipeline trade of the product.

    GECF members are – Algeria, Bolivia, Egypt, Equatorial Guinea, Iran, Libya and Nigeria.

    Others are: Qatar, Russia, Trinidad and Tobago, United Arab Emirates and Venezuela.

    Countries that enjoy observer-member status of the forum include Kazakhstan, Iraq, the Netherlands, Norway and Oman.

     

  • Group to Alison-Madueke: Protect Nigeria’s interest in OPEC

    Group to Alison-Madueke: Protect Nigeria’s interest in OPEC

    The Goodluck/Sambo Global Campaign Group has ?charged the Minister of Petroleum Resources, Mrs. Diezani Alison-Madueke, to use her new position as the President of the Organisation of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) to protect the interest of Nigeria in the international organization.

    In a congratulatory message by its National Coordinator, Prince Oladele Akinola, ?the group said Nigeria was lucky to have Alison-Madueke as the first female President appointed at the 166th OPEC Ordinary meeting in Vienna on 27 November 2014, urging Nigerians to support her to succeed in the new assignment.

    The group ?said the time was ripe for Nigeria to assert its authority and make itself relevant in the operations of OPEC.

    It congratulated President Goodluck Jonathan for producing the first female President of OPEC.