Tag: David Ugolor

  • Obaseki to electorates: Demand transparency from political leaders

    The Edo State governor, Mr Godwin Obaseki, has challenged Nigerian electorates to demand transparency from persons holding leadership positions.

    Obaseki threw the challenge during the launch of Open Niger Delta (OPENED) Campaign project in collaboration with the Africa Network for Environment and Economic Justice (ANEEJ), in Benin City, the Edo State capital.

    He commended ANEEJ for the OPENED initiative, which the governor said is in line with the state’s open government policy, and assured of his administration’s readiness to drive the campaign in the Niger Delta region.

    The governor, who was represented by his Chief of Staff, Mr Taiwo Akerele, said the state has put in place institutional framework to ensure due process is followed in the execution of projects, adding that the state government publishes all contracts above N10 million as well as her annual financial statements.

    Read Also: Osun victory shows APC is preferred party – Obaseki

    Obaseki noted that behavioural change amongst citizens was essential in the fight against corruption in the country and advised the electorates to vote only leaders who are transparent and ready to deliver good governance in the country.

    Rev David Ugolor, executive director of ANEEJ, said OPENED project is supported by Bread for the World Protestant Development Service with the goal of mainstreaming Open Government Partnership (OGP) principles in the Niger Delta states.

    Ugolor explained that OPENED was designed to encourage states within the Niger Delta region to adopt measures that will improve transparency, accountability and good governance in the region.

    “Edo State has joined the OGP which requires that participating governments enter into a co-creation process with civil society to develop commitment in the fight against corruption, public participation in governance and empowerment of citizens,” he said.

     

  • ANEEJ urges Buhari to reconsider decision on Petroleum bill

    The Africa Network for Environment & Economic Justice, ANEEJ, has urged President Muhammadu Buhari to reconsider his decision not to sign the Petroleum Industry Governance Bill, PIGB, in the interest of Nigerians.

    The Presidency on Wednesday explained that assent to the PIGB was withheld on the grounds that what has been permitted as accruals to the petroleum commission has the tendency to reduce what then gets to the three tiers of government.

    In addition, there are concerns within the echelons of power that expanding the scope of petroleum equalization fund conflicts with provisions on independent petroleum equalization fund.

    “But these are tenuous reasons being adduced for Mr. President’s refusal to sign this bill,” ANEEJ stated in a statement by its executive director, Rev David Ugolor.

    Read Also: Buhari to May: 2019 polls will be free, fair, credible

    According to ANEEJ rather than dwell on the technicalities inherent in the bill, Mr. President needs to rise up to the occasion and do the needful by exploring other ways and means of resolving these technicalities than an outright dissent.

    “If the bill will effectively checkmate the three tiers of government from the habit of going cap hand to Abuja to pick up monthly handouts from the centre so be it.  In all of the 17 years wherein the bill has been with the Legislature, it has been so balkanized and scrutinized to the extent that it has nearly lost of all its substance and relevance.

    “The broad overview of the Petroleum Industry Bill was essentially to give the Nigerian people ownership of a key extractive sector of the Nigerian economy. The Bill also sought to take into consideration the interests of the local communities that have suffered despoliation, pollution and degradation because of the activities of multinational companies in Nigeria,” ANEEJ stated.

  • FG to name owners of illegally-acquired Abuja property

    The federal government on Thursday promised to release the names of 200 individuals who own property that was purchased with illegally-acquired funds.

    The Chairman, Special Presidential Investigative Panel for the Recovery of Property, Okoi Obono-Obla, said this at the “Tackling corruption through improving transparency in property ownership” project which was held by ANEEJ in Abuja on Thursday.

    Obla, who is also the Senior Special Assistant to the President Muhammadu Buhari on Prosecution, also launched ANEEJ’s new online platform ‘Properti Tracka’ which will aid in tracking down these illegal properties.

    He described the platform as being one of the single most important contributions towards the fight against corruption.

    “Anybody who has taken what doesn’t belong to him should return it back to Nigeria or else face being tracked down,” he said.

    “Properti Tracka will expose those who have taken what belongs to the entire Nigerian populace.

    Read Also: Buhari commissions Abuja light rail

    “We will start by making available to the public the 200 names of those who own massive properties in Maitama, Abuja, most of whom are highly placed people in the country, some in the government, some in the past governments.

    “If they cannot explain where they got the money to build such massive properties, they should quietly return it back to the State.”

    Executive Director, ANEEJ, David Ugolor said that the Properti Tracka will help to unveil the owners of these and more properties and find out whether they are actually paying appropriate taxes to the government.

    “The Properti Tracka is a citizen tool to identify these owners of illegally-acquired properties and also to push for clean property in Nigeria.

    “It will also serve to strengthen citizens’ knowledge about using technology to demand for transparency and accountability in the property market in Nigeria.

    “The source of building the property must be from a genuine source. We will be working with the federal government agencies, the tax office, and law enforcement agencies as well.

  • $322m Abacha loot: Cash transfers to poor homes begin in July

    The Federal Government says it will commence disbursement of the recovered 322 million dollars Abacha loot through Conditional Cash Transfers (CCT) to 302,000 poor households in 19 states in July.

    Mr Tukur Rumar, of the National Cash Transfer Office (NTCO), said this at a roundtable on assets recovery organised by the Swiss Embassy on Thursday, in Abuja.

    The event was organised to intimate citizens and Civil Society Organisations (CSOs) on the efforts both nations were making on asset recovery after the Post-Global Forum on Assets Recovery (GFAR) held in Washington D.C. in Dec. 2017.

    At the forum, Nigeria made commendable commitments on beneficial ownership, tax transparency, asset recovery, transparency management of recovered funds and payments to victims of corruption.

    The states are: Niger, Kogi, Ekiti, Osun, Oyo, Kwara, Cross River, Bauchi, Gombe, Jigawa, Benue, Taraba, Adamawa, Kano, Katsina, Kaduna, Plateau, Nasarrawa, Anambra and Internally Displaced Camps (IDPs) in Borno.

    According to Rumar, the benefiting households will receive N5,000 monthly and are derived from the National Social Register (NSR) that the 19 states are already on.

    He said the programme was designed to also train beneficiaries on livelihood skills, social skills and other programmes that would change their lives completely.

    Rumar, however, said that NCTO had been making payments to the 46,000 poor and vulnerable households across the 19 states since Dec. 2016, adding that the number had increased to 290,000.

    Mr Iorwa Apera, the National Coordinator, National Social Safety Net Coordinating Office (NASSCO), said 503,055 households were already on the NSR register from the 19 states, adding that by July, there would be a social register for all the states of the federation.

    He said that of the Abacha loot, about 302,000 poor homes across the 19 states would be mined by the NCTO to begin to receive the Abacha loot.

    Apera told the participants that the Federal Government would begin with those states, because they had signed a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) with NASSCO to put in place certain infrastructure to empower the national register.

    “Some of the states delayed, but the other ones were quick enough to set up infrastructure that allowed us to start work there, but all the states are now on board as they have set up their state operating offices and donated office equipment to us.

    “As states come on board, we enroll and so they extend to the beneficiary register, and presently we are generating data in all the states now,’’ he said.

    Read Also: EFCC launches probe as $500m Abacha loot goes missing

    Mrs Linda Ekeator of the office of the Special Adviser to the President on Social Investment said the Abacha loot was invested in the social investment programme, because it was a programme that was already supported by the World Bank.

    She said that before the money was returned to Nigeria, there was an agreement with the Swiss government that it should be used for alleviating poverty and this was to be done with the supervision of the World Bank.

    The Swiss Ambassador to Nigeria, Mr Eric Mayoraz said the 722 million dollars of the Abacha family money that was hidden in Switzerland was fully repatriated in 2005.

    He also said that the 322 million dollars that was repatriated in Dec. 2017, was money that was frozen by the Swiss Attorney-General, but was not domiciled in Switzerland, but in other countries, mainly Luxembourg.

    He, however, said measures had been put in place to ensure that Swiss banks were not used to hide stolen funds from other countries.

    “For possible new cases, the Swiss legislation has fundamentally changed.

    “The law in Switzerland does not allow bank secrecy anymore, and all banks and financial institutions have a due diligence duty to ask everyone coming with money where it is coming from.

    “That does not mean that there are no illegal or stolen assets now in Switzerland, but then there is another instrument I signed myself with the Nigerian Ministry of Justice and Switzerland two years ago on mutual legal assistance and this is for new cases.

    “Now, this agreement with our own Ministry of Justice and Nigeria is that there will be direct communication and exchange on mutual legal request and we are really collaborating with EFCC and other agencies in Nigeria,’’ Mayoraz.

    The Executive Director, ANEEJ, Rev. David Ugolor, said for Nigerian citizens to not keep spreading rumours about the whereabouts of recovered loots, the government must be transparent in all the processes.

    He also said that CSOs should be given access to the social register to enable it monitor properly whether or not the beneficiaries received what was due to them.

  • NNPC: Buhari’s silence not helping matters – CSO

    NNPC: Buhari’s silence not helping matters – CSO

    The reaction of the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) Group Managing Director (GMD), Dr. Maikanti Baru to the Minister of Petroleum Resources, Dr. Ibe Kachikwu memo to President Muhammadu Buhari, on Tuesday, attracted its own reaction.

    Speaking with The Nation on phone, Convener, Say no Campaign, Ezenwa Mwagwu, urged Buhari, who doubles as the substantive Minister of Petroleum Resources to make clarifications on the ranging war of words in the NNPC over award of contract, insubordination and sidelining of Kachikwu from the scheme of things.

    According to him, Buhari should confirm whether Baru presented the report to him and also awarded the contract within the threshold that the Federal Executive Council allowed.

    The member of the Civil Society Organization said that since the president promoted Kachikwu to become the Minister of State for Petroleum Resources, the latter has become irrelevant in the oil and gas industry.

    Ezenwa noted that all the powers in the industry now reside with Buhari and Baru, while Kachikwu is only an onlooker.

    He said that “I think the intervening power of the substantive Minister of Petroleum Resources, (Buhari), who has the responsibility to clear the air on most of the issues.

    Stressing that the issues are about procurement, the activist noted that some critics may have veered of the point to conclude that money is missing.

    Ezemwa submitted that it may not necessarily mean that money is missing.

    He explained that “The issues are around procurement- who has the right to do what. The country is waiting for Buhari to intervene to put an end to the conversation.

    The people talking about money missing have already missed the point because it is about contract award and not necessarily money.”

    He said that: “The silence of the minister (Buhari) has not assisted in putting an end to that rivalry . I know that the BPP has intervened to say issues about procurement and contracts. The minister (Buhari) himself should also come out and state categorically what all of this means.

    “The power is with the GMD and the minister. Having promoted him out of relevance do you still think he has some power? That is why I am asking the substantive minister of petroleum to put an end to the conservation by stating whether him and the Federal Executive Council operated within the threshold that Baru talked about.”

    He said that he submitted the report the minister and Kachikwu is not the minister. He (Buhari) should tell us and his silence is not helping matters.”

    Meanwhile, the Executive Director, Africa Network for Environment and Economic Justice (ANEEJ), Rev. David Ugolor, said that Baru acted with the support of the president, who has refused to react to the issue.

    The advocate of good governance in the oil and gas industry added that Baru “acted with the backing of Mr. President. It wouldn’t have ever happened.”

    According to him, it is unfortunate that Kachikwu has not realized that it is time for him to resign.

    Ugolor said that “Now, he (Kachikwu) has not only been deeply embarrassed but he has also been deeply insulted.”

    He recalled that what happened to the secretary of the NNPC in Jonathan’s administration, Dr. Yinka Omoruke was summarily dismissed by the former Minister of Petroleum Resources, Mrs. Diezani Alison Madueke is now repeating itself.

    The minister had overwhelming influence in the government but now the NNPC boss is wielding the power.

    Ugolor noted that Kachikwu is protecting the interest of the citizenry but doubted whether Nigerians will be there for him when he is facing the music.

    He urged Nigerians to take their destiny into their hands, noting that “if they think that Buhari is going to rescue them, they (Nigerians) are on their own. This is not the first, not the third and not the last, they should not expect any miracle from President Buhari.”

  • Buhari should proceed on another medical leave, say Falana, Ugolor, others

    Buhari should proceed on another medical leave, say Falana, Ugolor, others

    Some eminent Nigerians have urged President Muhammadu Buhari to heed the advice of his personal physicians by taking another medical leave immediately to attend to his health.

    They gave the advice in a statement jointly issued on Monday and titled: “President Buhari Should Take Medical Leave Immediately.”

    Those that made the call included lawyer and activists, Femi Falana (SAN); Senior Fellow at the Centre for Democracy and Development, Abuja, Prof. Jibrin Ibrahim; Executive Chairman, Coalition Against Corrupt Leaders (CACOL), Mr. Debo Adeniran; Senior Lecturer / Researcher, Centre for Peace and Security Studies, Modibbo Adama; lecturer at the University of Technology, Yola, Adamawa State,  Dr. Chris Kwaja; Executive Director at Centre for Information Technology and Development CITAD), Dr. Y. Z. Ya’u and  ‎Country Director, Search for Common Ground, Mr. Chom Bagu.

    Others are the Chairman, Human and Environmental Development Agenda, (HEDA), Mr. Olanrewaju Suraju; Chairman, Partners for Electoral Reform (PER), Ezenwa Nwagwu; Executive Director of Civil Society Legislative Advocacy Centre (CISLAC), Mr.  Anwal Musa Rafsanjani; Executive Director of African Network for Environment and Economic Justice (ANEEJ), Rev. David Ugolor;  a Senior Communication Officer (Policy) in the World Bank Group. Dr. Sina Odugbemi; National Coordinator, Procurement Observation and Advocacy Initiative (PRADIN), Mr. Muhammed Attah, and Executive Secretary, Socio Economic Rights Project (SERAP), Mr. Adetokunbo Mumuni.

    The call was made following President Buhari’s absence at the last Federal Executive Council (FEC) meeting and other state functions.

    The statement reads: “When President Muhammadu Buhari was recently in the United Kingdom on a medical vacation, which lasted 59 days, many public officers said he was hale and hearty.  But upon his return to the country President Buhari disclosed that he had never been that sick in his entire life.

    “Even though the President did not disclose the nature of his ailment, he revealed that he went through blood transfusion. While thanking the Nigerian people for their prayers, the President announced that he might soon travel back for further medical treatment.

    “A few weeks ago, the Governor of Kaduna State, Mr. Nasir El-Rufai urged Nigerians to give President Buhari time to recover from his sickness. The plea was made after the Governor had visited and presumably assessed the state of the President at the presidential Villa in Abuja.

    “However, due to the apparent deterioration in the President’s health condition, he has neither been seen in public in the last one week nor attended the last two meetings of the Federal Executive Council. His absence at the last Jumat service in the Villa has fueled further speculations and rumours on President Buhari’s medical condition.

    “But instead of embarking on regular briefing on the actual state of the health of President Buhari, officials of the Federal Government have continued to assure the Nigerian people that the is no need for apprehension over the matter.

    “In defending the absence of the President at the last FEC meeting and other state functions, the Senior Special Assistant to the President on Media and Publicity, Mr. Garba Shehu stated that the President’s doctors have advised on his taking things slowly, as he fully recovers from the long period of treatment in the United Kingdom some weeks ago.

    “As we join the Nigerian people of goodwill to pray for a speedy recovery of President Buhari, we are compelled to advise him to heed the advice of his personal physicians by taking a rest to attend to his health without any further delay.”