Tag: Alison-Madueke

  • Oil prices: Nigeria must be more competitive – Minister

    Oil prices: Nigeria must be more competitive – Minister

    To survive the global oil price slump, the Minister of Petroleum Resources, Mrs. Diezani Alison-Madueke, on Wednesday said that Nigeria has to be more competitive.

    The minister, who was just elected first female President of Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC), said that Nigeria must ensure the right enabling parameters and indices to attract the right end user markets for its products.

    She said Nigeria cannot afford to continue to do business as usual.

    The minister said: “Most certainly, quite clearly and that actually comes to the ministry of petroleum sources position, that Nigeria has to be much more competitive at this time and going into the future.

    “We cannot continue to do business as usual. We must ensure that we have the right enabling parameters and indices in this country to attract the right end user markets, end user demand for our products because they are so many other countries that would be competing for those end user makers and to get that end user demand.

    “So we will have to seat down and reformulate our entire approach over the next months or so, in fact immediately to ensure that we are in fact at the cutting edge of competitveness. We should make ourselves competitive in the market and we are able to garner and take those end user markets.”

    On her new position in OPEC, she said: “First of all it wouldn’t have happened if the President had not had the courage to appoint a woman into the portfolio of Ministry of Petroleum Resources, which meant that I now headed the country’s delegation to OPEC.

    “I must say that that was a daunting thing, it happened about three and half years ago, I went into a body which is completely male dominated and mostly Arab dominated as well. But I have found that they have come to respect me and respect Nigeria’s voice over the last three years in OPEC very highly.”

     

  • Cut from civilisation by water

    Cut from civilisation by water

    •Tales from Alison-Madueke’s Yanaka community

    Anytime the glamorous Petroleum Minister, Mrs Diezani Allison-Madueke, wishes to visit her ancestral home in Yanaka, Yenagoa Local Government Area of Bayelsa State, she has to do it through a local canoe.

    There are no vehicles in Yanaka, a rustic and poor community lying close to the developing capital city. This is because there is no road to Yanaka. Also, there is no road to Belebebiri I and II, Omodubiri and Ekolo, the other impoverished communities that share boundaries with Yanaka.

    Perhaps, there would have been a road linking the communities to Yenagoa if a bridge had been constructed by the government. Only a water channel separates the communities from Yenagoa.

    Belebebiri, the first of the communities, is just a stone thrown from Yenagoa. It is located behind the Federal Medical Centre (FMC) and accessed through the popular Hospital Road in Yenagoa.

    Typical of a suffering and smiling condition, the people of the communities have devised a means to eke out a living from their adversities. Following the lack of a link bridge,  canoe paddling is the common business and it is reserved for women alone. Women, mostly aged ones, own locally-made canoes and use them to cross people over to the river banks.

    Morning, especially on weekdays, is a busy period for the canoe paddlers. Like a typical rush hour, civil servants and other workers living in the communities, including owners of businesses in Yenagoa, besiege the Bebelebiri river bank to board canoes to the capital city.

    They also cluster the FMC axis of the bank while returning to their communities in the evening. The paddlers grapple with the water which on rare cases become turbulent as they struggle to sail their passenger-filled canoes safely to the river bank.

    Angelina Koki is one of the canoe paddlers. She is a 65-year-old widow and has been catering for her household with proceeds from the strenuous occupation.

    Sitting at the edge of her long canoe and forcing out a smile, she says: “I’m a ferry paddler, I work here everyday and we pull the paddle stick on this water until 2pm.”

    According to Koki, the business is organised with a roaster. While some women work from morning till afternoon, others take over till night. Koki goes home everyday with N1000 some days and N500 sometimes.

    “Sometimes we get N1000 and at other times, it’s N500. The boat can carry eight passengers at a time, and we collect N10 to and fro from each passenger. But, if it is a chatter, it becomes N50.

    “We most times do this so as to render assistance to the passengers but still we don’t get enough passengers. And it’s from this money I take care of my children, so there is no money because we buy garri with this money.

    “We get this money little by little and use it to pay for our children’s school fees. I don’t have any other husband again. I am a widow, so, I use this little money I get to fend for my family,” she says.

    Apart from her seven children whom Koki feeds, clothes and pays their school fees, the woman is a grandmother. “One of my daughters gave birth in my house so I automatically became the breadwinner of the home,” she said.

    On how she learnt canoe paddling, she said: “ I’m an Ijaw woman, swimming is in my blood. I started when I was small. That was how I found it easy in doing this job. Sometimes the water hyacinth  which we call “lagua” covers the surface of the water. This problem makes paddling very difficult.

    Though she confesses disliking the job, she has no choice. She will readily abandon the job if she sees a better one. She believes she overworks herself for a little gain.

    “I need a job. I love to be a salary earner that is receiving salary at the end of the month because we work but we don’t see the money”, she laments.

    To Sarah Binipramine, her surname has enabled her to survive the hardship of canoe paddling. According to her, Binipramine when transliterated means  “I’m not dying but I have long life”. In fact, she is determined to live longer despite the unfriendly nature of her environment.

    The 45-year-old woman laments that her lack of education forces her into her present business. “I did not go to school. I don’t have anything to do. That’s why I’m doing this business”, she says.

    Lamenting the hazards of her job, she adds: “This work is very tasking. We work under the rain and in the sun. Supposing I saw something else doing, I would have changed to another job.”

    Canoe paddling, according to her, is more difficult to cope with as a nursing mother.

    “It’s not easy if I must confess. I can’t say since I’m working, I won’t give birth. If it is possible to do so, I don’t really mind,” she laments.

    Binipramine is not also happy with the little money each passenger pays for her service. Passengers to her are not in short supply. She says: “The problem is that the payment is very little because N10 is what we collect when the passengers are complete in the boat but if not we collect N50.”

    Like Koki, Binipramine knows her trade by virtue of her tribe. “I came from the water and as a typical Ijaw woman, it’s our nature to learn how to swim and also pull a boat from our childhood. I didn’t learn it from anyone. I grew up with it”, she says.

    Apart from Koki and Binipramine, paddling canoe puts food on the table of Mrs. Agnes Tombra who since her childhood has known aquatic life. Tombra proudly identifies herself as a boat rider, saying: “This is what I do to sustain my family.”

    She further explains: “I was given  birth to in this community. I  grew up here. In fact, I and my family reside here. Yenegoa is very close to me but I choose to remain here since I am not educated.

    “This is the  only job an uneducated person like me can get but if the government can give me other job, I wil be forever grateful”.

    In fact, paddling canoes has some negative impacts on the health of the women. Tombra says the occupation has forced her to age faster.

    “I was younger than this initially but since I have to do this for the sake of my family, l am becoming older  day by day. It has also affected my health having regular body aches.

    “Coming in contact with cold water everyday affects the blood. So, this is also an issue. Secondly, the money we get from this is very small. It is not encouraging but I have no option because am not educated,”she says.

    Jobs for mothers alone

    The job of crossing passengers to the river banks through canoes is done only by women. In fact, not just women but mothers. It has become a taboo for men to be found in the midst of women doing similar job.

    Indeed, canoe paddling in Belebebiri is a custom culturally reserved for mothers. It is so by convention. The men are allowed to drive the speedboats. The women belong to a union and they are expected to register  before joining the business.

    Everybody confirms it. Koki says it is neither a job for men nor for boys. “The business is solely for women because there is a boat paddler union so if you pay you enter so if you meet the head of this water side, you register and become a member.

    “Young boys cannot do this because it’s very difficult to row. The union is only meant for women. Since it is meant for mothers, men are not allowed into the union, rather, they drive the speedboat”, she explains.

    Also,  Binipramine, a mother of four children,  whose husband is jobless, admits that men are not allowed to do the business.

    “I feed my four children and husband with this. This job is solely meant for women since it is part of our tradition. Men must not be found in women business,” she says.

    Communities demand for a bridge

    Despite exploiting an opportunity afforded by lack of a bridge to make a living, the women and members of the communities are not comfortable with the development. They need a bridge to bring development to their communities.

    The communities are far from development despite their closeness to the state capital. They are more like settlements, rustic, outlandish and lacking basic amenities. Residents leave in hut-like houses in inclement conditions especially when it rains. Following lack of bridge, residents who own vehicles park them in Yenagoa before crossing over to their communities.

    Tombra says she will be happy if the government decides to construct a bridge to link their communities. She recalls that the government promised to build a bridge in the area.

    “I will be very happy for the sake of my children and the community if government fulfills this long promise. It means there is hope for our children because  this will bring good opportunities for our children and the community at large,” she says.

    Also, Cynthia Ozoro, who lives in the community, pleads with the government to link the communities with a bridge. She believes that a bridge is what the communities need to develop. Besides, Ozoro is not a good swimmer. She is always scared any time she travels on canoe.

    “The government should build a bridge across this community because this will bring about massive development. There will be job and everything will be fine.

    “I am not a good swimmer. I am always scared  when l am traveling on this water but I have to cross this water to meet my  daily needs.

    “I am so scared mostly when l am carrying my baby. I have heard of so many casualties on this river but  any time I travel I really thank God,” she says.

    She also believes that the women will find an alternative means of livelihood if eventually the bridge is constructed.

    “For the women what they are doing is like an  employment  because  they use this in taking care of their family.

    “But if they cross this bridge now, they will look for an alternative. Government should please construct a bridge for us so that I and my family can survive,” she says.

    Speaking on the issues, the Chairman of Community Development Committee, Belebebiri II, Mr. Nicholas Ewere, says the communities are in dire need of development.

    He says: “These communities need development. We are still in need of the government because their presence is not found anywhere around this area. We have other three communities that surround Belebebiri II.

    “All of them are still in the same level.  In fact, we all are in need and desperately in need. We need grassroot development in every  side.

    “This little water is demarcating us from Yenagoa. So, we are in need of a bridge. The only area we are begging the government is to do something; at least if this bridge is constructed we are okay.”

    He blames the woes of the community on lack of a short bridge. He says there are no schools, clinics and other basic amenities in the area. He admits that Allison-Madueke hails from Yanaka.

    “She is from Yanaka community. This place is just behind  Belebebiri II. When you take a walk, it is not up to 25 minutes so we are all one because  everybody from   the other  four communities go through this ‘bridgeless’ road,” she says.

    On whether Mrs alison-Madueke has assisted the communities to alleviate their suffering, he says: “From my own understanding, I learnt that she is giving out this money for contracts but those who grab this money divert it into their own personal pockets.

    “I am not blaming her because she cannot be there and close her eyes seeing  her people suffering. I just believe that she is doing something. The problem is the people she gives this money for  this contract.

    “But she should be mindful when giving money. She should give this money to a successful contractor.

    “I am using this opportunity to let the government know that what  is happening in this place is not supposed to be of this nature because in this village we have civil servants, military people and in the morning when these peole  will be going to work, they meet hazard endangering there lives.

    “Some in the cause of crossing to the other side, at times their canoes capsize and we record many casualties  every year. So, if there is a bridge, such things won’t happen.”

  • Alison-Madueke’s OPEC ambition to wait

    Alison-Madueke’s OPEC ambition to wait

    The ambition of Petroleum Minister Mrs Diezani Alison-Madueke to become the Secretary General of the Organisation of Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) will have to wait.

    The 12-member body has extended the tenure of its sitting secretary general till June next year. The election was earlier slated for December.

    President Goodluck Jonathan had forwarded the name of the minister for the position. But it will no longer be contested this year.

    At the end of a meeting of the Vienna, Austria-based organisation yesterday, its communique confirmed the decision to extend long-serving Secretary General Abdullah al-Badri’s term till June 30, 2015.

    Its next meeting is slated for November 27.

    The proposal was intended to solve the deadlock over the post created by opposing candidates from Saudi Arabia and Iran, Iraq’s Oil Minister Abdul Kareem Luaibi, said

    OPEC also agreed to renew its oil production ceiling of 30 million barrels a day for the second half of this year in a widely anticipated decision.

    It is satisfied with 110 dollars Brent crude oil price a barrel, above its preferred price of 100 dollars a barrel, ministers said.

    Two member countries, Libya and Iran, are producing well below capacity because of civil conflict and sanctions helping to support prices.

  • Alison-Madueke: gas cheaper than petrol

    he nation is beginning to see a change in gas use with compressed natural gas (CNG) as vehicular fuel, the Minister of Petroleum Resources, Mrs Diezani Alison-Madueke, has said.

    The Minister, who spoke at a forum in Abuja through the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) Group Managing Director, Andrew Yakubu, said Green Gas Limited supplied over 4,000 taxis and cars with natural gas, adding: “This is growing on a daily basis.”

    She praised the initiative of NIPCO and the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) called Green Gas Limited,  a joint venture targeted at making CNG a choice fuel by motorists, adding that the drive to deepen gas consumption had resulted in significant infrastructure development in and around Benin-City where the project took off.

    She said the use of gas, instead of petrol, has saved money for the taxi drivers, aside huge environmental benefits it offers to the citizens. The taxi drivers who have enjoyed the benefits are urging others to convert to CNG, she said.

    NIPCO’s Managing Director  Venkataraman Venkatapathy, in his presentation, titled: Natural gas vehicle sustainability and opportunity, said globally, the natural gas industry is increasing its effort to support natural gas transport, adding this is needed to create programmes and incentives that would be at par with other fuels.

    He explained that the success of natural gas use as an alternative to fuel, which relies on the government’s support through the provision of needed infrastructure, would further boost customer confidence in the project.

    He listed the needed support to include special gas pricing (lower than the power sector); subsidy to vehicle owners for this purpose; waiver of customs duty on importation of natural gas vehicles (NGVs), to ensure that 50 per cent  of vehicles imported are equipped with CNG, among others.

    Venkatapathy said to achieve this initiative,which would translate into increased use of the nation’s abundant gas resources as auto fuel, there was need for formation of a special high level committee that shall formulate policies with a clear strategic plan.The policy will include small share of fuel mix and auto fuel policy for use of natural gas as a fuel.

  • Missing $20b: Senate panel never cleared minister, NNPC – Saraki

    Chairman Senate Committee on Ecology and Environment, Senator Bukola Saraki, on Thursday denied media reports that the Senate Committee on Finance had cleared the Minister of Petroleum, Diezani Alison-Madueke and the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) over the alleged missing $20billion.

    Saraki, who is also a member of the Finance Committee, said nothing significant has changed to suggest the clearing of the minister and the NNPC.

    He stated that even though the report of the committee has been laid before the Senate, more was still being done to unravel the missing money.

    The former Governor of Kwara State, according to a statement issued by his media aide, Bamikole Omishore, in Abuja, urged the media to wait for the official release of the report to the public before jumping to conclusions.

    The statement reads: “The recent media reports claiming that the Senate Committee on Finance has cleared NNPC of any unaccounted revenue fund are not true.

    “Though I could not attend the last meeting of the committee, I have been very active in the investigation, nothing significant has changed to suggest clearing of anybody.

    “I can say on behalf of the committee that these media reports bear no correlation to the content of the Senate Committee report and I would urge the public to disregard it in its entirety.

    “The committee is yet to receive the report on the forensic audit and independent analysis on the subject clearly indicates we have a lot of grounds to cover in order to determine the level of culpability or otherwise of agency on the alleged non-committal, so to suggest any clearance for anybody at this stage is out of the question.

    “I will further advise that the media should wait for the Senate to release the details of the committee report to the public before they jump into spurious conclusions.”

     

  • Private jets: Allison Madueke gets fresh summon

    Private jets: Allison Madueke gets fresh summon

    The Minister of Petroleum Resources, Mrs. Deziani Allison-Madueke, has been issued a new summon to appear before the House of Representatives Committee on Public Account for spending N10 billion on private jets.

    This follows the directive of the Speaker, House of Representatives, Aminu Tambuwal, on Wednesday that the Public Accounts Committee should resume the investigation which had been stunted by a controversial court pronunciation.

    Also summoned are – the Group Managing Director of the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation, (Andrew Yakubu, Managing Director of the Federal Airports Authority, the MD of Pipeline and Petroleum Products Marketing Company; Mr. Haruna Momoh, Vistajet International Limited and other stakeholders.

    Chairman, House Committee in Media and Public Affairs, Hon. Zakari Mohammed, told reporters at a press briefing on Thursday that all those summoned are to appear between June 15 and 17 to shed light on the matter.

    His words: “We’ve invited all the stakeholders involved to appear before the committee between June 17 and 17. We gave this ample time because the people involved will have enough time to properly organise themselves.

    “The whole exercise is not designed to witch-hunt any public officer but to get to the bottom of the matter.”

    According to him, the PAC committee would take all stakeholders who have submitted memoranda before it one after the other.

    “We don’t want to stampede invitees. We are not after anybody, but to expose what is not right that is why we gave a long gap of three weeks,” Mohammed said.

  • Alison-Madueke: House ignores court summons

    The House of Representatives on Monday shunned a Federal High Court, Abuja, order, directing it to appear and explain where it got the information that the court has stopped the investigation of the Minister of Petroleum Resources, Diezani Alison-Madueke, for allegedly expending about N10billion in hiring aircraft.
    The court insisted that the order it made on April 29 stands and that House of Representatives must obey the order by appearing before it.
    Justice Ahmed Mohammed had made the order on April 29 upon media reports quoting the House of Representatives’ spokesman, Zakari Mohammed, as claiming that the planned investigation of Alison-Madueke and the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation by the House’s Committee on Public Accounts had been stopped by the court.
    The House of Representatives reportedly told the media on April 28 (a day the Minister and top officials of NNPC were expected to appear before it) that it was suspending its investigation into the N10b aircraft lease allegation on account of a purported restraining order from the court.
    On Monday, the House was neither represented by its official nor a lawyer, prompting plaintiff’s lawyer, Etigwe Uwa (SAN) to observe that the House of Reps (who is the 2nd defendant in the case) was treating the case with levity and urged the court to compel its appearance in court.
    Uwa noted that the House has consistently refused to attend court despite being served with court processes and hearing notices as directed by the court.

  • Why indigenous firms get oil contract – Alison-Madueke

    Why indigenous firms get oil contract – Alison-Madueke

    The Minister of Petroleum, Diezani Alison-Madueke, has said the recent award of crude oil lifting contract to indigenous companies was to encourage effective local participation in the industry.

    Alison-Madueke said the decision was a deliberate policy of the Federal Government to encourage Nigerians to participate in the oil and gas sector of the economy.

    This is contained in a statement issued on Sunday in Abuja by the Group General Manager, Group Public Affairs Division of the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation, Mr. Ohi Alegbe.

    According to the statement, over 60 per cent of the 2014 to 2015 annual term contracts for lifting of Nigeria’s crude oil were awarded to local firms after a painstaking pre-qualification process.

    It stated that the balance was shared among some international trading companies, refineries and to some countries with bilateral trade agreements with Nigeria.

    “When we unveiled the Nigerian content law a few years back, the overriding principle was to grow indigenous capacity in an aggressive manner.

    “I am happy to report that today, in the oil and gas sector, Nigerian content has been placed on the path of irreversible progress,” statement added.

    It said the award to local players was in line with the aspiration of President Goodluck Jonathan to effectively transform the petroleum industry.

    It said the advent of the Nigerian content law had encouraged indigenous investment in critical infrastructure.

    “We have seen robust indigenous investments in marine vessels of various categories, and wholly owned Nigerian vessels have increased astronomically throughout the years.

    “These vessels are the category one and category two types.

    “Investments in reception, storage and distribution facilities such as jetties, depots, trucks, vessels and modern retail outlets have more than doubled over the past few years.

    “This has helped to increase the nation’s sufficiency level in petrol supply,’’ the News Agency of Nigeria quoted the statement as saying on Monday.

     

  • N10b cash on jet: Reps secure  travel logs of Minister’s plane

    N10b cash on jet: Reps secure travel logs of Minister’s plane

    •Alison-Madueke suspends trip to prepare defence

    The travel logs of the jet chartered by Petroleum Resources Minister Diezani Alison-Madueke are now in possession of members of the House of Representatives as they prepare to launch their probe of the N10 billion allegedly spent by her on the plane.

    The logs, The Nation authoritatively gathered, cover the minister’s trips to China, South Africa, United States and United Arab Emirates.

    There are also indications that the House may demand movement logs of the Challenger jet from the Federal Airports Authority of Nigeria (FAAN); Nigerian Airspace Management Agency (NAMA); and the Nigerian Civil Aviation Authority (NCAA).

    One of the parastatals under the Ministry of Petroleum Resources has been fingered in the hiring and payment for the jet.

    Upset by the media attention generated by what many Nigerians see as waste of public funds, the minister has suspended a foreign trip with President Goodluck Jonathan to prepare her defence for the House of Representatives.

    Investigations in Abuja showed that some representatives have obtained travel logs of the minister which they intend to present to the Public Accounts Committee for verification from FAAN, NAMA and NCAA.

    A reliable source said the fact-sheet available to some members indicated that the average cost of a trip on the jet was about $300,000.

    It was also learnt that the parastatatal in question maintains the jet with $500,000 per month.

    The source said: “This probe is a result of painstaking efforts by some members in the last one year. Some of these members, including those from PDP in the House, have secured the travel logs of the minister to and from Nigeria.

    “For instance, she had been to China, South Africa, United States, the UK and the United Arab Emirates with the jet. At a point, the jet was relocated to Ghana when controversy arose on the jet in August last year.

    “Even if FAAN, NAMA and NCAA decide not to release the records of movement of the Challenger Jet, these countries will oblige the House of Representatives. Also, the leasing company is foreign owned, it cannot hide the records if it wants to remain in business.”

    Another source said: “We have identified some issues for Diezani as follows:

    • What informed the hiring of the jet?

    • Why will the parastatal be paying for the jet?

    • Why will the minister travel in a private jet while on the delegation of the president to some countries?

    • Assuming that the hiring of the jet was due to exigencies, what informed the extension of the privilege to members of her family as was the case during the 2013 Easter Break trip to Dubai in UAE?

    “We are not after the person of the minister but we want probity in government. We won’t allow a serving public officer use the public treasury for personal purpose.

    “And what we are doing is not new because a group, Crusaders for Good Governance (CGG), sent a petition to the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) on the same issue last year.”

    But the probe has caused anxiety in the presidency following recurring scandals trailing cabinet members.

    A source in government said: “The presidency is worried that the series of probes targeted at ministers might be attempts to bring down the government by some forces.

    “We are waiting for the investigative process and how it will go. The government will certainly pay keen interest on the probe.”

    Mrs. Alison-Madueke has already suspended an overseas trip with President Jonathan to her enable prepare her defence for the House of Representatives.

    A source close to her said: “The minister is just upset with the allegation, she decided to cancel her schedule abroad to clear her image. She believes the allegations are too grave to ignore.

    “She is already preparing her defence; she has devoted the weekend to do this. The minister has told everyone around her that there is a total misconception and misplacement of facts and purely an act of political blackmail against this administration

    “By the time she is through with the facts and figures, Nigerians will know the truth. She was seriously upset that some people are personalizsing the issue. She said the figures they are quoting were exaggerated; when the Minister opens up, it will be revealing too.”

     

  • Alison-Madueke ‘blows N10b on chartered plane’

    Alison-Madueke ‘blows N10b on chartered plane’

    Petroleum Resources Minister Diezani Alison- Madueke’s flamboyance attracted attention yesterday at the House of Representatives.

    The lawmakers described her movie star lifestyle, including the maintenance of a chartered Challenger 850 aircraft at N3.1billion, as “wasteful”.

    The House mandated its Committee on Public Accounts to investigate “this financial recklessness of the Hon. Minister of Petroleum Resources” and report back to the House within three weeks.

    The resolution of the House followed the adoption of the prayers of a motion brought before it by Hon. Samuel Babatunde Adejare ( APC, Lagos).

    Adejare, presenting the argument of the motion titled: “Urgent need to investigate the waste of resources on the arbitrary charter and maintenance of a Challenger 850 aircraft for non-official use”, said the minister has spent N3.1 billion of public funds so far to maintain the aircraft.

    He said: “In these days of scarce national resources where public finance is shrinking in the face of ever increasing national needs, such as roads, health, education and power, amongst others, an official of government could waste public funds on such luxury as chartering a Challenger 850 aircraft for extra official use.

    “In recent times, most states of the Federation have been facing acute shortage of allocations due to the dwindling national revenue, which has reduced the quality of governance and deprived the people of dividends of democracy.

    “Based on reliable evidence, the Hon. Minister of Petroleum Resources, Mrs Diezani Alison-Madueke, has been committing 500,000 Euros (N130 million) monthly to maintain the Aircraft, thus in two (2) years, the Minister had committed at least N3.120 billion in maintaining the private jet, which is used solely for her personal needs and those of her immediate family, which is an appalling act.”

    The lawmaker said there were strong indications that the expenditure is only a tip of the iceberg “as several other billions of naira have been allegedly wasted on flying the Jet all over the world, obviously for the leisure of the Hon. Minister and her immediate family on trips that were of no benefit to the country.”

    Adejare said: “This colossal waste is currently estimated at N10 billion, which includes the payment of allowances to the crew for the trips, hangar packing and rent, based on the lease agreement.”

    He expressed concern that an official of government could be bankrolling “this waste in the face of ever-dwindling public resources, which amounts to a misplacement of priority, impudence and breach of public trust, an action that offends the Fiscal Responsibility Act and all other – laws on fiscal discipline.”

    Adejare enjoined his colleagues to take cognizance of the provisions of Section 88 (2) (b) of the 1999 Constitution which empowers the National Assembly to expose corruption, inefficiency or waste in the execution or administration of laws within its legislative competence and the disbursement or administration of funds appropriated.

    The motion, which was not debated, was overwhelmingly supported by members of the House when Speaker Aminu Tambuwal called for a vote.

    Tambuwal referred the matter to the Public Accounts Committee for further investigation.

    But Hon. Uche Ekwunife defended the minister.

    According to her, what should be of focus is the benefit of her trips on the Nigerian economy.

    She added that there was no evidence that Mrs. Alison-Madueke had been carrying members of her family on the jet.

    She said she had flown on the jet with her locally and internationally and never saw her family members on board.

    Mrs. Ekwunife said: “What about governors who fly the whole state to collect awards?”