Tag: cash

  • India protests as NNPC holds N5.2b oil block cash for 9 years

    India protests as NNPC holds N5.2b oil block cash for 9 years

    There is the N5.2billion ($25m)  cash paid by an Indian firm for an oil block nine years ago? This is the puzzle security and anti-graft agencies have been trying to unravel since the Indian High Commission’s alleged failure to get back the money.

    Three former Group Managing Directors of the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) and  three directors of the Department of Petroleum Resources (DPR) are likely to be quizzed over the matter.

    Indian High Commissioner in Nigeria Ajjampur Ghanashyam said he could not secure an appointment to meet with the immediate past Minister of Petroleum Resources, Mrs. Diezani Alison-Madueke on the refund and modalities for the crude oil supply.

    Investigation revealed that Oil and Natural Gas Corp-Mittal Energy Limited of India (OMEL) was one of the 12 firms in the controversial 2007 oil blocks bid round.

    The blocks were auctioned on May 12, 2007, about 19 days to the expiration of former President Olusegun Obasanjo’s tenure.

    Ten of the firms won 12 oil blocks at a cost of about $228million.

    The  firms and amounts paid are: Essar Energy Exp and Prod(Block 226)—$18.5million; Monipulo(Block 231)—$17,999.980million; Conoil(Block 290:—$49,999,975million; Global Energy Coy Limited (Blocks 2009 and 2010)—$11,499,949million; Continental Oil(Block 2007)—$54, 999,982million; Sterline Globl Oil Res(Blocks 2005 and 2006)——$5,150,000million;  and Bayelsa Oil Coy(Block 240)—$5,599,949million.

    Others are Abbey Court/Coscharis (Block 293) $50,167,510million; Deltagate/ Petrodel (Block 258) $12,500,000million: and Sahara Energy (Block 228) —$2,500,000.

    OMEL was also given the Right of First Refusal on Block 250 in exchange for the execution of a feasibility study on a new railroad in the country.

    But OMEL’s bid did not sail through after payment of $25million in 2006 for the 2007 bid round.

    A top source, who spoke with our correspondent in confidence, said: “The Indian Government has raised issues over this $25million, relevant security and anti-graft agencies are looking into the complaint.

    “They have to screen records of payment of signature bonuses, where such revenue had been paid into and if it had been spent.

    “This will involve interacting with three ex-GMDs and three or four ex-Directors of DPR on what went wrong and the whereabouts of the said money.”

    Another  source however said: “I think the government might extend the probe beyond those in NNPC and DPR because signature bonuses are usually paid into Consolidated Revenue Account or what is described as CBN/AGF/FGN Account.

    “The DPR does not pay Signature Bonus into any other account other than those specified by the Office of the Accountant-General of the Federation. What those at the Executive or ministerial or political authority level did with such bonuses, the administration of President Muhammadu Buhari  has the right to know.

    “I know many things went wrong in the past. The accountability process in the oil sector was awkward.”

    Claiming that the $25m signature bonus was yet to be refunded, the Indian High Commissioner said: “They (ONGC-Mittal) were not the highest bidder and you cannot blame the government of Nigeria for it or the oil minister at that time for it.

    “It was an auction process, we were not bitter. What I raised objection to my interventions with the Nigerian government was that the last time the ONGC-Mittal asked for a  concession, they paid a signature bonus of $25 million. And that time, it was in 2006 and 2016 is approaching now and I am still writing, how many ambassadors must have come, tried and gone.

    “I am still trying to get back the $25 million. That is not fair enough. For 10 years, you cannot keep that money. What is the value of the $25 million today. This is what I questioned”.

    Asked if a formal request had been made, he said: “I have written three times to three GMDs of NNPC but the bonus has not been refunded.”

    Ghanashyam said the Indian government would require more transparency and elimination of intermediaries in the oil sector.

    He added: “Our relationship is very deep. So, we trust you. To us after the Middle East, normally we will trust someone we have been friends with for a long  time.  And there are some months we have bought oil from you than Saudi Arabia. Possibly because the quality of your oil is better, possibly because we have more trust in you than somebody else.

    “The question is if you keep on telling us to go and buy oil from spot market through agents, it is not something we are comfortable with it.

    “We don’t do it with any other  African or non-African oil producing country. We  buy directly from the government, we will like to do the same thing here.

    “We will like to avoid going through intermediaries. We will buy  from the Ministry of Petroleum Resources and pay to your Treasury Single Account (TSA). That is the only way you will be comfortable.

    “I tried  meeting with Madam Diezani Alison-Madueke but I never got an appointment. But the last three GMDs of NNPC whom I  have seen know this. They know what India wants.

    “It is not that we are looking at it as a complaint. We want to streamline the system so that for future , we don’t have any anxiety.

    “We have one of the largest refineries in the world,  we need crude oil from everywhere. If you have to start thinking  of something  every week, every month for crude oil from Nigeria, then you will rather look elsewhere like Angola which is ready to give you two years commitment.

    “The price can be at that time the ruling market price. Nobody is saying that you must fix your price from the day of signing the agreement. But once you have the agreement, there is security of supply, there is stability of supply.”

  • Rivers N53bn cash not “missing”, says Amaechi

    Rivers N53bn cash not “missing”, says Amaechi

    Former Governor of Rivers State, Mr. Rotimi Amaechi, has said no N53billion cash was missing during his tenure.
    He said the funds were from the Rivers State Reserve Fund which was duly approved by the Rivers State House of Assembly.
    He accused Governor Nyesom Wike of resorting to last ditch effort to scuttle his nomination as a minister by President Muhammadu Buhari.
    The ex-governor, who is now a ministerial nominee, made the clarification in a statement by his Media Office on Wednesday night in Abuja.
    The statement said: “The attention of the media office of Governor Chibuike Rotimi Amaechi has been drawn to a statement credited to the chairman of Mr. Nyesom Wike’s invidious panel of inquiry.
    “The statement credited to the panel’s chairman Justice Omeriji of a “missing” N53 billion is unfortunate and leaves much to be desired.
    “The mischief is all the more evident as the funds referred to are funds from the Rivers State reserve fund which was duly approved by the Rivers State House of Assembly and whose expenditure were duly captured and accounted for.
    “Ordinarily we might not have responded to the mischief of Mr. Wike knowing that having failed with his various desperate tactics to stop the nomination of the Rt. Hon. Chibuike Amaechi as a minister he has embarked on this last ditch effort which is his trump card in the hope that it will diminish the former governors towering stature as a statesman and honest Nigerian.”

  • ANAN donates 300,000 Accounting books, cash to varsity

    ANAN donates 300,000 Accounting books, cash to varsity

    Association of National Accountants of Nigeria (ANAN) has donated 300,000 books and an undisclosed amount of money to Paul University, Awka in Anambra State ahead of the institution’s accreditation exercise this month.

    The books, according to ANAN, cover all the relevant topics in accountancy from year one to final year.

    National president of the association, Tony Nzom, represented by the registrar, Dr Michael Ayeni, said the gesture was part of the association’s efforts to advance the science of accountancy in Nigerian universities.

    “There was need to fill the lacuna in the dearth of literatures in the course,” he said.

    He added that the books would go a long way to help the institution’s Accountancy Department pull through the accreditation exercise.

    In his remarks, the Vice-Chancellor, Prof. Uche Isiugo-Abanihe, said he was overwhelmed by the kind gesture shown the university by the association.

    “With this donation, there is no way the Department of Accountancy will fail the accreditation next month,” he said.

    He praised the Head of the Department, Levi Ezeaku, an associate professor, for playing a key role in facilitating the donation.

  • ABCON suspends Amazon BDC over $156,000 cash

    ABCON suspends Amazon BDC over $156,000 cash

    The Association of Bureau De Change Operators of Nigeria (ABCON) yesterday suspended Amazon Bureau De Change (BDC). This followed the arrest of Amazon BDC Manager, Nwokenta Emmanuel, and five other persons, by the Nigeria Drug Law Enforcement Agency (NDLEA) for swallowing $156,000 intended for export to Brazil.

    The Executive Council of ABCON also suspended directors and workers of the company pending the outcome of the investigations by the its Disciplinary and Investigative Committee, the NDLEA, Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) and the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN).

    ABCON President, Aminu Gwadabe who announced the suspension said the group is shocked and highly embarrassed by the development and the involvement of a BDC operator in the act.

    ”While this is not to pre-empt the outcome of these investigations, the suspension is to serve as strong warning to all ABCON members that any case of illegality and unethical conduct will be severely dealt with by the Association. We call on all BDC operators not to allow anyone to use their services or license for money laundering or any act of illegality and criminality,” Gwadabe said.

    He said ABCON has a zero tolerance for non-compliance with regulatory requirement and for unethical conduct amongst its members.

    “It for this purpose that the association created the office of Compliance Officer in its National Secretariat and in all its zonal offices and also provided official vehicles for the compliance officers to regularly pay inspection visits to BDCs under their jurisdictions”.

  • Man ‘steals’ phones, cash

    A 24-year-old man, Hassan Balogunk, was yesterday arraigned before an Ogba Magistrate’s Court in Ikeja, Lagos, for alleged stealing.

    Balogun was alleged to have stolen a Nokia phone worth N5,000;  Blackberry Q5 worth N35,000, Techno phone worth N70,000  and a N30, 000 cash all belonging to Kehinde Omokhilo.

    The defendant was arraigned on a two-count charge of conspiracy and stealing.

    According to the prosecutor, Superintendent of police Lugard Ahole, the defendant and others at large stole the items at Balogun junction in Iju-Ishaga, Lagos, on August 26.

    Ahole said the offence is punishable under Sections 285 and 409 of the Criminal Law of Lagos state 2011.

    The defendant pleaded not guilty.

    Magistrate T. Akani granted him N100, 000 bail with one surety in the like sum.

    Akani adjourned the case till September 16.

  • More cash for states as 11 get CBN’s loans relief

    More cash for states as 11 get CBN’s loans relief

    11 more states to get clearance for Fed Govt bonds

    Cash-strapped  states will soon clear their huge backlog of workers’ salaries.

    The Federal Government has approved the restructuring of the loans holding down their financial capacity.

    Of the 22 states which applied for the rescheduling of their loans, 11 have been cleared.

    Federal Government Bonds have been issued to 14 banks for the loans being owed by the 11 states.

    The news was broken yesterday as  part of the briefing on the outcome of the 60th National Economic Council (NEC) meeting presided over by Vice President Yemi Osinbajo in Abuja.

    Kwara State Governor Abdulfatah Ahmed, one of the four governors who spoke to reporters after the meeting, said the remaining states would be cleared after the verification of their documents. He did not name the 11 states.

    Ahmed said: “Discussions were looked at in terms of restructuring of states’ indebtedness to commercial banks. The Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) and the Debt Management Office (DMO) told the Council that based on the approval of Mr. President of the plans to restructure the bank loans of states into Federal Government bonds to address fiscal imbalance, 22 states have submitted reports and applied for restructuring as at August 19, 2015.

    “The DMO has requested states to reconcile figures with banks where disparities have been noticed and have been jointly authenticated with the banks as at June 30, 2015. As at August 14 2015, of the 22 states that applied for the federal government bond, 11 states have so far scaled through with respect to submission of necessary documentation to support disbursement.

    “Others have been urged to quickly put their documentation in place to see that they fit into the time schedule. The DMO is reviewing the additional submissions by other states so that it comes as phase two of their programme.”

    The governor added that the Permanent Secretary in the  Ministry of Finance reported to the Council that the Excess Crude Proceeds stands at US$2.207 billion as at this month.

    Anambra State Governor Willie Obiano said CBN Governor Godwin Emefiele briefed the Council on the state of the economy and the exchange rate of the Naira.

    According to him, the CBN governor attributed the situation to some of the following: “Declining oil price, which put a drag on the foreign reserves; Exchange rate movements and pressure on the domestic currency; Inflation and tight monetary policy.

    He said the CBN governor told the Council that the apex bank had come up with some policies to address the situation. They include:

    • specific intervention in the foreign exchange market to stabilise rates;
    • cessation of foreign currency cash deposits in banks;
    • closure of CBN official foreign window; and
    • reclassification of eligible goods and services to the window.

    Obiano noted that the naira had appreciated as a result of the CBN’s stoppage of dollar cash deposit.

    Ogun State Governor Ibikunle Amosun said Edo State Governor Adams Oshiomhole presented a provisional report of the five governors ad-hoc committee set up by NEC to review the operations and management of the ECA/Federation Account.

    He said: “He told the Council that the Committee invited all the relevant revenue generating agencies that contribute to the Federation Account in the course of its assignment.

    “The Ad-hoc Committee recommended to the Council that in order to have a comprehensive report on the operations of the ECA/Federation Account, two International Audit Firms have been appointed to carry out Forensic Audit of the ECA/Federation Account between January 2010 and June 30, 2015.

    “Regarding the above, Council will in the near future receive a more comprehensive report.” He added that there is no law that bars NEC through the committee from appointing the audit firms.

    Amosun explained that NNPC Group Managing Director Ibe Kachikwu briefed the Council on the ongoing reforms in the petroleum industry.

    “He told the Council that the reforms will cover aspects of performance management, transparency and accountability, proper focus in investment attraction, zero tolerance for corruption, cost auditing improved stakeholders management and relationship and image rebranding among others.”

    The GMD, he said, also urged the governors to assist in protecting oil and gas infrastructure in their states.

    Jigawa State Governor Mohammed Badero spoke on the meeting’s decision in respect of the power sector.

    He said the Council was briefed that there was overall increase in power supply by 29 per cent as at the first six-weeks of the new Administration, compared to the last weeks of the previous administration.

    The Federal Government is targeting generation and distribution of 5,000 megawatts of electricity by December.

    According to him, power generation reached 4.662MW by July 29.

    He said that the Council has urged state governments to pay electricity bills by their vendors’ MDA, stressing that the Council was informed that at the moment, there is a 45 per cent default rate.

    The governors, Badero said, were also urged to assist with security to reduce vandalization of power distribution assets.

    He said they were also urged to encourage embedded generation for state-owned facilities.

    According to him, the TCN management contract has been extended for one year.

    Badero said that the Council was also informed that the top priorities in the next two months included repair of stranded hydro capacity, reduced load rejection by Discos, stopping hemorrhage of gas from power plants to industrial off-takers and fixing major transmission and transformation constraints.

  • Amaechi: my govt left N7.5b cash, others

    Former Rivers State Governor Chibuike Rotimi Amaechi has said his administration left refuted claims by his successor Nyesom Wike that he left an empty treasury.

    Governor Wike had consistently maintained that he met an empty treasury when he assumed office.

    On Wednesday, in an attempt to justify why he took N30 billion bank loans from Zenith and Access banks within 30 days in office, Wike, through his spokesman, Opunabo Inko-Tariah, told a radio station in Port Harcourt, Today 95.1FM, that he met an empty treasury.

    But Amaechi debunked Wike’s claim, saying he left billions of naira in cash and economic assets for Rivers State.

    In a statement yesterday in Port Harcourt, the state capital, by his Media Office, Amaechi said his administration left N7.5 billion cash as the balances in the Internally Generated Revenue (IGR) account with Skye Bank, Federation Account Allocation Committee (FAAC) account with Zenith Bank, balances with Access Bank and funds in the reserve fund account at First Bank.

    The statement said: “This is besides other balances in the Government House account with Zenith Bank and other government Ministries, Departments and Agencies’ (MDAs’) accounts, such as the Bureau for Public Procurement (BPP). By the time you pull all these together, we are looking at readily available cash in the region of N8 billion to N10 billion left for the Wike administration.

    “It’s also pertinent to point out here that Amaechi also left economic assets worth tens of billions of naira for the state. Just like cash, the assets store value. These assets, which are scattered in diverse sectors of the economy, were developed or built or procured with revenue that accrued to the state during Amaechi’s tenure.

    “The assets belong to Rivers State, not Amaechi. Some of these assets are yielding revenue to the state’s coffers and many can be easily and readily converted to cash, if the state so desires.

    “It is, therefore, disingenuous and fraudulent for Wike to claim that Amaechi left an empty treasury, in his bid to justify the N30 billion loans he collected under 30 days in office.

    “Rather than this puerile and silly distraction of always pointing fingers at Amaechi, Wike should explain to Rivers residents what he took the loans for, account for and justify every kobo that has been spent from the loans.”

     

  • Osun ’ll soon be out of cash crisis, says Rep

    A member of the House of Representatives Alhaja Ayo Omidiran, has predicted that Osun State will soon be out of its economic crisis.

    She said with the beginning of implementation of the communiqué of the stakeholders’ conference held on August 10, in Osogbo, the state is set for an economic turnaround.

    The conference was organised by the Osun Legislators’ Forum and attended by public office holders and civil servants.

    Top players in the organised labour and private sector also attended, the event, where decisions on the way forward were taken.

    Mrs. Omidiran, who represents Irewole Federal Constituency, was one of the prime organisers of the conference.

    She said Governor Rauf Aregbesola has started to implement the meeting’s outcome.

    “The idea behind it was for us to bring the ideas together so that the state can harness its resources to continue to move forward. We were happy the governor supported it and put all the government machinery behind it. We are confident the outcome will positively influence the state,” Mrs. Omidiran said.

    Osun is one of the states badly hit by the financial crisis that followed the drop in oil prices, which adversely affected the cash flow into the nation’s treasury.

    The state is just clearing the backlog of salaries to its workers.

    The communiqué of the conference read by the representative of the labour unions at the meeting, Mr. Richard Afolayan Oyegbami, recommends that:

    * government should plug the loopholes in the way revenues are collected;

    * Osun people must pay taxes and rates before being compelled to do so;

    *the need to review the cost of governance, particularly to ascertain accurately the recurrent expenditure.

    *government should embrace public private sector partnerships in agriculture, mining and tourism;

    *government should patronise competent local contractors to deepen the state’s economy; and

    *parents should contribute a token to augment the free education programme.

  • Illicit cash: All eyes on Buhari to stem the haemorrhage

    Illicit cash: All eyes on Buhari to stem the haemorrhage

    The figures are unflattering. Over $150 billion was stolen from Nigeria in the last 10 years, with over 90 per cent of the loot related to oil. Africa’s largest economy also occupies an unenviable seventh position among the top 10 highest illicit capital outflows in the developing world, losing a cumulative $217.7 billion from 1970 to 2008. But there are indications that the President Muhammadu Buhari administration’s war against corruption is off to a good start. This has raised hopes that the monster may soon be caged to pave the way for real development. Assistant Editor CHIKODI OKEREOCHA reports.

    It may have been long in coming, but when it finally did last week, the shake-up at the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC), beginning with the appointment of a new Group Managing Director (GMD), Dr. Emmanuel Kachikwu, gladdened the hearts of not a few Nigerians.

    For one, it was an indication that the war against corruption is off to a good start. Most importantly perhaps, the choice of NNPC for the beginning of the cleansing, is seen by many as a clear and bold statement that President Muhammadu Buhari’s administration’s resolve to tackle the manace is on to a promising start.

    Barely a day after the appointment of Kachikwu as NNPC’s helmsman, all the Corporation’s Group Executive Directors were also booted out.

    That the NNPC is one of the first to come under the administration’s scrutiny is hardly surprising. The oil & gas industry, which the NNPC supervises, both as industry regulator and active player, is the cash cow and mainstay of Nigeria’s economy.

    It accounts for over 90 per cent of her foreign exchange earnings, about 8.97 per cent of the Gross Domestic Product (GDP), and 80 per  cent of government revenue.

    However, under its watch, much of Nigeria’s oil fortune is being squandered on account of the Corporation’s long history of graft, waste and mismanagement. This was what prompted persistent calls by experts and Nigerians for a probe of the management.

    Such calls are not without justification, considering the mind-boggling revelations of pervasive corruption in the industry. For instance, between 2009 and 2012, about 160 million barrels of oil worth $13.7b was stolen, according to the Nigerian Extractive Industries Transparency Initiative (NEITI).

    The United Nations Development Programme (UNDP), also estimates that $400billion was stolen from the country between 1960 and 1999. Even Buhari himself raised the alarm that up to last month, July 10, some people in government were illegally selling 250,000 barrels of oil per day.

    To date, Nigerians are yet to come to terms with the fact that despite earning about $500 billion from crude oil in the five years to 2014 and about $1tr in 50 years, according to the US Department of Energy, there is not much on ground to show for it either in physical infrastructure or human development indices. For instance, United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF) estimated that 76.8 million of the 170 million population still lack access to drinking water in 2014, while 64 million Nigerians were illiterate, according to the National Mass Education Commission. Over 50 per cent of Nigerians also lack access to basic health care services.

     

    Illicit financial flows

    Much of the disturbing statistics of Nigeria’s heavy losses to corruption appear to be in form of illicit financial flows (IFFs). For instance, a Washington DC-based research and advisory organisation, Global Financial Integrity (GFI), recently released a report, which placed Nigeria 7th among the top 10 highest illicit capital outflows in the developing world.

    GFI, which produces high-calibre analyses of illicit financial flows, said while Africa loses $50 billion annually in IFFs, Nigeria topped the league, losing a cumulative $217.7b from 1970 to 2008. GFI said over 90 per cent of that loss was related to oil. It also added that in the last 10 years alone, $150b was stolen from Nigeria, which perhaps, was why the recovery of the $150b stolen oil wealth was on the priority list of Buhari’s request on Kachikwu.

    GFI did not say anything new. It only added its voice to growing public outcry, particularly by economic experts and stakeholders that the economy is bleeding profusely from IFFs.

    Sometime last year, the immediate past Director General of the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) and Vice President/Treasurer of the World Bank, Ms. Arunma Oteh, raised the alarm that Nigeria lost over $140 billion to IFFs between 2002 and 2011, a period of nine years.

    Oteh, who was keynote speaker at the 2nd Christopher Kolade Lecture on business integrity held in Lagos in September, last year, said: “Nigeria has lost more to illicit financial flows than any other African country between 2002 and 2011, even being listed in the top 10 globally. Within a 9-year period we lost over $140 billion to illicit financial flows.”

    She added that poor countries are losing an estimated $1 trillion annually to such illegal financial activities as money laundering, tax evasion, transfer pricing and embezzlement.

     

    Multinational companies,

    banks culpable

    Oteh said a lot of the illicit outflows, which are basically monies illegally earned, transferred or utilised, was through the illicit commercial activities of multinational companies. The multinational companies some of which are in the oil & gas industry are allegedly involved in big ticket crude oil swap deals and contract splitting through the help of unscrupulous government officials and their collaborators in the organised private sector including foreign businesses.

    Some commercial banks are also said to be involved in the transfer of the loot.

    “In all sincerity, I don’t think the banks are doing or have done enough to curtail these sharp practices. More often than not, they are complicit. Such deals can’t be pulled without the active connivance of financial institutions,” a Security Expert and Founder, Forenovate Technologies Ltd, an Abuja-based security risk management consultancy, Mr. Don Okereke, said.

    The UK-trained security expert added that lately, Nigerian banks had found a new love: a penchant for opening foreign branches. “Some schools of thought see this as an avenue to siphon, launder money abroad. The Nigerian government must beam its searchlight on the plethora of foreign bank branches operated by Nigerian parent banks, Okereke told The Nation.

     

    How IFFs hurt economy,

    fuel terrorism

    Mr. Okereke said the implications of IFFs on the economy are grave and far-reaching. He said, for instance, that IFFs deplete the nation’s resources while enriching that of foreign countries where these monies are domiciled. Said he: “If these monies were/are invested in the Nigerian economy, even though ‘stolen’, at least jobs will be created for the teeming unemployed youths. It means that these outflows indirectly lead to increase in crime since our country’s resources are being looted by people in corridors of power and no jobs are created, this leaves idle youths with no choice than to do crime.”

    Another implication of this, he said, is that Nigeria now has a situation where some folks are richer than their State, possibly as rich as the country. “Some of these nouveau-riches use their ill-gotten resources to fight the government and ferment trouble. In other words, they see themselves as a government. Some even argue that illicit financial outflows could be channelled into sponsoring terrorism and insurgency,” he added.

    Oteh confirmed this much, saying: “We now have a situation where these illicit outflows are not only depriving our country of desperately needed capital but are also being used to finance terrorism abroad and within our shores.” she said a security expert who trained members of staff of SEC recently shared some pieces of intelligence with the Commission indicating that the rampaging Boko Haram sect received over $70 million between 2006 and 2011 through shady activities like money laundering, oil bunkering, kidnapping and dealing in drugs.

    That is not all. The $150 billion stolen in the last decade as confirmed by GFI is more than the about $100 billion the World Bank said Nigeria needed to invest in power in 10 years to lift electricity supply to an acceptable level and tackle poverty and unemployment.

    Again, Oteh agrees. While noting that this is money desperately needed for the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) and could prevent as much as 3.6 million deaths annually in the world’s poorest countries, she said in the case of Nigeria, an estimated $50 billion investment is required to ensure stable electricity supply.

    The World Bank Vice President was emphatic that IFFs and corruption are two issues that countries have been battling with and Nigeria suffers greatly from both issues. “Corruption has been identified as the second most problematic factor to doing business in Nigeria ahead of factors including access to finance and terrorism,” she stated, adding that the G-20 is focusing on combating illicit financial flows especially considering the fact that poor countries are losing a lot to such illegal activities.

    Oteh, however, said considering the impact of corruption and anti-money laundering violations on Nigeria, efforts have been made to strengthen the Anti-Money Laundering and Countering the Financing of Terrorism (AML/CFT) regime in Nigeria.

    “Other countries are also implementing reforms to make it harder for wrongdoers to find a hiding place. The United Kingdom has the Anti-Bribery Act 2010 that requires companies with any link to the UK to have robust structures to forestall shady dealings. The United States has long had the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act of 1977, which provides for up to $25 million in fines and 20-year jail term,” she said.

     

    What options for Buhari?

    Since the inauguration of Buhari’s administration on May 29, his perceived hard stance against corruption has largely been read from his body language. His body language is believed to have galvanised the hitherto inefficient anti-corruption agencies, such as the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC), Independent Corrupt Practices and Other Related Offences Commission (ICPC), and the Code of Conduct Bureau (CCB) into action, leading to the arrest of some Politically Exposed Persons (PPPs). However, the thinking is that last week’s shake up in NNPC was a pointer that the days of reckoning are finally here for corrupt people.

    However, experts have proposed some  measures that they believe will guarantee success in the war against entrenched corruption. With regards to IFFs, for instance, Okereke said ensuring strict financial regulation and intelligence surveillance of financial transactions as well as genuine cooperation and partnership with Western governments and institutions to check money laundering would go a long way in curbing the trend.

    Okereke was not done. He also wants the Federal Government to “Mandate all revenue generating, collecting Ministries, Departments and Agencies (MDA’s) to henceforth remit every dime they collect/generate to the federation account. Ensure that award of government contracts, crude oil blocks etc. are very transparent and in line with global best practices, and allow unfettered access to public information and free speech. Unnecessary bureaucracy enshrined in the freedom of information law must be purged.”

    He also urged government to strengthen the Federal Inland Revenue Service (FIRS), the Nigerian Financial Intelligence Unit (NFIU) and the anti-corruption agencies to be alive to their responsibilities.

    The thinking is that reforming the EFCC, the ICPC and the CCB involves a radical overhaul of their scandalous and uncoordinated investigations and weak prosecution, which are factors believed to be responsible for losing high profile cases in the past. It also involves the strategy of making the institutions strong and efficient and without overt interference from the political class. Incidentally, the need for some of these institutional reforms is not lost on Buhari. This was why the President gave the new NNPC helmsman a matching order to reshape the Corporation, by, among other things, cleaning up the NNPC system of corrupt elements, work with the EFCC and the Directorate of State Service (DSS) to trace and recover stolen oil cash, review NNPC’s structure to compete globally, and give targets to all subsidiaries and put in place performance benchmarks.

    The President also wants the GMD to fixe all refineries, which must work at optimal level, “even if it means using expatriates in the interim.”

     

    Support rises for fight against IFFs

    This must be music in the ears of African governments, which are hard-hit by the unbridled looting of their commonwealth. Already, the continent appears poised to compliment and collaborate with the world powers in the bid to halt the rampaging monster that has continued to frustrate efforts at sustainable growth and development.

    For instance, the International Trade Union Confederation (ITUC)-Africa pledged its commitment to support African countries and the African Union (AU) in the fight against IFFs from Africa. At the end of a two-day ITUC-Africa Human and Trade Union Rights Network meeting in Abuja, Nigeria, the ITUC-Africa General Secretary Mr. Kwesi Aou-Amankwah, said the Thabo Mbeki panel report on IFF from Africa showed that a conservative figure of $50b was leaving the continent annually.

    Aou-Amankwah therefore, pledged that ITUC-Africa shall continue to pressure big business and multinational companies to pay their fair and true share tax in countries where their production and profit activities take place. “The financial haemorrhage as a result of IFF continues to harm our economies and people, as it reduces monies for social spending on education, potable water, health and sanitation, among others.

    “These real drivers of development are lost because businesses continue to find ways to manipulate tax rules and administrations. We, therefore, say `stop the bleeding,’ which is our ongoing campaign on halting IFFs from Africa,” he said, urging governments to desist from the current harmful tax competition among themselves with the use of sundry and endless incentives.

     

    AfDB joins the fray

    The African Development Bank (AfDB) has also joined the battle to stop IFFs. In doing so, AfDB Country Director, Nigeria, Dr Ousmane Dore, said while Nigeria had embarked on milestone reforms aimed at improving her Domestic Resource Mobilisation (DRM), large scale IFFs out of the country still required urgent attention. “Some of the push factors in illicit capital flows include mainly issues like corruption perception indicators, the size of the underground economy, and weak regulatory institutions,” Dore said.

    Dore, while delivering a keynote address at a ‘Multi- Stakeholders’ meeting on Illicit Financial Flows (IFFs) out of Nigeria” in Abuja, said the AfDB recently commissioned a study entitled, ‘Nigeria: Illicit Financial Flows due to Trade Misinvoicing, 1960-2012″, with its report focused on trade mis-invoicing. According to him, Nigeria has for many decades experienced serious problem with trade misinvoicing in the form of over-invoicing of imports and under-invoicing of exports for the purpose of shifting money out of the country.

    “Between 1960 and 2011, Nigeria experienced cumulative IFFs totalling $83.3b or 5.6 per cent of total goods trade through trade misinvoicing only. Export under-invoicing takes the larger share of $44b, while the balance of $39.3b was due to import over-invoicing,” he added, stressing the need for government to undertake critical tax reforms with focus on regulatory, institutional and legal issues, including reduction in complications in tax assessment, computation and collection.

    Former UN Secretary-General Kofi Annan could not agree less. He noted that “Stemming the hemorrhage of finance lost through illicit financial transfers will be a key driver of domestic resources that can be used for future development.”  Annan is Chairman of the Africa Progress Panel whose recent report ‘People, Power, Planet’ highlighted the impact illicit flows have on the continent of Africa. The report calls on the international community to “support African efforts to strengthen tax and customs administration and reduce illicit financial outflows, especially via trade misinvoicing.”

     

    The buck stops on Nigeria’s table

    Though a continental problem, Nigeria, Africa’s largest economy with GDP size of $500b is saddled with the responsibility of coordinating the fight against corruption, especially with regards to IFFs. Buhari may have put the right foot forward in halting the trend by beaming the searchlight on the NNPC, but the consensus is that a strong commitment and political will, backed by the involvement of all stakeholders, is required to fight and win the war.

     

  • EFCC identifies owner of $2.1m seized cash

    EFCC identifies owner of $2.1m seized cash

    Ex-federal agency chief may be declared wanted

    The Economic and Financial Crimes Commission(EFCC) yesterday said it had traced about $2.1million (N413million) seized at the Murtala Muhammed Airport in Lagos to a former Executive Secretary of a federal parastatal.

    The commission said it might be forced to declare the man wanted if he does not show up for questioning.

    The agency said all attempts to locate the man in Lagos and Abuja proved futile.

    The National Drug Law Enforcement Agency (NDLEA) on July 3 arrested a bureau de change operator, Mr. Ibiteye John Bamidele, at MMA Terminal 2 (MMA2) Lagos with the cash.

    The Head of Public Affairs, NDLEA, Mitchel Ofoyeju, said Bamidele was arrested by anti-narcotic officials, who suspected that the cash was to be laundered.

    The NDLEA handed over the suspect to the EFCC on July 8, following his confession that he was on money laundering errand for the ex-official.

    It was, however, learnt that all attempts by the EFCC to interrogate the suspect had failed.

    A top source in the agency said: “The EFCC has finalised a plan to declare the former parastatal’s chief wanted, over a $2.1million money laundering case.

    “The anti-graft agency has been on his trail for weeks, since a certain Ibiteye John Bamidele named him as the owner of a $2,198,900 haul, recovered from him by men of the National Drug Law Enforcement Agency, NDLEA.

    “Ibiteye was arrested on July 3, 2015 at the Murtala Mohammed Airport in Lagos by the NDLEA and handed over to the EFCC on July 8, for further investigation.

    “The suspect, upon interrogation, named as the owner of the money, but all efforts to locate him both in Lagos and his known address in Abuja proved futile.”

    The Head of Media and Publicity of EFCC, Mr. Wilson Uwujaren, said: “We have plans to declare the man  wanted. We urge anyone with information on his whereabouts to contact the Commission or the nearest police station.”