Tag: billions

  • A former oil minister and her billions

    A former oil minister and her billions

    IF the funds traced to Mrs. Diezani Alison-Madueke by local and international anti-graft agencies had been earned from legitimate sources, she would have made Forbes’ Billonaire List as one of the richest African

    Several billions (in local and foreign currencies) have been traced to Mrs. Alison-Madueke, who held the forte as Petroleum Resources Minister between 2011 and 2015.

    According to the Forbes’ latest Billionaire List, the President and Chief Executive of Dangote Group, Aliko Dangote, is the richest African with a net worth of $12.2 billion. This is far cry from the.

    As at August last year, the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) confirmed tracing at least N47.2 billion and $487.5 million in cash and properties to the former oil minister, who relocated to London since 2015, following the loss of the presidential election by her Peoples Democratic Party (PDP).

    In November last year, a London estate agent who appeared on the BBC’s “Homes under the Hammer” was named in an investigation into alleged corruption by a former Nigerian oil minister known as ‘The Madam’.

    Court documents filed in the United States (U.S) alleged King’s Cross estate agency, Daniel Ford, helped to buy millions of pounds worth of properties for the embattled former minister in London.

    She’s been accused of diverting state funds, awarding multi-billion naira contracts without regard for due process, as well as recklessly spending government funds.

    On January 6, 2017, a Federal High Court sitting in Lagos ruled that a certain $153.3 million, allegedly stolen by the former, be forfeited to the Federal Government.

    According to documents filed by the EFCC in court, four local banks aided her in siphoning the money from the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC).

    The anti-graft agency has been able to chase down the sums of N23.4 billion, $5 million and another N9.08 billion out of the $153.3 million.

    Also on August 9 last year, a Federal High Court in Lagos, ordered the interim forfeiture of N7, 646,700,000, believed to have been part of the loot stashed away in a local bank.

    She was said to have received $1.7 billion from two of her associates between 2011 and 2015 in exchange for billion dollar contracts, to lift oil, getting awarded to shell companies owned by the ‘business partners’.

    The men allegedly laundered billions of dollars accruing from Nigeria’s crude through shell companies into the U.S. and Europe.

    The kickbacks were allegedly used by both men to purchase properties worth millions of dollars for Alison-Madueke.

    They reportedly conspired to buy properties at Flat 5 Park View, 83-86 Prince Albert Road, London NW8 7RU (“Flat 5 Park View”) for £3,750,000; 58 Harley House, Marylebone Road, London NW1 5HL (“58 Harley House”) for £2,800,000; 9 Chester Close North, London NW1 4JE (“39 Chester Close North”) for £1,730,000 and £11,530,000 worth of London real estate for the benefit of Mrs. Alison-Madueke.

    The U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ) has been seeking to recover $144 million in assets from the loot.

    According to U.S. authorities, the former minister lavished millions of her illicit wealth on landed properties, furniture and artworks.

    In March last year, the EFCC amended a five-count charge, and joined Mrs. Alison-Madueke as an accused person in a N450 million money laundering suit involving Mohammed Belgore (SAN) and Abubakar  Sulaiman, a former Minister of National Planning.

    A prosecution witness, Timothy Olaobaju, told the court that sometime in April 2014, about $115 million was lodged into the account of Mrs. Alison-Madueke.

    Though she was cleared by a Senate committee, allegations that she diverted around $20 million of revenues from the NNPC while she was minister, continued to linger.

    The erstwhile Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) Governor, Emir of Kano,  Muhammad Lamido, had in 2014, alleged that the money was diverted under the supervision of Mrs. Alison-Madueke.

    An audit report by PricewaterhouseCoopers on the alleged missing $20 billion oil money established that the gap between the NNPC’s oil revenues between January 2012 and July 2013 and cash remitted to the government for the same period was $18.5 billion.

    The former administration of Dr. Goodluck Jonathan never admitted that such fund was missing, it admited that it could not account for an outstanding $10.8 billion, which it later claimed formed part of subsidy payment for petrol and kerosene, and maintenance for oil pipeline.

  • How ex-Naval chiefs transferred billions into private accounts, by EFCC witness

    How ex-Naval chiefs transferred billions into private accounts, by EFCC witness

    A Federal High Court sitting in Lagos heard yesterday how a former Chief of Air Staff (CAS), Air Marshal Adesola Amosu, allegedly set up a diagnostic centre with funds allegedly belonging to the Nigeria Air Force (NAF).

    It was at the resumed trial during which an Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) investigator, Tosin Owobo, testified before Justice Mohammed Idris of the Federal High Court.

    He was testifying in the trial of Air Marshal Amosu and former NAF Chief of Accounts and Budgeting, Air Vice Marshal Jacob Adigun and a former Director of Finance and Budget, Air Commodore Olugbenga Gbadebo.

    The anti-graft agency accused them of converting N21 billion from NAF through various companies, namely Delfina Oil and Gas Ltd, Mcallan Oil And Gas Ltd, Hebron Housing and Properties Company Ltd, Trapezites BDC, Fonds and Pricey Ltd, Deegee Oil and Gas Ltd, Timsegg Investment Ltd and Solomon Health Care Ltd.

    Led in evidence by prosecution counsel Rotimi Oyedepo, Owobo said his team’s investigation discovered an account owned by Amosu and his wife in the United Bank for Africa (UBA) in the name of Solomon Health Care.

    He said: “We discovered that it is a hospital and diagnostic centre located in Ikeja owned and operated by Amosu and his wife. Our team also visited the premises at 24, Adeniyi Jones, Ikeja in Ikeja when they just started operations.

    “Some equipment were just being installed by General Electric such as MRI scanners, X-Ray Machines and other sophisticated medical equipment”, he said.

    Owobo, who had earlier testified that Amosu transferred N677 million from NAF to Delfina Oil and Gas and others between March 2014 and April 2015, said Solomon Health Care was funded with money transferred from Delfina Oil and Gas and others.

    He said that on January 16, 2015, N145 million was transferred from Delfina Oil and Gas to Solomon Health Care.

    On January 20, 2015, the sum of N45 million was transferred to Solomon Health Care, while over N93 million was transferred to the diagnostic company from Trapezites BDC (Bureau de Change) on January 30, 2015.

    The witness said that another N106 million was also transferred on to Solomon Health Care from Trapezites BDC on the same day.

    Other amounts transferred to Solomon Health Care, he said, were N55 million (April 17, 2015); N55 million (May 6 2015) from Mcallan Oil and Gas; N78 million (June 1, 2015) and N81 million (June 1, 2015) from the same company.

    He said the balance in Solomon Health Care’s account as at April 39, 2015 was N360, 640,636.25.

    Owobo said the EFCC also had cause to investigate Timsegg Investment, which he said had Gbadebo as director.

    The investigator said: “The accounts of Timsegg Investment received direct transfers from from NAF accounts. Timsegg had accounts with UBA and FCMB. We wrote the banks, and we analysed their responses and made further discoveries.”

    Owobo claimed that Gbadebo transferred N12 million from NAF Airmen Subsidy Account to Timsegg; N25 million from NAF Airport Operation Account and N20 million from NAF account on June 4, 2014.

    According to him, N10 million was transferred on July 4, 2014; N24 million (July 30, 2014); N10 million (August 29, 2014); N29 million (October 8, 2014) from NAF Jet Account and N24 million and N65million (October 8, 2014).

    Others are: N14 million from NAF Operations account on October 31, 2014; N15 million (December 2, 2014) from NAF Jet Account; N20 million (May 5, 2015) from NAF Operations Account; N19 million (May 27, 2015) from NAF account and N19 million (July 3, 2015) from NAF Operations Account.

    The funds, according to the witness, were all transferred to Timsegg’s account.

    “We discovered that most of the funds were being fixed on term basis. Upon expiration, cash withdrawals were made by Gbadebo. The funds were paid to him as his share from NAF and were for his personal use”, he said.

    Owobo said a property on 40A Bourdillion Road, Ikoyi, was discovered to belong to Adigun, the second defendant, which he said was acquired with money from Delfina Oil and Gas.

    Justice Idris will rule today on an application by Oyedepo to visit some of the property allegedly acquired by the defendants which cannot be brought to court as exhibit.

    “I humbly apply for my Lord to visit the locus for the purpose of admissibility of the properties mentioned in the charges, especially those within jurisdiction”, Oyedepo prayed.

    But, defence counsel Bolaji Ayorinde (SAN) opposed the application on the basis that there was no basis for it.

    Justice Idris adjourned until today for ruling.

  • Beyond the drama of recovered billions

    Left alone to face his own demons, ex-President Jonathan has gone through severe stress and stains in the past two years. He has had to account for the monumental looting of our national resources during his presidency. Some of our stolen funds, according to EFCC, have been traced to his aides, trusted ministers, governors and even his immediate family members. This development seems to have overshadowed his act of statesmanship in conceding defeat after the 2015 General Election despite Elder Orubebe and other PDP stalwarts’ resolve to pull the edifice down over their heads rather than allow power they had sworn to hold for 60 years slip away. If we forgot Jonathan’s huge sacrifice because of his current travails, some of his sympathisers have reminded us. First was Bishop Matthew Kukah of Sokoto Catholic Archdiocese who reminded us that the nation owes Jonathan some respect for conceding defeat instead of behaving like his other African leaders who would rather turn their nations into a killing field than relinquish power after losing election. A few days ago, Col, Umar Kangiwa, former military governor of Kaduna State who along with embattled. Col. Sambo Dasuki sold Buhari to slippery Babangida during the night of long knives in 1985 also reminded us of Jonathan graceful exit.

    However, majority of Nigerians hold Jonathan responsible for the level of debauchery that took place during his presidency. First it was the $2.2b arms funds said to have been ferried in boxes under the watchful eyes of the current CBN governor, brought in to replace cantankerous and stiff Lamido Sanusi who had just then raised an alarm about missing $20b from NNPC account to the office of Dasuki, Jonathan’s National Security Adviser.

    The Socio-Economic Rights and Accountability Project, SERAP, has since asked Jonathan to explain to Nigerians what he “knew or had reason to know on the apparent diversion and sharing of over $2 billion meant for purchase of arms to fight Boko Haram.”.There was Diezani Alison-Madueke, his minister of petroleum who according to EFCC invested huge sums of money she allegedly pilfered from NNPC on properties in and outside Nigeria.  His closest confidants including t Babangida Aliu, the self-styled chief servant of Niger State that was dragged to court by EFCC two days ago over an alleged theft of N3billion are in various courts trying to defend their honour. Before then, huge sum of funds had been traced to Jonathan’s wife, cousin and other relatives.   Some N1b, $2m and 4m pounds suspected to be stolen funds were seized by EFCC between Buhari’s inauguration in May 2015 and Dec 2016. Following the introduction of government’s whistle blowing  policy, the haulage has been in droves with about  N145 b, $217m  and 2m pounds  raked in between December 2016 and April this year according to SB  Morgen Intelligence.

    But shoeless, ex-President Jonathan, in spite of the haulage of these huge sums of loose is funds is just a symptom of our problem. The rain started beating us long before he became President. All Jonathan, who admitted he was caged by PDP all through his presidency did, was to build on the legacies of his predecessors beginning with General Babangida, the man he described as his ‘father’ and General Obasanjo who he once described as the third greatest influence on his life after God and his biological father. These two leaders should be held responsible for our current nightmare. They presided over systematic sales of our national assets and sharing of a national patrimony, handed over to Balewa, Zik and Awo by the departing colonial masters which they in turn preserved for our children.

    Our nightmare started with IBB who along with his military prefects sold off many of our once viable companies covering hospitality, pharmaceutical beverages and other industries to themselves and their fronts sometimes at less than the cost of land on which they were built. Obasanjo and Atiku under the ill-managed privatization exercise sold off what IBB could not sell off before he was forced by Nigerians and civil society to step aside after he had annulled the most credible election in our nation’s history.  El Rufai, current governor of Kaduna State who presided over BPE at the period , is on record as having told a House of Representatives probe that  what the nation recouped from an investment of over $100b was just a little over $1.5b.

    President Jonathan was programmed by those who imposed him on the nation to continue with the legacies of his predecessors. Unfortunately there was little left to sell or share by the time he got into office. Tormented and harassed by those he claimed caged him, he came up with his crooked, logic that ‘stealing of government funds is not corruption’.  From then on, Jonathan was unrestrained. The huge earnings from the oil sector which dwarfed the total accruable to the nation between 1999 and 2010 ended up in the pockets of politicians and their fronts. Jonathan did not forget his family members. Only this week, it was revealed that the sum of $43.4million haul made from the Osborne Towers, Ikoyi, was part of the $289 million allegedly withdrawn from the National Petroleum Investment Management Services (NAPIMS) Company’s accounts then headed by Jonathan’s kinsman.

    While aggrieved Nigerians most of whom live below $2 a day have the luxury of engaging in the drama about alleged stolen billions traced to peoples’ homes, abandoned at airports or bureau de changes offices, or buried in cemeteries, Buhari and his APC were given a mandate to resolve our economic crisis and our crisis of nationhood through politics and not through the judiciary which we all know has remained the scourge of the nation since independence.

    And here, no one is asking Buhari and APC to invent the wheel. Faced with similar crisis a few years ago, Russia under Putin chose politics over judiciary. Like many other nations did before him, he refused to engage in a battle with the enemies of his nation who subscribed to the rule of the jungle, using rule of law. He was however fair to those who had turned Russia into a candidate for western aids. Those who shared Russian national patrimony through dubious privatisation programme under drunken Yeltsin and who had failed to keep to the terms of sales were forced to cede the confiscated assets to the state. We have more than enough evidence that our nation was short-changed during the ill-implemented privatization programme. We know many of the new investors embarked on asset stripping while some others have gone ahead to sell the confiscated national assets to foreigners. These are some of the reasons why our graduates roam the street while we import the labour of other societies in form of fake products including drugs. Recovered billions can change this narrative.

    Those who brought our nation to its knees did so by exploiting political power. This was why we gave President Buhari and his APC political power to resolve our economic crisis and our crisis of nationhood through restructuring. They have spent two years unable to appreciate the value of political power at their disposal. In less than two years, they will have to face the electorate to account for their stewardship. Drama about recovered billions will be an appendix.

  • Amnesty Office’s hanging billions

    Amnesty Office’s hanging billions

    he Presidential Amnesty Programme, a brain child of the late President Umaru Musa Yar’Adua, brought peace to the Niger Delta at a time when the region was becoming an embarrassment to the country at home and abroad. Revenue dwindled. Bombs went off like fireworks at oil installations.

    The first thing he did was to have the Niger Delta Ministry. First, he created the Ministry of the Niger Delta. He later followed up with a technical committee to review existing reports on the region. The committee, headed by an ex-President of the Movement for the Survival of the Ogoni People (MOSOP), Ledum Mittee, recommended an increase of the derivation fund from 13 to 25 per cent. It also recommended open trial for one of the faces of the arms struggle, Mr Henry Okah, who was then in detention in Angola. Another of its recommendation, which led to the Presidential Amnesty Programme, is that youths in the region must be disarmed through a credible Decommissioning, Disarmament and Rehabilitation (DDR) process.

    The late Yar’Adua knew something urgent must be done to rescue the situation. Aside his love for peace, he also needed to save the country from international embarrassment the arms struggle had become. By then, there were reports of militants partaking in piracy activities on the Gulf of Guinea, a development which had seen the governments of Equatorial Guinea and Angola complaining to Yar’Adua at international meetings. Okah, I was told, was mentioned by the two governments as being responsible for the piracy activities against their countries. Okah was a leader of the Movement for the Emancipation of the Niger Delta (MEND), which had claimed responsibility for many of the kidnappings and the attacks on oil facilities in the region.

    Fast forward to April 2009, the then president dissolved the board of the NNDC. Timi Alaibe, who was the Managing Director, however, got another job. He was appointed Special Adviser on Niger Delta Affairs. His major job, it turned out, was to midwife the birth of the Presidential Amnesty Programme.

    Two months after Alaibe’s appointment, Yar’Adua breathed life into it. The late Yar’Adua recruited Chief Tony Anenih, Dr Koripamo Agary and Dr Ferdinand Ikwang, among others, to assure the agitators he was truthful about not victimising them after dropping their guns.

    Alaibe traversed the creeks persuading hard-line militant leaders to embrace the programme. He did not do it alone. He got Kingsley Kuku, the Arogbo-born ex-member of the Ondo State House of Assembly, who had worked with him as Special Assistant at the NNDC, to get Government Ekpemupolo (Tompolo), General Shoot-at-sight and many other leaders of the arms’ struggle to sign up to Yar’Adua’s offer.

    Okah, who had by then been repatriated from Angola and was standing trial for treason at the Federal High Court, Jos, was a major issue in the refusal of many militant leaders to accept the programme. But, because Yar’Adua wanted the programme to live, he agreed to drop charges against Okah and on July 13, 2009, Okah became a free man. Okah’s release did not go down with many in the military circle and elsewhere. It did not convince some militant leaders to embrace the programme until hours before the October 4, 2009 deadline.

    Between June 25 and October 4, 2009, I am told 20,192 militants embraced the programme by handing over arms in excess of 20,000. Others who did not hand over their weapons initially because of the fear of the unknown did before the deadline expired. Even after the deadline’s expiration, 6,166 more people, I understand, associated with it.

    Alaibe, who took on the task of managing the programme as the Chairman of the Presidential Amnesty Programme, left to contest the 2011 governorship in Bayelsa State.  Yar’Adua’s successor, Dr. Goodluck Jonathan, saw no one else to continue other than Kuku, the man from the fringe of the Niger Delta, who had worked closely with Alaibe.

    Through the programme, over 30,000 ex-militants have been given a new lease of life. Through it also, not less than 2,000 students are abroad studying for one degree or the other. One of them is 21-year-old Gabriel Odidison, who is majoring in Business and Finance at Marist College in the United States.  I met him on a trip to Atlanta shortly after Jonathan was defeated by President Muhammadu Buhari. There are several others who have been trained as pilots, marine engineers, underwater welders and experts in various oil and gas fields.

    Sadly, the programme, which Buhari continued after assuming office, has not had it easy. The major problem is paucity of fund. Billions of naira, which belongs to the programme now overseen by Gen. Paul Boroh, have not been released. Because of this, ex-agitators are owed; school fees of students abroad cannot be paid and even some local trainings have had to be put on hold. I heard the situation is changing but more cash should be released to end the pains.

    My final take: The Presidency, which has been all over the Niger Delta in search of peace, must act fast. We must get the Amnesty Office its billions. Please don’t kill the programme. The consequences are unimaginable. The dreams of the likes of Odidison, who are the future of not just the Niger Delta, but Nigeria, must be kept alive and well.

     

    And Dear Efe Ejeba

     This is my first letter to you and will likely be the last. First, let me start by congratulating you on your win. In this time of recession, getting N25 million and a brand new Sports Utility Vehicle (SUV) – after 78 days of snatched kisses, hugs and showering naked with grown women – is no mean feat. It is also no mean feat staying in doors for that long, with access to free alcoholic drinks, twerking babes and not lose it. I congratulate you, especially ‘based on logistics’.

    You may wonder why I am writing to you. Well, it is because you are a Warri boy and I know a bit of your story,  as gleaned from the social media accounts of the tales you told in the house. You are a street boy and clearly the one who needed the money most. You typify the Niger Delta story, where poverty walks on all fours, where a few corner the commonwealth and even use it to destabilise the society; and ensure the youth lose the sense to take back what belongs to them.

    There is the temptation to moralise about the Big Brother Naija show, but I will resist it; I leave that for your pastor. Instead I will offer some pieces of advice on what you should do with your life after the BBN house.

    My first advice is this: look for Katung Aduwak. He won the first BBN, which was hosted in Lagos, Nigeria, unlike yours which held in South Africa. Katung won the grand prize a decade ago.  Though you are a Warri boy and your family members are largely there, you and Katung, I understand, share the background of having lived in Jos, the Plateau State capital. Please get Katung to tell you how he invested his money and till date he remains on top. He never went back to where he was before the show. With the kind of money you have, the time has come for you to stop being a street boy. Your career as a rapper and entertainer should hit the top now. You should give MI Abaga and Oga Boss a run for their money.

    Aside Katung, you also need to seek time to have a hearty-to-heart talk with Ayo Makun, another Warri boy who we all love to call AY. If you do not know, he was your fan and mobilised support for you. Over the years, AY has shown that he knows how to invest money and get it back in multiple folds. If you are in doubt, ask for the figures from 30 Days in Atlanta and A Trip to Jamaica. You will also do well to ask for the figures from his popular AY Live comedy shows.

    My third advice to you, dear Efe, centres around girls. Not a few of them flock around cash. You have some cash now and more are bound to roll in and with this, the girls will look for you, even without invitation. The cash is the invite they need. They will confuse and convince you with their physique. Examples abound of entertainers with multiple baby mamas because they simply got convinced and confused by the babes. This is not a road you should travel.

    You also need to take a trip round major towns in the Niger Delta, such as Port Harcourt, Warri, Yenagoa and Benin. In these places, your business is not at the Government Houses. No. Your business is with the boys on the streets. You need to give them hope. Tell them your story and I believe they will learn from it.

    While avoiding any advice that will make me sound like your pastor – assuming you have one– you need God; you need his grace. This is not a race you can run alone. One with God is a majority, remember.

    Bye for now.

  • Of billions buried in farms

    SIR: House of RepresentativesSpeaker, Yakubu Dogara, it was who recently made a shocking revelation of looted funds said to have been buried in a farmaround Abuja. Said he: “As we speak, they (referring to the EFCC operatives), are recovering money from someone’s farm somewhere around Abuja”.

    Since when have farms become cash vaults? When has money turned into yam seedlings to beburied in farm grounds?  I cannot imagine such bizarre occurrence.

    Really, the development is a metaphor, showing us in a way that here is a nationflourishing in corruption. Corruption here has grown wild and with little or no hindrance to stop its gargantuan growth.

    Here, the environment is fertile for corruption and stealing; that is why a public looter is a king; worshipped and hailed to high heavens by supporters, kinsmen/women who take crumbs of the loot.

    Worse still, the people would hardly raise an eye brow on such criminality. So citizens engage in all manners of illegalities to amass wealth for no one would query the source of wealth and such people are lavished with all manners of tittles including national awards. Pity!

    We are all aware that corrupt people do not make good leaders. That is why instead of feeling the presence of government in our cities and communities through massive execution of infrastructural projects, what we see are the ostentatious living and display of prodigious wealth of few individuals in power while the people wallow in poverty and misery.

    Someone may want to say: what is the big deal about this? Could this have been the only looting? Haven’t you heard about those who hid monies in soak-away pits and overhead tanks? Those who vehemently fight back and defend their loot by hiring top (please,read SAND) lawyers so as to escape justice in courts.

    Corruption needs to be tamed in this nation because if we don’t, we will definitely be doomed.  And as it has been generally acknowledged: if we don’t kill corruption, corruption will kill us.

    With serial episodes of unimaginable loots hidden by corrupt Nigerians, the argument in some quarters that the identities of these looters be exposed is appropriate. Covering their identities will definitely send a wrong signal.

    The  fight against corruption requires  the support of every one, so is the pursuit of  unveiling our treasury looters  as being canvassed by Socio- Economic Right Accountability Project(SERAP), after all  no one, not even a court will recommend the  blowing of  their silly  greedy heads off  the China way.

     

    • Sola Lebile,

    Akure, Ondo State.

  • Help! These billions are driving me crazy!

    The subject I dreaded most as a student was Mathematics. The sight of numbers easily unsettled me. Not a few of my concerned teachers had to call me to their offices to ask what my problem was with a subject many of my classmates gleefully announced as their best. Their concern was accentuated by the fact that my performance in the subject was always drawing my position back. They reckoned that but for my poor performance in Mathematics, I would consistently be one of the best three in my class, but they were worried by a situation where I would perform excellently in other subjects only for Mathematics to mess up the overall result.

    At the initial stage, I made deliberate efforts to overcome the phobia I had for the subject, but the harder I tried, the more monstrous it became until the sight of numbers sent panic waves through my spinal cord. So, from my early years in secondary school, I knew that I was not going to have anything to do with any course with a bent of Mathematics. Mercifully, there were many courses I could do in the university without been capable of adding two and two together. I made up my mind as far back as that time that I would study Law or Mass Communication. It goes without saying, therefore, that one of my biggest reliefs as I left secondary school was that I would no longer endure the sessions of abracadabra my classmates called Mathematics period.

    Since I left secondary school, I have avoided figures like leprosy except where they had to do with money. I have done so successfully until President Muhammadu Buhari assumed office on May 29 and the ugly monster started baring its fangs again in the form of the billions of dollars reporters are quoting on a daily basis as sums embezzled by some actors in the immediate past administration of Dr. Goodluck Ebele Jonathan. To be sure, many concerned Nigerians had expressed their fears long before Buhari assumed office that many officials of the administration had preoccupied themselves with the looting of public treasury. Only that no one seemed to suspect that the sums involved could be anything near the mind-boggling ones that are being rolled out on a daily basis.

    The alarm bell was first sounded by former governor of Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN), Alhaji Sanusi Lamido Sanusi, now the Emir of Kano, when at the twilight of the Jonathan administration he accused the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) of failing to pay about $20 billion in oil revenue to the government between 2012 and 2013. The government denied that any money was missing even before an investigation was conducted, and removed Sanusi as CBN governor.

    But that turned out to be the beginning of the revelations in the graft that enveloped the Jonathan administration. PriceWaterHouseCoopers, an audit firm the Jonathan government hurriedly commissioned to audit the books of the NNPC, said the corporation only had to account for $1.48 billion. But a former CBN governor, Chukwuma Soludo, wrote a long, acerbic article accusing the managers of the nation’s economy of misappropriating over N30 trillion of public funds, including several billions in oil money.

    In an opinion article published by the Financial Times of London, Sanusi also faulted the report of PriceWaterHouseCoopers, saying the argument that the outstanding amount was used by the NNPC for apparently unlawful purposes such as kerosene subsidy, did not diminish the notion that the NNPC illegally withheld billions of dollars from the government. “Contrary to the claims of petroleum minister Diezani Alison-Madueke, the audit report does not exonerate the NNPC. It establishes that the gap between the company’s oil revenues between January 2012 and July 2013 and cash remitted to the government for the same period was $18.5bn,” Sanusi said.

    But those were just signs of the things to come as has been evident in the mind-boggling revelations of the sleaze that had had been the lot of the nation’s finances under Jonathan. Edo State governor and member of the National Economic Council (NEC), Comrade Adams Oshiomhole, was the first to raise the alarm shortly after the NEC was inaugurated by President Muhammadu Buhari on June 29, saying that the sum of $2 billion the Accountant General of the Federation (AGF) said was left in the excess crude account (ECA) was $2.1 billion short of the $4.1 billion the former Minister of Finance and Coordinating Minister of the Economy, Dr. Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala, had earlier declared.

    Oshiomhole said: The last time the former Minister of Finance and Coordinating Minister for the Economy, Mrs Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala, reported to the council, and it is in the minutes, she reported by November 2014 that we had $4.1 bn. Today, the Accountant-General Office reported we have $2.0bn. Which means the honourable minister spent $2.1bn without authority of the NEC and that money was not distributed to states, it was not paid to the three tiers of government.”

    Okonjo-Iweala promptly responded to the allegation in a statement issued by her spokesperson, Paul Nwabuikwu, describing the allegation that she made the withdrawals without authorization as false and malicious, insisting that the withdrawals had the blessings of the Federation Account Allocation Committee (FAAC) whose meetings are attended by finance commissioners of the 36 states of the federation. But FAAC promptly took exception to Okonjo-Iweala’s claim that it (FAAC) was privy to the withdrawal of the said sum, saying that Okonjo-Iweala’s explanation was “far from the fact and misleading,” adding that the law that set it up did not give it the power to approve withdrawals from the ECA.

    Apparently rattled by the FAAC’s reaction, Okonjo-Iweala shifted the blame on former President Goodluck Jonathan on whose directives she said the withdrawals were predicated.

    Yet more shocking are the sordid tales emerging from the sum of $2.1 billion the immediate past National Security Adviser, Col. Sambo Dasuki allegedly withdrew from the Central Bank of Nigeria for arms that were never acquired. Already named among the beneficiaries of the scandalous deal are the chairman emeritus of DAAR Communications Limited, Dr. Raymond Dokpesi; former Director of Finance in the Office of the National Security Adviser, Mr. Shuaibu Salisu and former Sokoto State governor, Attahiru Bafarawa, among others.

    Only yesterday, the news media were awash with the story of another sum of N8.4 billion the Jonathan government paid Dokpesi’s DAAR Communications Limited for a contract awarded to it by Federation of International Football (FIFA). That was a day after Salisu relived how he moved 11 suitcases loaded with $47 million from the Central Bank to Dasuki’s house in Abuja. The figures are already making me dizzy but the President says the facts are only beginning to emerge. I need help before the billions drive me nuts.

  • ‘Malaria prevention can save billions’

    MAlaria prevention can save Nigeria billions of Naira as curing the disease is more expensive than preventing it.

    Efforts  have been made by various groups to prevent the disease. For instance,  the Society for Family Health (SFH), has encouraged the use of mosquito nets  by distributing same freely (Long Lasting Insecticidal Nets freely).

    According to Safurat Eromosele of SFH, “LLINs are factory-treated mosquito nets that are safe, easy to use, and come in a variety of sizes and colours to address individual needs. Some LLINs are effective for up to four years and will last a minimum of 20 washes – they require no re-treatment during this time, making them five to 10 times more effective than conventional re-treatable mosquito nets.LLINs are an inexpensive and easy way to prevent malaria and thus reduce its burden on the health and economic well-being of Nigerians. SFH uses its extensive marketing and distribution channels to move LLINs all across Nigeria so that they are available to everyone, particularly women and children.”

    She said when prevention fails, treatment of malaria is critical. “In seeking treatment for malaria, some mothers are given the wrong drugs for their children, while others find treatment options confusing and difficult to complete the dosage.

    In 2003, SFH and other stakeholders developed an innovative approach to “pre-package” malaria treatment for easy use by mothers and families to rapidly and correctly treat malaria. SFH’s treatment programmes to combat malaria are focused on promoting and distributing an innovative and effective drug for malaria, called Artemisinin-based Combination Therapy (ACT). This is  an easy way to use pre-packaged drug combination that ensures effective treatment of malaria for children and adults as well. Now, SFH promotes ACT treatment using the pre-packaged method and distributes this product throughout Nigeria, especially in remote and rural communities. In 2014 alone, about 8.2 million doses of ACTs were distributed in the country.

    “SFH is actively engaged in behavioural change communication activities through mass media and community-based interpersonal communication activities to facilitate the adoption of positive behaviours by individuals and communities. These interpersonal communication activities available mostly in hard to reach communities, help to ensure that individuals are equipped with the right information and attitudes to prevent and treat malaria. SFH also works closely with the Federal Ministry of Health on technical matters, education, training, and coordinating on policy and research to move the nation forward on both prevention and treatment issues in the battle against malaria,” she stated.

    On other efforts to control the scourge,  she said, “SFH has four projects that address malaria – the Global Fund Malaria Project, the Expanded Social Marketing Project in Nigeria (ESMPIN), the Rapid Access Expansion (RAcE) Programme and the Africa Health Markets for Equity (AHME) Programme.

    ACTwatch collects data to inform evidence-based malaria control policies and programmes. Regardless of the giant strides made so far, more needs to be done to defeat this fight against malaria in Nigeria. This could be achieved by intensifying our efforts and exploring innovative approaches to tackle the disease. Behaviour change communication to increase use of malaria prevention is important in this regard.”

  • Dubai deals may be billions, says Dangote

    Dubai deals may be billions, says Dangote

    Africa’s richest man, Aliko Dangote, said further deals with the Investment Corporation of Dubai may run into billions of dollars after the Emirati holding company invested $300 million in his cement business last month.

    “We have also agreed to invest in other other ventures in oil and agriculture,” Dangote said yesterday in an interview at a conference in Dubai. “They already have a seat on our Board. This could run into billions of dollars. There are a lot of opportunities that we are looking at with ICD.”

    ICD is exploring opportunities to work with the Nigerian billionaire after taking an unspecified holding in Dangote Cement Plc (DANGCEM) last month, its first major Africa investment, ICD Chief Executive Officer Mohammed Al Shaibani also said today in Dubai. The company is diversifying its investments, which include Emirates airline and Emaar Properties PJSC.

    Dangote, whose cement and commodities businesses built him a $23.1 billion fortune, according to the Bloomberg billionaires index, partnered with the private-equity firms Blackstone Group LP (BX) and Carlyle Group LP (CG) in August for Africa investments. He plans to spend about $3 billion to boost production of sugar and rice at his companies, he said today.

    Dangote’s cement business, the biggest producer in Africa, has the capacity to produce 29 million tons in Nigeria and plans to expand in 13 other countries on the continent.

    The billionaire is bidding for gas assets in Nigeria, Africa’s largest economy, to help stem continuing disruptions to his cement plants in the West African nation. He’s also building a $9 billion oil refinery and petrochemical complex in Nigeria’s southwest that is scheduled to be completed in 2016.

    “We are looking forward to doing more with Mr. Dangote, and we have some things that we are exploring at the moment,” ICD’s Al Shaibani said. “Having the right partner, especially in Africa, is the key thing.”

  • ‘ Govt loses billions of naira to grey importation’

    ‘ Govt loses billions of naira to grey importation’

    With the liberalisation of the telecoms sector more than a decade ago came the influx of different devices into the country. Many of these products were brought in through unapproved routes, thus depriving the Federal Government of its revenue. In this interview with LUCAS AJANAKU, the Director, Hand Held Products, Samsung West Africa, Emmanouil Revmatas, speaks on the problems of the mobile phone industry, how to solve them and other issues. Excerpts.

    How will you assess the mobile phone market in Nigeria?

    It’s been great. I was here nearly 10 years ago, in the early phase of the evolution of the mobile industry and returned to Nigeria last year. I found that the market is as dynamic as it was 10 years ago. If you look at some of the developments, of course you know the operators have improved their network capabilities and you find that data is becoming more available to many people particularly in the rural areas and of course, you know the space Samsung dominates across the world is the smartphone arena, has grown enormously.

    This year, we are estimating that 40 per cent of all smartphones in Africa will be sold in Nigeria. This means that Nigeria is booming in terms of the mobile phone industry. Although I think users have become smarter and more selective, there is a lot more because the devices are becoming multi-media devices, not necessarily being able to do voice and short message service (SMS) but they are now expected to be able to access the World Wide Web as well as – connecting to various social network activities that have become part of everyday life.

    You said about 40 per cent smart devices that will be sold in Africa will be sold in Nigeria, underscoring the hugeness of the market. Why is Samsung not considering establishing a factory in Nigeria, not only to serve her huge market but also that of the entire sub-region?

    This is a question that is raised on a regular basis. Let’s take one step back. I think first of all, as an OEM (original equipment manufacturer), Smasung, particularly has made huge investment in Nigeria. If you look at the numerous projects we are involved in, from the corporate social responsibility investment perspective. I will use the investment rather than responsibility because we have done some very big projects in Ekiti and we have also established the first Samsung Electronics Engineering Academy in Ikeja, Lagos where we have been busy training large group of students in various technical skills and I think for many people, they don’t realise that for our consumer electronics business, a vast majority of our products are assembled in local assembly plant. If you take a look at our air conditioners and other consumer electronics products, we have a very big commitment in terms of assembly plants right here in Lagos.

    In terms of the mobile industry, it is a little bit more complex because of course, you deal with a lot more components that come from distant sources. At the moment, quite honestly, the challenge of trying to consolidate all of those components in Nigeria and having to do with either manufacturing or assembly is really pretty difficult. Is it a possibility for the future, I mean, of course anything is a possibility. The fact is that we are really assembling many of our products in Nigeria and that shows that Samsung is totally committed to the economy. But at the moment, we need to take small steps and for us, the real priority is to ensure that we can provide a high quality affordable products with two year service, which is what Samsung offers to the people of Nigeria. In the future, may be things will change, you know we innovate and we are very dynamic.

    Samsung is prolific in the roll-out of products. What is the organisation doing in managing the e-waste that arises from the use of your products considering the dangers such wastes pose to health, safety and environment?

    Let me make it clear that Samsung as a large global multinational company take our responsibility in terms of environmental issues extremely important. We are signatory to various international protocols. Unfortunately, I am probably not the right person to give you the details of our management of waste. What I can assure you is that even here in Nigeria, when it comes to the simple disposal of things such as old phones or batteries, we still engage third party agencies to do that for us and do it under a certification process. We comply with the regulatory requirements not only on international level but also on local levels and I know from personal experience in the past, during the disposal of our old demo mobile phones as well as batteries, we engaged third party agencies to ensure that they are disposed off in the right environment-correct manner.

    Let us talk about Samsung Research and Development (R&D) Centres. You have 22 of such across the globe but none in Africa. What is your organisation doing in the area of establishing an R&D centre in the country so that products are manufactured to withstand the peculiar climate of the continent?

    Let me begin by saying that we are already producing unique and numerous products tailor-designed and tailored-made for Africa. These are well known and known as our bond for Africa products and these extends to our mobile range as well as our consumer electronics range.

    In terms of R&D, It takes place on an annual basis, in the next few months, we will have our team from Korea, visiting us and spending considerable amount of time on ground, traveling across Nigeria, gaining first time knowledge, experience and feedback in terms of what consumers want.

    We have virtual R&D team that are not necessarily permanently based in Nigeria although of course, we have our own product managers and our own product specialists, they gather and collate information and feed it back. So, very soon, you will see the launch of Galaxy Grand, which is an exciting 5-inch smartphone, (Jiimson smartphone) in fact, the firsT smartphone that will be available in Nigeria. It is a typical example of market research, understanding the needs of the consumers and creating products that meet it. Chief Hero is the chief hero 1500, which is another product that was specifically designed for Nigeria and other parts of Africa based on inputs from consumers. It was created based on the requirements of consumers and affordable entry level. Consumers want robust, durable phones with good battery life and fast charging capability. They want the touch. When you gather all these information through your R&D team, you will be able build one product….as you said is built for Africa.

    Theft of mobile phones has become a recurring decimal in Nigeria. Is there anyway Samsung can assist the customers such that, through the application of technology, stolen phones become useless?

    We and our competitors are working very closely with the operators in Nigeria. There are various initiatives to try to reduce, if not entirely eliminate the abuse, either it is theft or other forms of abuse of mobile phone. Of course, all mobile phones carry IMEI, so there is a means of identifying products and taking the necessary action. Honestly, there is probably limited action that takes place within Nigeria; this is an area that could be improved upon. We will continue to work with the operators and other third parties to find out a way of managing this. In fact, at the moment, you talk about theft, the challenges in Nigeria continues to be grey. I want to emphasise this point because for your readers, I would like them to understand that the challenge with consumers buying grey. They are basically perpetuating illegitimate sales channel. Of course, people are very sensitive to pricing. Grey continues to be a big challenge in Nigeria; it continues to be a huge challenge for OEMs such as Samsung as well as our key partners, who are making efforts to try as much as possible to abide by the rules of the country in terms of importation rules or duty rules. I will urge Nigerians to reconsider buying grey because of N100 savings. In fact, in many cases, they don’t realise that at the later stage, the decision to buy grey has created a long term problem because there are warranty issues related to products that are illegitimately brought into the country.

    The grey imports you talked about, are they not Samsung’s products?

    There are two different grey products. On the one hand, there is the legitimate Samsung products made in a Samsung factory somewhere in the world, and they’ve been brought into Nigeria illegally. In other words, they are brought in by individuals who are avoiding paying the necessary duties and other charges that should be paid to the government of Nigeria. In the case of that grey products, individuals in many cases do not realise that they are buying grey, but there is a very simple way to check. At the time of buying your mobile phone, there is a call that can be made that can immediately tell the consumers whether they are buying a phone that is legitimately brought into the country or not. It is simple, there is a code that is made from the phone that will confirm whether the phone has been brought into the country legitimately.

    The second is a greater problem. Of course when you become successful globally as we have become, many people want to try and ride on the waves of your success, so, if you go to any of the markets, may be it is Computer Village, Saka Tinubu or anywhere for that matter, you unfortunately will find many products that look like Samsung but that are not Samsung. Those are completely pirated products. They are not our products; they are not made by Samsung. Again, we ask people to do some checks. Generally, consumers must realise that they are buying an illegal pirated product. You will find that the grey pirate is significantly cheaper than the real products.

    What amount of local content goes into your mobile devices by way of apps?

    It is probably one of the fastest growing areas of our business at the moment. In our team, we have Bolade whose is fully dedicated to building relationship with local content developers and providers to ensure that we are able to provide both the app and content to the consumers. At the moment we have various initiatives – one of them being with Spinlet, which is a company where Nigerian music is pre-loaded onto the phone or alternatively, if you go to the Samsung store, you will find that they are increasing number of app both global, African and recently Nigerian applications available to consumers. It is a big growth area. I mean between social networking and the need for local content being available, it is the largest growth area we find driving the smartphone area because you essentially need the smartphone for your multi-media device.

    Spinlet is about music. Are you not thinking of developing apps that will focus on education, health, agriculture and others? This may give you an edge on your competitors?

    I will not disclose our business plan but we are working with a group of young mobile app developers in Nigeria and we are busy on some initiatives, which in the next few weeks, one of them will be announced. We are working, not only on app and content to high-end smartphone, but also with the introduction of our Book for Africa chief hero product, which is internet enabled, we are also looking at providing content and app for affordable phone users too.

    The Federal Government, late last year, made available to develop the software industry N500million, leaving the balance of about $12million to sourced from individual and private organisations. Will Samsung support this fund?

    Honestly, I don’t know. I will not be able to comment on that at the moment because I don’t have details.

    What is your market share?

    Well, no one wants to disclose market share but let us take a look at the developments taking place in Nigeria particularly in the past few years. First of all, I think without sounding arrogant, if you have to look at the premium smartphone space, everyone will agree that Samsung dominates the smartphone space. If you have to look at the success of many of our flagship products whether it’s the S3, which is world’s best selling phone, or the Note 2, which continues to gain huge popularity, especially in Nigeria where in December last year, we recorded fantastic sales or 10.1 tablet, it an area we dominate and it is an area you will continue to see innovation.

    If you have to look at other smart phone areas, the Pocket, which is well known in Nigeria as well as across Africa has also become a major player. I think Nokia is finding it difficult to compete particularly in the smartphone arena. Blackberry has had some success in the past. It is about where the market is going and what the consumers want. It is not about Samsung. The market is going towards touch. So, the first thing is more and more people are becoming increasingly comfortable with the concept of basically using a touch phone. That is the first trend and if you look at who is the major player, of course you know it is Samsung. The issue is that consumers are moving more towards Android. Android age has become powerful engine that is really driving the smartphone space. And again, our alliance with Android and the fact that we use Android as our base for all our smartphones, positions us very well. If you look at the way the market is going right now, there is a two-camp forming; the first camp that continues to focus on low end entry level phone. Secondly, there is another camp that is focusing on entry level affordable premium smartphones. This is where Samsung chips in. We will continue to build some innovative smartphone, some affordable smartphones and we will also start introducing some exciting feature phones. Our strength to be honest is not in the ULC arena, there are other players that perform better there but if you start moving towards the messaging or feature phone arena. We are confident that we will continue to grow our business as it is at the moment because we have got consumers acceptance and in terms of market share, we are the dominant player within the smartphone arena.

    Under your B2B years ago, you developed solutions for the South African Intelligence Agency. With the security challenge facing Nigeria, what level of partnership do you have with the Federal Government to address the spate of bombings across the country?

    Again, I cannot comment on those particular solutions because I don’t have the details. What I can tell you is that in Samasung West Africa, we have dedicated B2B and D2D team; so because we have different units, we have the mobile unit, the IT, the consumer electronics and in many places B2B and B2G, opportunities extend across the business. We have now created one business unit; B2G business unit, which really drives many of our initiative into the government and the corporate sector.