Tag: Andrew Yakubu

  • Seized funds: Yakubu slams N1bn suit on EFCC

    Seized funds: Yakubu slams N1bn suit on EFCC

    The former Group Managing Director of the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC), Andrew Yakubu, wants the Federal High Court, Abuja, to award N1 billion against the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) as damages and compensation for violation‎ of his rights.

    Counsel to Yakubu, Mr. Adeola Adedipe told the court that the matter was brought pursuant to Order 8 Rule 4 of the Fundamental Rights Enforcement Procedure Rules.

    Yakubu also prayed the court for a declaration that he was entitled to the dignity of his person, personal liberty, freedom of movement, private and family life as enshrined in the 1999 Constitution.

    Yakubu joined the EFCC and the Attorney-General of the Federation as first and second respondents in the suit.

    He also prayed the court to declare that his continued detention by the EFCC without charging him to court or allowing him to complete his medical procedure in the United Kingdom was a violation of his rights.

    The former NNPC boss asked the court to declare that his continued detention was also an infringement on his rights to dignity of human person.

    He subsequently, prayed the court for an order enforcing his rights to personal liberty, dignity of human person, freedom of movement, private and family life.

    This, he said, was by directing his immediate release from EFCC custody or admitting him to bail on liberal terms and allowing him to complete his medical treatment in the UK.

    Yakubu also prayed for an order of perpetual injunction restraining the EFCC from further detaining him unlawfully.

    NAN

     

  • Ex-NNPC GMD sues EFCC over forfeited cash

    Ex-NNPC GMD sues EFCC over forfeited cash

    The Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) has been sued by former Group Managing Director of the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC), Mr Andrew Yakubu, over a cash forfeiture order.

    The Federal High Court sitting in Kano and presided over by Justice Zainab Bage recently ruled that the embattled ex- NNPC boss should forfeit $9.8 million and 74,000 pounds recovered from his house to the Federal Government.

    Justice Bage ruled on the ex parte application filed by the EFCC.

    However, Yakubu has dragged the EFCC to a Federal High Court in Kano in his bid to quash the forfeiture order.

    Counsel to the former NNPC boss, Mr Ahmed Raji, who spoke through, Barr. Abdulkarim Kabiru Maude said his client had applied for Motion on Notice, seeking the court to dismiss the forfeiture order earlier granted to the EFCC by Justice Zainab’s court.

    The EFCC spokesperson, Kano office, Idris Nadabo, who confirmed the development, said the hearing on the matter would take place on March 7.

    [news_box style=”2″ display=”tag” link_target=”_blank” tag=”Yakubu” count=”6″ show_more=”on” show_more_type=”link”]

  • Alleged $9.7m loot: Angry Kaduna slum  residents curse ex-NNPC boss Yakubu

    Alleged $9.7m loot: Angry Kaduna slum residents curse ex-NNPC boss Yakubu

    •Ex-GMD battles for bail
    •Magu praises officer behind the expose

    Residents of Sabon Tasha, the Kaduna slum from where operatives of the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) recently recovered an alleged loot of $9.7million and 74,000 pound sterling are angry with former Group Managing Director of NNPC, Mr. Andrew Yakubu, who is believed to have kept the money in his house there.

    Such is the bitterness of the residents’ anger that they now rain curses on him for locking up equivalent of billions of naira in the community where many go to bed in hunger.

    Yakubu remained in EFCC custody yesterday, battling for bail.

    Following the discovery of a whopping $9.7m in a Kaduna slum house allegedly belonging to the former Group Managing Director of NNPC, Yakubu, residents of the area have expressed anger and rained curses on the owner for locking up billions in a community where many go to bed in hunger.

    The residents gathered in twos and threes yesterday discussing the recovery which was widely published yesterday by the media.

    They were shocked that such a huge amount of money was kept close to them when many cannot afford three square meals or meet their basic needs.

    Some branded his action as sheer wickedness.

    One Jerry D. Ishaya said: “If you keep a large sum of money somewhere, whether you got it legitimately or illegitimately, bring it out and invest it for the people to benefit.

    “If anyone is caught looting, let him face the law. After all, EFCC was established by PDP.”

    Another resident, Mrs. Shila Musa said “those stealing our commonwealth and making us languish in abject poverty will not know peace.

    “Just imagine, an amount that is enough to resuscitate the entire textile industry in Kaduna in the hands of one man, ‘Allah ya isa’ (God will judge).

    “I am a Christian and I know in a situation like this some people will be blindly supporting this kind of person. But the question is: of what benefit has his loot being to Christians?

    “So, Nigerians must wake up and fight their common enemies looting our treasury irrespective of their religious or ethnic affiliation,” Mrs. Musa said.

    Yakubu, according to EFCC sources has admitted ownership of the money.

    He claimed the money was a gift.

    The anti-graft agency, The Nation gathered yesterday, is also reviewing certain actions of Yakubu when he held sway at the NNPC.

    The Acting Chairman of the anti-graft agency, Mr.Ibrahim Magu is full of praise for the head of the commission’s operations in Kano Zonal Office, Mr. Adamu Dan Musa who led the team that recovered the money.

    Yakubu is said to be keen to go home on bail.

    Also working hard to get him released on bail are several prominent Nigerians including a Senator.

    However, EFCC sources said its investigation of the detainee is far from concluded.

    A top source said: “The ex-GMD is still in custody, we want him to give us the list of those who gave him the $9.8million as gift.

    “We are also considering other clues which we have stumbled upon in the course of this investigation. We will grant him bail as soon as we sort out a few things.

    “It is interesting that some prominent Nigerians, including a Senator, have been begging us to release the ex-GMD. But EFCC only complied with the rule of law and not sentiments.”

    Meanwhile, Magu yesterday commended Mr. Adamu Dan Musa, the commission’s head of operations in Kano Zonal Office, who led the team that recovered the money.

    The Head of Media and Publicity of the commission, Mr. Wilson Uwujaren, said Magu  spoke after the commission’s monthly keep fit programme.

    Magu said the officer and his team “demonstrated courage, professionalism and integrity in executing the raid that yielded the astounding discovery.”

    He asked staff of the commission to “emulate the team as the EFCC is poised to take the fight against corruption to new heights.”

    The statement added: “The EFCC boss also used the opportunity to clarify the misleading information in a release by the Police Service Commission (PSC) concerning the promotion of six policemen for outstanding performance.

    “One of the newly promoted officers, Suleiman Abdul, who is currently on secondment at the EFCC, was purportedly promoted to the rank of Assistant Commissioner of Police because he “recently recovered N42billion for the Federal Government”.

    “Magu said he is unaware of any recent recovery by the officer.

    “He may have made recovery in the past. But in the last six years I am not aware of any recovery by the officer to warrant commendation by the commission.”

  • Don’t separate offices of Minister of State Petroleum, GMD NNPC – Group

    Don’t separate offices of Minister of State Petroleum, GMD NNPC – Group

    The Niger Delta Youths Coalition on Tuesday opposed the call for the separation of the office of the Minister of State for Petroleum from that of the Group Managing Director of the Nigeria National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC).

     

    The NDYC in a statement made available to our reporter in Abuja said that the insinuation that the combination of the two offices as presently constituted is too demanding for the Minister of State, Petroleum Resources, Dr. Ibe Kachikwu, lacked substance and is not founded on facts.

     

    Endorsed by Comrade Ebipade Jackson (Bayelsa), Comrade Eghosa Idehen (Edo State), Comrade Tony Gbemudu (Delta State), Comrade Amezhinim Ekiye (Rivers State), Comrade Aniebiet Nsikan (Akwa Ibom State) and Comrade Odey Christopher (Cross River State) statement said that the merger of the two offices is also not the cause of the current fuel scarcity.

     

    NDYC said that it is on record that the relationship between the two offices when they were separate, was characterized with friction, power tussle and policy inconsistency.

     

    It added that fuel scarcity had been a perennial occurrence in the country’s history at those times when the offices of Minister of State for Petroleum and the GMD of NNPC were under separate management, as was the case in the era of Funsho Kukpolokun, Austin Oniwon, Andrew Yakubu, Joseph Dawha, and others.

     

    “We wish to condemn in strong terms the call by the President of the Trade Union Congress, Mr. Bobboi Kaigama for the separation of the office of the Minister of State for Petroleum from that of the Group Managing Director of the NNPC because, according to him, the office as presently constituted is too demanding for Dr. Kachikwu.

     

    “Such an argument lacks substance and is not founded on facts. The merger of the two offices era of Funsho Kukpolokun, Austin Oniwon, Andrew Yakubu, Joseph Dawha, and others.

     

    “It is common knowledge that the cause of the present fuel scarcity is as a result of the inability of fuel importers to source enough foreign exchange for the importation of fuel.

     

    “The Central Bank should as a matter of urgency grant these fuel importers access to foreign exchange to alleviate the pains being experienced by all as a result of the scarcity of petroleum products.

     

    “We wish to utilize this opportunity to call on the ordinary Nigerian to rally round Ibe Kachikwu.

     

    “It is on record that Dr. Kachikwu has made some far-reaching changes since assumption of office.

    “His re-engineering of the NNPC to make it more profit oriented and a veritable revenue earner for Nigeria is a great feat which past administrations failed to achieve.

     

    “As a matter of fact, the NNPC has been running at huge losses over the years and was mostly dependent on the finances of the country for sustenance.

     

    “Another major feat recorded by Dr. Kachikwu is the jettisoning of the fraud called fuel subsidy which had served as a drain pipe on the resources of this country for years.

     

    “Available records show that fuel subsidy payments gulped over N5 trillion between 2011 and 2015. With the recent down-grading of the fuel subsidy regime, the system is now free for fair and competitive businesses that can grow the economy unlike in the past where a very few held the system hostage and continually made false declarations on the quantity of products brought into the country.

     

    “Dr. Ibe Kachukwu has been very proactive in the management of the Petroleum sector since assumption of office and we urge him not to be deterred because  President Muhammadu Buhari’s change agenda as is being brilliantly prosecuted by Dr. Ibe Kachikwu through revolutionary policies geared towards revamping the oil and gas sector.

     

    “We also want to use this opportunity to thank and commend His Excellency Muhammadu Buhari for finding in Dr Kachikwua worthy change agent who has the capacity and skills to deliver on the determination of his administration to restore hope to Nigerians.

     

    “We therefore thank Mr President for his unwavering support for Dr. Ibe Kachikwu’sprogrammes in the petroleum sector since assumption of office and urge him to discountenance and disregard all negative insinuations which without doubt, are borne out of greed and mischief.

     

     

    “South South people are solidly behind Dr. Ibe Kachikwu and we remain profoundly proud of his outstanding achievements in life, including the giant strides he has already recorded in the Nigerian oil and gas sector where, on resuming office, he has characteristically grabbed the bull of corruption and inefficiency by the horns, and began a transformation of the NNPC to a modern and more efficient oil company.

     

    “We finally urge Dr. Ibe Kachikwu to remain focused and unrelenting in his commitment to justify the confidence placed on him by Mr President.

     

    “Dr. Ibe Kachikwu remains one of our best brains in the Niger Delta region and we are glad to note that this administration recognizes the importance of engaging our best unlike in the past, to head sensitive positions in government and thus bring good governance to bear not just on the Niger Delta region but in Nigeria as a whole.

     

    “For the avoidance of doubt, it must be put on record that for the first time in the history of this country, the era of profligacy in the management and administration of the oil sector is now over and this is as a result of the dexterous application of the world acclaimed professional skills of a sincere and honest administrator, against all the odds placed on his way by devious persons in the industry who are opposed to the change agenda.”

  • Victims Support Fund –Spend ‘’For, By and With the Victims’ Families, not chop chop’’; NNPC sack

    Victims Support Fund –Spend ‘’For, By and With the Victims’ Families, not chop chop’’; NNPC sack

    Be advised that the now well-funded N58.7billion Danjuma-led Terror Victim Support Fund will best be served by targeting for employment in management, administrative and outreach qualified victims only from the areas concerned who have been affected and are naturally desperately looking for jobs. This is not a job for the boys. This is not a time for the usual greedy suspects, vultures feeding fat on the victims’ funds. The Nigerian extended family is the best NGO in Nigeria and should be quickly identified as the unit of recovery, not the individual. Make the recovery a family matter. The VSF must be spent ‘For the Victims, By the Victims and With the Victims!’

    This is not the time for mega-contractors – one contractor delivering 5000 mattresses or 10,000 blankets or whatever and making billions for his family. Nigeria does not need more billionaires. It needs many thousands of half-a-millionaires. This fund will do better with multiple micro-finance contracts similar to Small and Medium Enterprises (SMEs) and touching millions. Every contractor, business or local professional or consultant empowered with a N1million or N5million or N10million contract or job for drugs, beddings, roofing sheets, cooking gas or physical and psychological caring will empower the recipients’ families with honest income. But more than money, it will bring morale and morals to the contractor, shop or merchant and instil the pride of the dignity of labour and a return from ruin to human respectability.

    There is no point in paying non-local consultants, accountants, drivers, purchasers, contractors, workers, companies and even NGOs from outside the area while the capable affected citizens, experienced in local business, transportation, administration, management are sitting in long separate rows of men, women and children to receive the ‘largess’ of the TVSF. All these must be registered by age, experience, qualification from paper to professional skills like food preparation to driving licence owner to plumber to farmer, jobs done, jobs desired, computer literacy-very important. Students studying should also be registered for assistance, holiday jobs and educational support. Ask for citizens from the area but residing elsewhere to offer themselves for technical service. Ultimately it is not about the money but integrity, not only of the leadership but of the funded care system.

    I suspect the sack of Mr Andrew Yakubu of the NNPC demonstrates little more than the absolute arrogance of political power refusing to accept good advice and professionalism. Could it be that government only wants ‘yes-men and yes-women’ willing to carry out wrong decisions as ‘orders from above’? Why are there such high attrition rates among the chosen leadership? In the armed forces, how many Generals have been retired prematurely in the last 15 years? Nigeria forgets that each prematurely retired high official has been trained at government expense and will receive full gratuity and pension for the remaining 30+ years of their life. So every premature retirement case is a blow to the finances of Nigeria because premature retirement means that Nigeria is paying for the person to live until the actual retirement day when the pensions should start. If government retires a GMD or a General at 55 instead of 65, Nigeria will lose years of usefulness. Whatever the real reason, one has doubts that Mr Yakubu, now suddenly ‘former GMD’, was sacked for something serious or treasonable like having links to Boko Haram funding or bombers or massive fraud and corruption at NNPC. Can the Presidency tell the nation if his crime was corruption, theft, contract inflation, mal-administration or a lack of ‘Yes Ma, Yes sir’? Government is powerful enough to tar anyone with a ‘criminal’ brush. In July, I watched part of the well-established Annual NNPC Youth Quiz Competition on TV and I wonder if that was why he was sacked. Perhaps for being ‘larger than life’ and offering to ‘increase the Quiz Prize money’? Perhaps for doing too much good in the public domain and standing too firmly against non-professionalism? Of course, perhaps we will never know the real ‘political’ reason for Diezani and Jonathan agreeing to the termination of such a senior government official. The NNPC has a track record of rapid turn-over of leadership. Are these ‘too quick changes of the guard at the oily palace’ for the good of Nigeria or for the good and preservation of the evil retrogressive status quo and the interests of the few? Some suggestions include that many importers are unhappy at the progress of the GMD in getting Nigeria’s refineries ready to replace the ridiculous dependence on imported fuel.

    But the most important announcement from the Minister of Petroleum is the devastating news that Nigeria will not see even 10,000Mw in the lifetime of many and certainly not before 2015 as the new goal by end 2014 is now revised down to –yes, you guessed right -5,000Mw. The same political authorities have been in total charge of petroleum and gas supplies since 1999. Yet they blame poor gas supplies in turn blamed on a refusal of contractors to supply gas because of non-payment of gas contractors. These contractors are strangely owed N25billion for previous gas supplies. What type of country do we live in that the government does not pay its own contractors for years and years while the nation groans in preventable darkness? And then Customs release 230+ containers containing electricity power equipment needed long ago. Is there no synergy between power, policies and agencies?

  • Why NNPC GMD was fired

    Why NNPC GMD was fired

    •Yakubu opposed minister’s suit against Reps over chartered flight

    Irreconcilable differences between the newly dropped Group Managing Director of the  Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC), Andrew Yakubu,  and Petroleum Minister Diezani Alison-Madueke, cost him his job on Friday, The Nation can reveal.

    Yakubu and the Managing Director of the Nigerian Petroleum Development  Company (NPDC), Mr. Victor Briggs, were unceremoniously dumped at the weekend  by President Goodluck Jonathan  who  immediately appointed  Dr Joseph Thlama Dawha at NNPC and Mr. Anthony Ugonna Muoneke  at NPDC as replacements.

    Yakubu is the fourth NNPC GMD to work with the minister in a space of four years.

    Many staff of the NNPC remained shell shocked at the development yesterday a few weeks after Yakubu reportedly told them that he had the confidence of the President.

    Industry sources told The Nation in Abuja that the relationship between the former NNPC boss and the minister was dogged by disagreements on several issues.

    These include constant sack of highly-skilled professionals in the corporation who were trained by the federal government; sharp differences on policies affecting oil and gas industry; alienation of International Oil Companies (IOCs);  opposition to the minister’s court action against  the House of Representatives to stop the probe into alleged N10billion spent on chartered jet; non-availability of the minister when crucial decisions are required; and pile up of files on matters affecting the industry.

    An NNPC source familiar with the situation said: “You know Yakubu, a northern minority, was the fourth to get the boot in four years. We had Barkindo, Ladan, Oniwon and the latest victim, Yakubu.

    “What happened was that the immediate past GMD was uncomfortable with the recurring sack of competent hands in NNPC to satisfy some cronies. His position was that sycophancy should not be the basis for appointments in the corporation.

    “For instance, a former GED of the NNPC in charge of exploration, Abiye, was sacked after he fought spiritedly to reconcile accounts on alleged missing oil funds with ex-CBN Governor Sanusi Lamido Sanusi. There were so many cases like that in the last four years.”

    The source also alleged that several policy proposals made by Yakubu never sat well with the minister.

    “The ex-GMD was not happy that the IOCs are divesting in the oil sector although the minister does not see anything wrong with the development,” the source said.

    “Above all, the former GMD detested the idea of running after a minister with files when crucial decisions were to be taken.

    “Instead of being mutually consultative, the minister will rather give an order on what should be done when it is technically obvious as defective. All the management staff owe the minister is “Yes madam.”

    Yakubu was said to be opposed to the minister’s decision to take the House of Representatives to court on the alleged N10billion spent on chartered jet. His position was that the corporation should go and explain to the House and lay the facts bare.

    “Yakubu was thinking of what would become of NNPC after the exit of the minister. He said a constitutional body should be accountable for the system to flow well.

    “The frequent travels of the minister also affected or delayed issues which ought to be treated on time. This created a cold war between the minister and the former GMD.”

    The source said that the manner in which the President acted clearly showed that   he only listened to the supervising minister alone.

    Another source however said although some management staff saw Yakubu’s sack coming, the ex-GMD dismissed such assumption.

    It was gathered that some management staff had been tipped off that the Minister was uncomfortable with the ex-GMD anymore.

    Such managers reportedly raised the issue with the former GMD but he refused to move to stop the sack.

    He was said to have told his informants that President Jonathan had repeatedly assured him that his job was safe.

    The source said: “I can recall that some management staff had recently asked him if all was well with the supervising minister, the former MD said: ‘I have met with the president and he told me he had no problem with me. I have done that more than three times.’ You can imagine our feelings when our worst fear was confirmed on Friday night.

    “None of us was in the picture, not even the aides of the minister. We were all shocked because the former GMD did so much to put the refineries in good shape. He was also too loyal to the Minister of Petroleum Resources.”

    The source said: “Instability is gradually creeping into NNPC, we are losing good hands to incessant sack. The development has created fears in all of us.”

     

     

     

     

  • Jonathan sacks NNPC chief Andrew Yakubu

    Jonathan sacks NNPC chief Andrew Yakubu

    President Goodluck Jonathan has replaced the top four executives at Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation, his office said on Saturday, intervening in one of the country’s most powerful institutions and the source of 80 percent of government revenues.

    Reuters reports that Joseph Thlama Dawha replaces Andrew Yakubu as NNPC group managing director.

    Dawha previously held another executive role within the company.

    Anthony Muoneke, a career lawyer, took up management at the Nigerian Petroleum Development Company (NPDC), the corporation’s development arm

    While Aisha Mata Abdurrahman is the new group executive director of commercial and investment.

    Attahir Yusuf takes over as group executive director of business development.

    The President’s media aide, Dr. Reuben Abati, said the change was routine, declining to give further details.

    Jonathan has come under intense pressure to clean up the country’s oil and gas sector after a public outcry over corruption and waste of the country’s vast energy wealth.

    There was similar pressure at the time of the previous NNPC management change in June 2012, however, and critics say little has changed since.

  • NNPC orders upward  review of its quiz prizes

    NNPC orders upward review of its quiz prizes

    •Imo wins competition

    The Group Managing Director of the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC), Mr Andrew Yakubu, has said since there has been an increase in the cost of education, the corporation would begin an upward review of the prizes for the winners of its annual national quiz competition.

    Students from Imo State won the first position with 155 points in English language, Biology, Chemistry, Mathematics and Physics.

    The event was held at the NNPC Towers in Abuja.

    Ogun State won the second position; Akwa Ibom State, third; the Federal Capital Territory (FCT), fourth; Taraba State, fifth and Kaduna, sixth.

    Yakubu said the corporation was giving automatic undergraduate scholarship to the winners.

    He said: “As usual, those who have distinguished themselves in this year’s competition will be offered undergraduate scholarship; others (will get) consolation prizes. My attention has been drawn to the amount involved in the scholarship package.

    “I have, therefore, identified the fact that the package is not adequate. I have directed, accordingly, for an upward review of the package. This will start from this year.”

    The NNPC chief urged the students to work hard and make excellence their watchword.

    Yakubu said the first star winner of the 2001 edition, Sunday John Aliyu, had become a Project Engineer at the Engina Project in Lagos.

    According to him, the Engina Project is a $15 billion project.

    He said the competition had spurred the interest of many students in the sciences.

    The Group General Manager in the Group Public Affairs Division, Dr. Ohi Alegbe, explained that this year’s quiz was the 13th.

    He said the competition had been generating keen interest among participating states.

    Alegbe explained that as a responsible corporate citizen, the competition is among several ways the NNPC was touching the lives of Nigerians in line with its popular slogan: “We touch your lives in many positive ways.”

    The spokesman also said the corporation had strived hard to positively affect the lives of many, especially the host communities spread across the country.

    On the essence of the competition, Alegbe said it is aimed at supporting the massive Federal Government’s campaigns to raise the standard of education.

    The competition, he said, is also aimed at stimulating the interest of the youth in the sciences and spurring schools to improve their teaching and learning processes.

     

  • N10b jet scandal: Diezani, NNPC GMD in cold war

    N10b jet scandal: Diezani, NNPC GMD in cold war

    • Presidency saves Andrew Yakubu’s job
    •Minister may sack two aides
    •N1.5b debt still owed on aircraft expenses

    Controversies over claims that Minister of Petroleum Resources, Mrs. Diezani Alison-Madueke, blew a whooping N10 billion on a chartered jet provided by the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) appear to be spiraling out of control with the topmost figures managing the nation’s oil industry at each other’s throat.

    Disturbed by leakage of information on alleged N10 billion expended on the chartered jet, Mrs. Alison-Madueke is poised to sack two of her Special Assistants. The aides on the firing line were after being linked with the leakage of information on the chartered jet.

    The Minister has also vented her anger at a former Minister, who was recently sacked from the cabinet and some top officials of the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) over the leaks and the management of the fallout.

    A source within the ministry said: “There was disquiet in the Minister’s office on Wednesday when some aides were threatened with sack by the Minister. In fact, one of the affected assistants is in charge of a sensitive unit.

    “But at the close of work on Thursday, I saw the affected aides in office. No one was sure whether they came to clear their desks or someone from the top has acceded on their behalf. The true picture will emerge on Tuesday when we resume work.”

    The development has resulted in a cold war between pitching the Petroleum Minister against the Group Managing Director of NNPC, Andrew Yakubu.

    But for the intervention of the presidency which feared it would lose the support of the people of Southern Kaduna for President Goodluck Jonathan’s second term bid in 2015, Yakubu was set to be ousted from his position last week.

    The President is banking on Northern minorities and Christians to win his re-election bid against the backdrop of perceived hostility of the Hausa-Fulani oligarchy in the North against his ambition.

    In spite of the intrigues, the House of Representatives has drawn a battle line over its intention to proceed with the probe of the alleged scandal on April 28.

    The House of Representatives Committee on Public Accounts already has in its possession documents including the movement log of Challenger 850 jet in question.

    Investigations by our correspondent revealed that the chartered jet scandal has caused considerable disquiet in the presidency leading to a major split in the seat of power.

    While some forces are supporting the minister to confront the House Committee by challenging its powers to investigate in court, some friends and associates of the President Goodluck Jonathan are pleading with him to allow the minister bear her cross.

    It was, however, learnt that the division has put the minister in a difficult position leading to a desperate moves to reorganise her office and deployment of propaganda by her supporters through the organization of a pocket of pro-Diezani rallies in Abuja.

    A top source said: “The chartered jet allegation has put the presidency under undue pressure on whether the Minister should face the probe or not. Although some forces believe that the presidency should live up to its avowed commitment to the fight against corruption, others feel the House should be checked following suspicion that it is using the investigation to undermine the presidency.

    “This explains why some people in the presidency are backing Diezani to go to court to obtain injunction to restrain the House Committee on Public Accounts. There is a plan to hang on to legal technicalities to stall the probe.

    “Despite plans to frustrate the probe, all is not well in Diezani’s office on how the leakage came about leading to threats to sack two Special Assistants to the Minister during the week. She was said to be uncomfortable with the roles of the SAs on her travel logs with the jet.

    “There is so much anger everywhere from the Minister because she has never been under heat like in the past few weeks. During the week, the blame game continued culminating in a cold war between the Minister and some NNPC officials. It got to a stage when she was almost sacking the Group Managing Director of NNPC, Andrew Yakubu.

    “A major source of the war borders on the alleged refusal of the NNPC to pay the outstanding N1.56billion debt on the Challenger 850 jet.

    “About 500,000 Euros (aboutN130 million) was paid monthly to hire the jet. The company managing the lease of the aircraft is being owed for 12 months which amounted to about N1.56 billion. The NNPC management was said to be reluctant to pay the debt.

    “It is also suspected that some NNPC officials might have contributed to the leakage of information on the chartered jet causing some friction between the Minister and the GMD.

    “Also, the GMD was said to be unhappy at being sidelined in decision-making process by the Minister. If she had her way, the GMD would have gone by now.”

    It was, however, feared that Yakubu’s sack might trigger political backlash and that “the President would lose the sympathy of Northern minorities who are mostly in the North-Central and some parts of the North-East. The President might lose the support of Northern minority, especially the people of Southern Kaduna, who have been complaining of marginalisation.”

    Responding to a question, the source said: “Concerning the GMD’s fate, I am aware that he was in London for a greater part of the week for a meeting of the NLNG. Whatever happened must have been at the top.”

    Meanwhile, as the House Committee prepares for its inquiry, more documents and fact-sheets on the chartered Challenger jet have been submitted by firms and individuals connected with the transactions.

    One source on the committee said: “We are set for the inquiry although the Minister has refused to respond to queries from the committee. Instead, there was a plot to distract the House by casting aspersions on Speaker Aminu Tambuwal.

    “We will not join issues with anybody or group on this probe. Rather, we will ensure that we are fair and objective as possible to the Minister and whoever may appear before us.

    “So far, we have got relevant information to set the stage for our probe. The Minister appears indisposed to our summons, we will go ahead. No amount of propaganda by media consultants can stop us.

    “The House of Representatives Committee on Public Accounts is already in possession of the manifest of the Minister’s trips. We have also received a fact-sheet indicating that the aircraft lease firm, Vista Jet is being owed N1.56 billion for 12 months at 500,000 Euros (aboutN130 million) per month.

    “We now have response from Evergreen, which has provided records of the movement of the jet in question. They, however, did not include the manifest. We understand that they are claiming that officially the other agencies in the aviation sector are to provide manifests for the House Committee.”

  • Oil sector fraud …Many unanswered questions

    Oil sector fraud …Many unanswered questions

    The Senate Committee on Finance, probing the alleged mismanagement of oil proceeds, will reconvene on Thursday. Eric Ikhilae, in this report, observes that rather than help resolve knotty issues thrown up so far, the legal opinion given the committee by the Attorney General of the Federation (AGF), Mohammed Adoke (SAN), has raised more questions for which the senators now seek answers.

    Suspended Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) Governor Lamido Sanusi jolted all when he alerted the nation to the practice by the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) of withholding part of its earnings. He said the NNPC has failed to remit an estimated $20billion into the Federation Account.

    The disclosure by Sanusi caused the Senate, through its Committee on Finance, headed by former Kaduna State Governor, Senator Ahmed Makarfi to open investigation into the management of the nation’s oil affairs.

    Since it commenced sitting, the committee has taken submissions from key players in the nation’s oil, revenue management and legal sectors. The first set of invitees included the Coordinating Minister of the Economy and Finance Minister, Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala, Petroleum Minister, Mrs Diezani Alison-Madueke and the Group Managing Director of the NNPC, Andrew Yakubu.

    Mrs Alison-Madueke and Yakubu, in the course of their presentations, raised some issues. Yakubu stated that part of the funds Sanusi accused NNPC of withholding had actually been expended on operational expenses, including the payment of some billions of US Dollars to some unnamed oil firms in kerosene subsidy claims.

    He also claimed that NNPC paid $6billion to one of its subsidiaries – the Nigerian Petroleum Development Company (NPDC) – to defray its operational expenses.

    Mrs Alison-Madueke, in attempting to rationalise her ministry’s position on the issue, justified the continued payment of subsidy on kerosene after a presidential directive in 2009 halting such payment.

    She argued that an inter-ministerial committee elected to continue with the kerosene subsidy payment, even without the National Assembly’s approval, because the presidential directive was not gazetted.

    Unsure of the position of the law in relation to issues raised by Alison-Madueke, Yakubu and others, the Makarfi committee sought the opinion of the Attorney General of the Federation (AGF), Mohammed Adoke (SAN).

    During his appearance on February 20, Adoke read a prepared speech, in which he addressed only two out of the three issues he formulated. When Adoke exited the committee’s sitting venue, with a promise to return at a later date, everyone, including the committee’s members were not better educated. In fact, they became more curious.

    This may have resulted from Adoke’s unsatisfactory resolution of the three issues he formulated and those for which the committee had sought his expert opinion, which the committee’s members described as key to their investigation.

    The legitimacy of Adoke’s position, as queried by former Minister of Finance, Senator Nenadi Usman (a member of the committee) and the outright denial by NPDC’s Managing Director, Iyowuna Briggs that his company did not receive $6b from NNPC, contributed to people’s heightened hunger for explanations from those managing the nation’s oil affairs.

    It was part of Adoke’s opinion that NNPC could legitimately transfer its participating interest in OMLs to its wholly owned subsidiary, and in this case, the NPDC.

    He relied on the provisions of Paragraph 14 to 16 of the First Schedule to the Petroleum Act Cap P10 LFN 2004 (NNPC Act) and Regulation 4 of the Oil Drilling and Regulation 1969 (as amended), Section 6(1)(c)of the NNPC Act, Article 19(2) of a Joint Operating Agreement, otherwise known as Shell/NNPC JOA and Article 2 Para 6 (1) of the JOA to support his position.

    The second issue was whether all revenue derived by NNPC from its upstream petroleum operations, including all those under which the OMLs in the Joint Ventures operated by its subsidiaries fall under, are payable to the Federation Account (FA) under Section 162 of the Constitution’.

    Adoke’s view on the issue was that it was only the net revenue that should be paid into the FA. He said what NNPC is required to pay into the FA is the net revenue as opposed to the gross revenue.

    In supporting his position, Adoke relied on the provision of Section 7(4) of the NNPC Act, which he said complements Section 162(10)(C) of the Constitution. He also cited the Supreme Court decision in the case of AG, Ogun State vs AGF 2002 18 NWLR part 798 page 232 at 284.

    Section 162 (10) provides that:

    “ For the purposes of subsection (1) of this section, “revenue” means any income or return accruing to or derived by the Government of the Federation from any source and includes- (a) any receipt, however described, arising from the operation of any law; (b) any return, however described, arising from or in respect of any property held by the Government of the Federation; (c) any return by way of interest on loans and dividends in respect of shares or interest held by the Government of the Federation in any company or statutory body”.

    While Section 7(4)(b) of the NNPC) Act provides that “such monies as may be received by the Corporation in the course of its operations or in relation to the exercise by the Corporation of any of its functions under this Act, and from such fund there shall be defrayed all expenses incurred by the Corporation”.

    Adoke said he could not immediately provide response to the third issue about whether due process was followed by the NPDC in engaging strategic partners for the funding and operations of the oil blocks assigned to it by the NNPC.

    The AGF, who promised to return back to address the issue, explained the relevant agencies delayed in providing him with necessary documents to enable him address the issue.

    When asked by former Special Assistant to the President, Senator Andy Ubah whether Section 7(4) of the Act did not conflict with Section 162 (10)( C ) of the Constitution, the AGF said “it does not conflict with the constitutional provision. In fact, it complements it.”

    Another member, Senator Isah Galaudu (Kebbi) observed that the AGF did not address the issues on which the committee sought his opinion, but rather, raised three issues on his own, from among which he answered two.

    He said the AGF addressed the second issue, relating to what the NNPC is required to pay into the FA, without any foundation. This, Galaudu said, was because the resolution of issue two is dependent on the proper resolution of issue three, which the AGF sought time to address.

    Galaudu said “if we do not resolve the issue of due process in the engagement of strategic partners, the issue of distributing revenue does not arise. I think we need to answer question three before you can know the answer to question two.”

    He said the most important legal opinion the committee needs from the AGF is in respect of an issue raised in page 14 of the committee’s letter to the AGF, where it was indicated that about $7b worth of crude was shipped by NPDC.

    Another member, Ayo Akinyelure (Ondo) sought to know from the AGF, the definition of net revenue. He asked if there was any clear definition of allowable expenses deductible from the gross revenue specified in the NNPC Act.

    He said the definition should be in figures so that the component of the net revenue due to be remitted into the FA out of the N6b is spelt out. He said the committee is only concerned about the true position of things.

    Reacting, the AGF said the issues raised by Galaudu were not contained in the letter sent to him by the committee. Adoke said he distilled the issues he addressed from the information contained in the letter he received.

    Makarfi, who immediately directed that the missing part of the letter be given to him, said the committee was actually interested in hearing from the AGF, what portion of the money NNPC claimed to have paid to NPDC ought to be remitted into the FA.

    He said although issues two and three were related, they are distinct. “One is that, if you have a property worth 1billion, if you sell it for 100m, you cannot begin to talk of how much you lost because you sold it at 100m. You can talk of, maybe how stupid you were, because you were the one that sold it for 100m.

    “But where public property is concerned, the issue of whether due diligence was exercised in assigning or transferring the public property in such a way and manner that the revenue that should accrue to government was just and fair revenue should be ascertained.

    “The summary, the Attorney General, is that the pages we have quoted will be given to you once again. You will combine those pages we have quoted with the outstanding issue, which is central; because the issue of due process is central to this issue. That is where, possible loss of revenue can be established. “ Makarfi said.

    The NPDC MD also provided a puzzling dimension to the investigation, when during his appearance on February 20 he denied receiving $6b from NNPC, but that his company only received money from the NNPC to fund its budget.

    “Giving its funding relationship with its parent company, the NNPC, NPDC will like to confirm that it received funds from NNPC to cover its capital and operating expenditure, as approved by NNPC for the NNPC funded assets during the period under review ( that is, Jan 2012 to July 2013),” Briggs said.

    When asked by Makarfi, how much NPDC received out of the $6b, which NNPC claimed to have paid to it, Briggs said “we did not, in NPDC account, receive $6b. Like I stated in the letter, from the account managed by NNPC, royalty and taxes are paid. We receive funds that are required to fund the budget. A specific amount of that I can provide.” He promised to provide that at a later date.

    At that point, Mrs Usman drew members’ attention to page six of the AGF’s presentation and observed that by the AGF’s opinion, NPDC is required to pay only the net profit, which is the dividend, to the NNPC for onward remittance to the FA. She noted that this opinion by the AGF is at variance with the position of the NPDC boss.

    She observed that the NPDC boss, in his presentation, said his company is not expected to pay anything to the NNPC, and that all the funds given to the NPDC, was to fund its budget, an observation Briggs confirmed, represented his position.

    Mrs Usman then concluded that “it means even this legal opinion (by the AGF) is wrong then.”

    Bothered by Briggs’ denial, another member, Adamu Gomba (Bauchi) asked the NNPC boss – Yakubu, whether he was comfortable that the NPDC MD denied receiving any $6b from NNPC, a query Yakubu promised to address later.

    Yakubu said he will address the issue along with other questions regarding how the NNPC relates with its subsidiaries and manage their funds when next he appears before the committee.

    While everyone expects more revelations as the committee reconvenes on March 6, The Nation sought the views of some lawyers on the legitimacy of the positions of the AGF and the Minister of Petroleum.

    Dr. Abubakar Uthman and Adetokunbo Mumuni faulted the position of the AGF that NNPC was only required to pay into the FA, its net revenue. Also, Johnson Daramola and Anthony Nwanchukwu faulted Alison-Madueke’s position that it was right for her ministry to have overridden the presidential directive on kerosene subsidy.

    Uthman argued that there is nothing in Section 7 (4) of the NNPC Act that confers the power on the NNPC to refuse to pay into the FA, monies realised from the sale of crude, on the excuse that it must first, defray expenses it incurred in the course of running of its affairs.

    He further argued that Section 7 (4) of the NNPC Act cannot override Section 162 (1) of the Constitution, which is the basic law of the country. Uthman argued that by virtue of it being the grundnorm, the Constitution is the highest statute in the hierarchy of legislations in the country, which could give validity and efficacy to the NNPC Act.

    “In other words the NNPC Act is an inferior legislation to the Constitution because it derives its validity from the Constitution. It goes without saying that where the provisions of an inferior legislation, such as the NNPC Act, conflicts with the Constitution, it (the inferior legislation) must yield ground for the superiority of the Constitution.

    “I am, therefore, surprised that the learned AGF would take umbrage under the provisions of Section 7 (4) of the NNPC Act to justify the failure of the NNPC to account for an humongous sum of $ 20 billion.

    “It follows that revenue derives by the NNPC from the sales of crude oil amounts to any income or return accruing to or derived by the Government of the Federation from any source as contemplated by Section 162 (10) (a) (b) & (c) of the Constitution.

    “Where the words used in a statute are clear and unambiguous, they must be given their ordinary and natural meaning otherwise it will lead to absurdity.

    From the provision of the Constitution, revenue from the sale of crude does not fall within the exception provided by Section 162 (1) of the Constitution and so, the NNPC is obligated to remit revenue realised from the sale of crude into the FA,” he said.

    Uthman also faulted Adoke’s reliance on the case of the AG Ogun vs AGF (2002) 18 N. W.L. R (Part 798) 232 @ 284 on the ground that the facts of that case and the case under review are not the same.

    He said in the AG, Ogun case, the plaintiff had sought the payment of proceeds of privatization of public enterprises, capital gains tax and stamp duties into the FA, and an order that the payment of Local Government Allocation directly to the Local Government and charge of Federal Government debt to the FA is unconstitutional.

    The lawyer noted that in the case, the issue is whether the NNPC was right to have refused to remit the $20 billion realised as revenue from the sale of crude oil into the FA. “Thus the case of the AG, Ogun vs AGF cannot be the authority for the failure of the NNPC to remit revenue collected by it from the sale of crude oil as canvassed by the AGF.

    Mumuni argued that the advice by the AGF “is patently inconsistent with the letter and spirit of Section 162 of the Constitution, which is to establish a dedicated account into which all public revenue by the Federal Government shall be paid, as well as to remove any arbitrary and non-transparent and non-accountable spending of public revenue.

    “Assuming, for the sake of argument, that the NNPC is required to pay into the FA only the ‘net revenue’ and not the ‘gross revenue’ as Mr. Adoke has argued, this will still not remove the fact that the NNPC is a trustee of the public revenue collected.

    Therefore, as a trustee, the NNPC has a legal duty to render account to the beneficiaries (Nigerians) of the trust, if and when called upon to do so. We believe that the NNPC has woefully failed to discharge this sacred responsibility.

    “Unfortunately, the impression created by the legal advice by the AGF is that the NNPC is not obligated to render account. This is clearly inconsistent with the attitude of a government that has repeatedly expressed commitment to fight corruption, and in fact signed the Freedom of Information (FoI) Act,” Mumuni said.

    On the whether the Petroleum Minister was right to have ignored a subsisting presidential directive, Daramola argued that it was unlawful for a minister to override presidential directive just because it was not gazetted.

    “A presidential directive remains a directive whether gazetted or not. I think those, who advise these government officials always end up misdirecting them,” Daramola said.

    In similar vein, Nwachukwu faulted the Petroleum Minister’s position and argued that it was wrong under the law, for her to claim that she was a party to the disobedience of a presidential directive on the ground that it was not gazetted.