Tag: Okonjo-Iweala

  • Lack of will to save: Okonjo-Iweala must be prosecuted, says South East APC

    Lack of will to save: Okonjo-Iweala must be prosecuted, says South East APC

    The All Progressives Congress (APC) in the Southeast wants former Minister of Finance and Coordinating Minister for the Economy, Dr. Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala, prosecuted for her conspiracy in what the party termed squandering of the nation’s oil resources by the Jonathan administration.

    Reacting yesterday to a statement by Okonjo-Iweala in the USA that the last administration lacked the political will to save for the rainy day, spokesman for the APC caucus in the geo-political zone ,Mr. Osita Okechukwu, said  the former minister’s open confession was an admission of her conspiracy in alleged  mismanagement of the oil windfall of the period.

    The minister, however, denied yesterday that she indicted the former president.

    She said it was the state governors and not Jonathan who made saving difficult.

    “My understanding  is that ex-president Jonathan handed over the economy to our sister to manage because of her acclaimed international pedigree,” Okechukwu said.

    Dismissing the claim that she was not the President and the buck didn’t stop at her desk, Okechukwu said “Ngozi could should have resigned, that’s the path of honour and rectitude. It is easy to sit in her comfort zone in the United States and plot an escape route from the economic adversity she unleashed on Nigerians.”

    However,the former minister yesterday said it was actually the state governors that made saving difficult and not Dr.Jonathan.

    She cited the Excess Crude Account (ECA) and the Sovereign Wealth Fund (SWF) which she said were vehemently  opposed by the governors for the purpose of saving for the future.

    The ex-minister who spoke though her media aide, Paul Nwabuikwu, said: ”Contrary to the slant given by these loud headlines, Dr Okonjo-Iweala did not indict the Jonathan administration in which she served.

    “Rather, she was referring to what many Nigerians already know: the strong opposition by some governors to the Jonathan government  efforts to save in the Excess Crude Account and the Sovereign Wealth Fund sabotaged this important national priority.

    “The governors’ criticism of Dr Okonjo-Iweala’s many calls for the country to save for the rainy day are still fresh

  • Okonjo-Iweala under probe for €3.6m vehicles deal

    Okonjo-Iweala under probe for €3.6m vehicles deal

    EFCC to quiz ex-Service Chiefs in new phase of arms cash investigation

    Another round of investigations into the $2.1billion arms deals is to begin tomorrow, Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) sources said yesterday.

    Top on the agenda is how the Dr. Goodluck Jonathan Administration bought €3,654,121million vehicles for the Republic of Niger in October 2013 and April 2014.

    The cash was withdrawn from the Office of the National Security Adviser (ONSA) account in two installments of €1, 401,869 and €2,252,252.25,

    The commission is also seeking to verify whether or not the vehicles were bought and under diplomatic or bilateral security cooperation.

    The EFCC is to find out from the Republic of Niger if there was such assistance from Nigeria.

    The agency plans to quiz some more public figures, including former Minister of Finance Dr. Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala, some former Service Chiefs and serving military officers in connection with the $2.1billion arms deals.

    Some suspects may be taken into custody, it was learnt.

    The EFCC,it was gathered, is through with the first phase of the probe, which led to the arraignment of ex-National Security Adviser (NSA) Sambo Dasuki and 10 others.

    The interrogation of the likes of Dasuki and the others now facing trial or about to be arraigned seems to have convinced the agency of the need to dig deeper than originally planned.

    A top source said: “We are beginning the second phase of the ongoing investigation of the $2.1b arms deals on Monday. From the preliminary findings, the scandal is mind-boggling.

    “We are going to question more high-profile serving and former public officers, including a former Minister of Finance, Dr. Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala, on the release of some funds.

    “We want the ex-Minister to shed more light on how about $322million was disbursed to the Office of the National Security Adviser(ONSA).

    “Some serving and former military chiefs will have to respond to issues which we have already isolated for clarification.”

    The source said investigators had already obtained the list of military equipment which were bought and the inventory by the Armed Forces.

    “This explains why some serving and former military chiefs will need to come and assist our investigators,”he said.

    “Some of the companies which supplied these equipment have been contacted too.”

    On the purchase of security vehicles for Niger Republic,the EFCC is said to have established that the money was withdrawn from the ONSA account in two installments of €1, 401,869 and €2,252,252.25,

    The commission is keen to confirm whether or not the vehicles were bought and under what diplomatic or bilateral security cooperation.

    It was gathered that it will require finding out from the Republic of Niger if there was such assistance from Nigeria.

    The initial cash of €1, 401,869 was drawn from the Central Bank in an October 2013 through ONSA memo ACCT/87/VOL.1/384.

    The second tranche of €2,252,252.25 was got from the CBN in an April 1, 2014 via a memo ACCT/87/VOL.1/60

    The first memo to the CBN Governor, “Transfer of foreign exchange”, said: “You are please requested to transfer the sum of €1, 401,869.00 only in favour of SEI Societe d’equipments Internanaux-Niamey-Niger BP 11737 as payment for the supply of security vehicles to Republic of Niger. The wire transfer details are as follows: Banque: SONIBANK (Republique du Niger-Niamey). Compete N025111123981/22. Code Banque:80064. Code Guichrt: 01001.

    “The amount should be charged to National Security Adviser Account no. 0020172241019 with the Central Bank of Nigeris Abuja and all charges thereto.

    “Please accept the assurances of the National Security Adviser.”

    Magu, earlier in the day told the House of Representatives Committee on Financial Crimes that Okonjo-Iweala, former Minister of Petroleum Resources Mrs Diezani Alison-Madueke and one of her associates, Mr, Kola Aluko, are being investigated.

    He also told the committee, why defending the EFCC’s 2016 Budget, that the agency should be supported to hire additional 750 employees in different cadres.

    Magu also sought the backing of the committee to consider and approve “additional N500,000 million to assist in our operational activities as more sectors of the economy may likely come under investigative activities during the year.”

    Magu said the agency’s estimate is made up ofN11, 422, 991, 540.00 for capital, and N2,999,245,761.00 as the overhead component of the recurrent. He requested that “the National Assembly should graciously support a planned recruitment of additional 750 employees of different cadres in 2016.”

    A second memo said: “You are please requested to transfer the sum of €2, 252, 252.25 only in favour of SEI Societe d’equipments Internanaux-Niamey-Niger BP 11737 as payment for the supply of security vehicles to Republic of Niger. The wire transfer details are as follows: Banque: SONIBANK (Republique du Niger-Niamey). Compete N025111123981/22. Code Banque: 80064. Code Guichrt: 01001.

    “The amount should be charged to National Security Adviser Account no. 0020172241019 with the Central Bank of Nigeria,Abuja and all charges thereto.

    “Please accept the assurances of the National Security Adviser.”

    The EFCC has intensified its collaboration with the National Crime Agency in the United Kingdom, with the ongoing probe of former Minister of Petroleum Resources, Mrs. Diezani Alison-Madueke.

    The International Corruption Unit (ICU) of NCA on October 2 arrested Mrs. Alison-Madueke and four others.

    The identities of the remaining four suspects are yet to be unveiled.

    But all the suspects are being investigated for alleged bribery and money laundering.

    The EFCC source, who is actively involved in the ongoing investigation, said: “We have been collaborating with NCA on Diezani’s case, which has reached an appreciable level.

    “We have the details of others arrested with Diezani but we will not disclose until the matter gets to a convenient bend.

    “So far, we have been comparing notes with NCA on a faster note in terms of tracking a few transactions and documents. There is no hiding place for the ex-Minister and her alleged accomplices.

    “By the time the trial begins, the NCA and EFCC would have established a solid case against the ex-Minister and other suspects.”

     

  • EFCC ‘investigating’ Okonjo- Iweala, Diezani, Aluko

    The former Minister of Finance Minister, Dr. Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala, is being investigated by the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission in connection with corruption cases perpetrated during the last administration, the chairman of the anti-graft agency, Ibrahim Magu, said on Monday.

    Magu, who spoke during the budget defence session with the House of Representatives Committee on Financial Crimes, added that a former Minister of Petroleum Resources, Mrs. Diezani Allison-Madueke, is also under the EFCC radar.

    Kola Aluko, a close associate of the former Petroleum minister, alleged to have helped in taking a large chunk of the nation’s funds out of the country, is also being investigated by the commission.

    Magu, who responded to questions by a member of the committee, Hon. Razak Atunwa , on whether the two  ex-ministers and Aluko were included in the EFCC investigative list, said “very soon, we will go into the petroleum industry.”

    “Such investigation requires that we have to build capacity, we have to bring in experts to enable us tackle what we are doing properly and the investigation must be conducted properly. We have internal lawyers and external lawyers, we have to pay insurance,” he stated.

    Magu had earlier in his speech asked the committee to consider and approve additional N500 million to assist the EFCC operational activities as more sectors of the economy may come under investigation during the year.”

     

     

  • Falana to Okonjo-Iweala: I want to stop impunity

    Falana to Okonjo-Iweala: I want to stop impunity

    Lagos lawyer, Femi Falana (SAN), on Wednesday said his petitions to anti- graft agencies and the Special Prosecutor of the International Criminal Court (ICC) were anchored on law and facts, insisting that he has nothing personal against any person in the ongoing battle to end impunity and retrieve the nation’s looted funds from corrupt elements and institutions.

    Falana made this declaration while reacting to comments credited to the former Minister of Finance, Dr. Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala following his petition to the ICC for investigation into alleged crimes against humanity by serving and retired military officers and their civilian accomplices who were alleged to have diverted over $8 billion earmarked for procurement of arms for counter insurgency operations in the northeast.

    The lawyer declined to exchange what he termed “vulgar abuse” with the former minister who he said was attempting to extricate herself from the mass looting of the commonwealth under her watch.

    He said Dr. Okonjo-Iweala is always quick to deflect criticisms by accusing anyone seeking to hold her to account for her appalling records in government of ulterior political motives.

    He recalled that when a former Governor of the Central Bank of Nigeria, Prof. Chukwuma Soludo, alleged that about N30 trillion could not be accounted for under her watch, he (Soludo) was described as  “an embittered loser” in the Nigerian political space.

    “When Comrade Adams Oshiomole questioned the illegal withdrawal of $2 billion from the Excess Crude Account, he was accused of having animus towards her because she had blocked Edo State from obtaining a loan,” Falana stated.

    The rights activist said the ex- minister‘s claim that he is not familiar with the mandate of the ICC shows that she has not been following the practice of the court and its active and robust approach to its mandates, in particular with regard to the investigation of crimes in Darfur, the warrant of arrest for Joseph Kony (Uganda), and the warrant of arrest for Ahmad Harun, (Sudan).

     

  • Alleged $2.1b arms scandal: Okonjo-Iweala slams Falana for comment

    Alleged $2.1b arms scandal: Okonjo-Iweala slams Falana for comment

    Former Minister of Finance Dr. Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala has described as a joke, attempts by Mr. Femi Falana (SAN) to link her to the alleged $2.1 billion arms scandal.

    Dr. Okonjo-Iweala, in a statement by her media adviser, Paul Nwabuikwu, said she “has absolutely nothing to do with the alleged misuse of $2.1 billion by the Office of the former National Security Adviser”.

    The statement said: “Falana and his sponsors are simply trying to invent a connection, where there is none.”

    She noted that she “sought and received the approval of former President Jonathan for the release of part of the newly returned Abacha funds to the NSA for purchase of arms, which is totally separate from the $2.1 billion issue”.

    On the recovered Abacha funds, the statement added: “Some of the funds recovery was done under the regime of General Abdulsalami Abubakar and the first term of President Olusegun Obasanjo, when Dr. Okonjo-Iweala was not even in government.”

    During her time as Finance minister in the second term of Obasanjo administration, Dr. Okonjo-Iweala said: “$500 million was recovered. As documented by the Field Study conducted by the World Bank with the assistance of national and international NGOs, this amount was properly applied. Falana’s insistence on the contrary shows how despicable he is and how he is ready to ignore facts and concoct a fiction in the service of his sponsors.”

    On her fight against corruption while in office, Dr. Okonjo-Iweala described Falana as “callous beyond belief for ignoring a fact of recent Nigerian history: the kidnap of Professor Kamene Okonjo, the then 83-year-old mother of Dr. Okonjo-Iweala, by agents of fuel subsidy fraudsters, who were angry that the former minister had blocked them from defrauding the country further.”

    According to the statement, “the kidnappers had told the traumatised old woman that they were sent to punish Dr. Okonjo-Iweala for refusing to pay some oil marketers. It is on record with the Department of State Services (DSS) that the kidnappers initially demanded the resignation of Dr. Okonjo-Iweala in return for the release of her mother. Thank God Professor Okonjo is still alive to tell her story today and she will not be silenced.”

    She accused Falana and his alleged sponsors of engaging “in nothing, but media harassment, cyber-bullying and intimidation against innocent persons like Dr. Okonjo-Iweala for political and pecuniary gain”.

  • Attempt to indict me in arms scam a joke – Okonjo-Iweala

    A former Minister of Finance, Dr. Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala, has described as a joke attempt by Lagos lawyer, Mr. Femi Falana, to link her to the raging $2.1 billion arms scandal.

    A statement issued by her media adviser, Paul Nwabuikwu, said the ex-minister “has absolutely nothing to do with the alleged misuse of $2.1billion by the office of the former National Security Adviser.”

    The statement said, “Falana and his sponsors are simply trying to invent a connection where there is none.”

    Okonjo-Iweala she sought and received the approval of former President Goodluck Jonathan for the release of part of the returned Abacha funds to the ex- NSA, Sambo Dasuki, for purchase of arms which is totally separate from the $2.1 billion.”

    She added: “Some of the funds recovery was done under the regime of Gen. Abdulsalami Abubakar and the first term of President Olusegun Obasanjo when Dr. Okonjo-Iweala was not even in government.”

    During her time as Finance minister in the Obasanjo administration, Okonjo-Iweala said $500million was recovered by the government.

    “As documented by the field study conducted by the World Bank with the assistance of national and international NGOs, this amount was properly applied. Falana’s insistence on the contrary shows how despicable he is and how he is ready to ignore facts and concoct a fiction in the service of his sponsors,” the ex-minister stated.

  • One particular record of underachievement APC must avoid: Okonjo-Iweala’s 4% reduction of corruption, waste and squandermania

    One particular record of underachievement APC must avoid: Okonjo-Iweala’s 4% reduction of corruption, waste and squandermania

    First of all, it is useful to revealthe thought, the motivation that inspired the reflections in this piece. This is none other than the profoundly disturbing fear that our new ruling party, the APC, might in the end match the former ruling party, the PDP, in its abysmal record of underachievement. Since it is still very early in the reign of the new ruling party, I admit that this thought, this worry is perhaps unfair and may in the end be unjustified. Moreover, though I am neither a member nor a supporter of the APC as such, I very much want the new ruling party to succeed, if by success we mean a new economic and political order, a new dispensation in which the wealth of the nation is used, not for the few rich and powerful of the land, but to create security, peace, unity, employment opportunities and better and more dignified lives for the vast majority of Nigerians throughout the length and breadth of the country. Any ruling party, any administration that succeeds in achieving these defining aspirations of our peoples in their tens of millions will have my support, even if both its declared and undeclared but practical and effective ideological inclinations are unacceptable to me – as those of the new ruling party, APC, are. How do these musings relate to the topic of this piece?

    Those who are regular readers of this column would, I hope, have immediately recognized the allusion to Dr. Okonjo-Iweala’s 4% reduction of corruption, waste and squandermania in the title of this piece since I have referred to it many times in this column. For readers who may be encountering it for the first time, here’s the relevant fact: in its publication of May 3, 2012, the British bible of global capitalist news reporting and analysis, The Economist, quoted Okonjo-Iweala in a declaration that though corruption and waste were killing Nigeria, they were so monumental in scope that she would be quite happy if by the time she left office in 2015 she would have managed to achieve as little as 4% reduction. I have not stopped being amazed and angered by the scale of the cynicism inherent in this declaration. But in the wake of the declared and still unfolding revelations of Dasukigate, I now have a slightly revised view of the former Finance Minister’s cynicism: as the Coordinating Minister for the Economy, Okonjo-Iweala personally authorized many of the vast, mind-boggling withdrawals from the Central Bank that fueled the Dasukigate bonanza – doesn’t this show that her 4% super-underachievement in corruption and waste reduction was an insider’s knowledge of and acceptance of underachievement as systemic, inevitable and, Heavens help us, enduring?And if that is the case, wouldn’t these systemic and enduring aspects of underachievement of the PDP era persist to haunt and perhaps even trap the new ruling party and the Buhari administration?

    I do not have any definitive answers to these questions, at least not yet; all I can discern for the moment are signs and they are very perturbing signs. For instance, I am almost certain that many of those reading these words do not remember the work of the Ahmed Joda Transition Committee that President-Elect Muhammadu Buhari himself set up to ease his transition from election into incumbency. But dear reader, please take note and remember that the President rejected one of the most crucial recommendations of the Joda Transition Committee and he did so without a single word of explanation. This was the recommendation that since Nigeria under the PDP had one of the largest, most wasteful and most inefficient ministerial cabinets in the whole world, the President should substantially reduce the number of ministers in his cabinet. In making that recommendation, the Joda Committee supplied comparative data and statistics to demonstrate how completely out of step Nigeria under the PDP was in the size and inefficiency of its ministerial cabinet. As a columnist, I was personally very gratified by this particular recommendation of the Joda Committee since I had written a lot about the matter in this column. But the President rejected the recommendation and he did so without any explanations of why he did so.

    There is a plausible reason for the President’s rejection of the recommendation. Moreover, it is worthwhile for us to reflect on the implications of this “explanation” in our reflections in this piece on specters of underachievement that stalk the rule of the APC and the Buhari administration. Here’s the “explanation”: there is a binding clause in the 1999 Constitution that makes it mandatory for the federal ministerial cabinet to have a minister from each of the 36 states of the federation. This in effect means that the President’s “executive” hands were tied; he had no choice but to have at least 36 members of the cabinet. But this is a specious argument and it betrays facile, rigid reasoning. The Joda Committee was very much aware of this constitutional provision, just as I have been aware of it in my innumerable calls for a major downsizing of our ministerial cabinet, but neither the Joda Committee nor I was swayed by this presumed binding force of the constitutional provision.  For the truth of the matter is that our Constitution was made for us; we were not “made” for, and we do not live or die by our Constitution. Indeed, throughout the world and in all periods of modern history, constitutions have been constantly revised in the light of changing times and exigencies. Thus, the President’s rejection of that Joda Committee recommendation is nothing but a demonstration of a lack of political will and vision. In the context of the present discussion, it also shows a predisposition for underachievement due to systemic and enduring features of the rule of the PDP. Let me explain.

    As quiet as it is kept, the single greatest cause of waste, squandermania, inefficiency and underachievement in our political order is not corruption; it is the extremely bloated size and cost of governance in our country. The standard, anodyne way in which this is expressed is the statement we all too often read or hear that recurrent expenditure is far greater than capital expenditure in the budgets of all levels of government in our country, federal, state and local. In reality and in plain language this is nothing other than the fact that we simply cannot afford to have 36 states; we simply cannot afford all the federal and state chief executives, together with their typically very large ministerial cabinets, advisers and assistants. In other words, we hide under the abstract discourse of excess of recurrent expenditure over capital expenditure instead of saying, quite simply and directly, that many of our states should be merged; many of our governors should be let go; and the large armies of administrative and technical support staff in all our state capitals and local government headquarters should be laid off and – redeployed into truly productive employment.

    It is to be hoped that readersof these reflections appreciate the fact that I am not writing these words in a vacuum. Right now, at this very historical and political moment, many states of the federation are on the brink of bankruptcy and many workers have not been paid for months on end. The “convenient” explanation – which is not untrue – is that the departing PDP administrations left the country in a state of undeclared bankruptcy. However, this is only half of the truth. The other half of the story, so far at least, concerns the indications we are receiving every day that the new ruling party does not seem inclined to fundamentally change course from the wasteful, underachieving paths of the PDP. The new legislators are insisting on getting the same jumbo salaries and allowances as the previous set; the Presidency is buying a new fleet of very expensive cars for top officials; the President’s budget for overseas trips has actually been increased, this in a period when shortfalls in revenue expectations have increased sharply; and new mansions are being built for the Vice President and the Senate President, among other top public officeholders, even though there are mansions in Abuja that were built for the previous Vice President and Senate President. At the very least, one would have expected that in a period when hundreds of thousands of workers are unpaid for months and millions of unemployed Nigerians face very bleak prospects, the new ruling party would have gone out of its way to establish a clear difference between itself and the previous ruling party in perpetuating this tradition of extremely indecent and immoral binging by our rulers on our collective wealth.

    It is against this background of a creeping and unsettling sense of business as usual that I locate the line of departure indicated in the title of this piece. By the end of its sixteen-year reign, the previous ruling party had completely given up on any pretense to the pursuit of the common good; it had in fact embraced impunity and underachievement as the barge of its total flight from reality, especially the reality of its clear and looming defeat and consignment to the dustbin of history. Okonjo-Iweala’s 4% abyss of underachievement is the ultimate marker of that flight from reality of the Jonathan administration and the PDP. No matter how much APC is trying – and succeeding – in looking and acting very much like PDP, this Okonjo-Iweala abyss is something that APC should at least avoid reaching or being plunged into. Nowhere is this more palpable than in the declared legal battle against corruption. I have been more restrained in my previous comments on how this is being handled by the administration. I think it is time for me now to state unequivocally that the level of preparation for this battle by the administration is so lackluster, so mediocre that one can be pardoned if one is beginning to see the specter of underachievement on the scale of the Okonjo-Iweala 4% corruption reduction katakata. The looters are winning; or, they seem far much better prepared for the battle than the Buhari administration. More specifically, the Attorney General of the Federation seems to lack the stomach, the heart and the requisite experience for this battle. In this case, we must prepare ourselves for a long and very ineptly fought battle, even as the administration gives assurance every day that things are going well. I hope I am wrong in this. How I wish I could say that I know that I am wrong in this.

    Biodun Jeyifo

    bjeyifo@fas.harvard.edu

  • Okonjo-Iweala and limits of propaganda

    Okonjo-Iweala and limits of propaganda

    The News condemned her as “The Failed Minister” on the cover of its edition of May 25. On the other hand, Government, a monthly publication of Leadership Newspapers, praised her as the minister who “revamped the Nigerian economy” whatever her critics may say.

    Between the two publications, the vast majority of Nigerians are, I suspect, more likely to agree with the first. And it won’t be for any lack in self-promotion by the woman herself or of support from abroad as someone who, but for her stint as finance minister under two presidents, has worked mostly as a World Bank official at mid to senior levels.

    Most Nigerians are more likely to agree with The News than with Government for the simple reason that, for all her exertions, she left her country’s economy far worse than she met it. Whether it is the cost of borrowing, the rate of inflation, the rates of currency exchange or employment, government’s integrity, public debt, name it, the legacy she left behind on May 29, when Muhammadu Buhari took over fromGoodluck Jonathan as president, was worse than what she had inherited.

    Dr. Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala first served as finance minister under President Olusegun Obasanjo from July 2003, ostensibly on loan from the World Bank under a United Nation’s scheme in which Africans in diaspora returning to serve in their countries were paid their old salaries in dollars. Okonjo-Iweala’s at the World Bank was $240,000.00. Herself and her supporters were to make a song and dance of the great personal sacrifice her forfeiture of this princely salary for the Naira equivalent of a “paltry” $6,000 entailed, when the arrangement became a controversial court case and she, along with Ambassador Olu Adeniji then serving as our foreign minister, lost out.

    What, of course, she and her supporters never talked about was the net benefit she must have enjoyed as the finance minister of the most populous and one of the most prosperous countries in Africa.

    Three years after she first became finance minister, she gave an interview to The Independent of London, which the newspaper published on May 17, 2006. A more blatant exercise at self-promotion would be hard to find. “The woman who has power to change Africa,” as the newspaper described her in its headline to its story of the interview, was “a heroine not just of Nigeria where she is Finance Minister, but of the entire continent. Her crusade against corruption has put her life at risk.’

    In that interview she claimed credit for the jailing of just about every corrupt public official found guilty.”Some very, very powerful people including the inspector general of police,” she said, “have been brought to book. Two judges have been suspended, two sacked outright, three ministers sacked, two rear-admirals, a governor, top Customs officers. Did we get all the people? Not yet – but we’ve got enough to send a powerful signal and (generate) a powerful fear. People in power now know that they can’t act with impunity.”

    The powerful finance minister did not stop at that. Just talking in vague terms in the fight against corruption, she said, was not good enough. “You have to identify the sources of corruption and target them.” So she identified the oil industry and government contracts as top priorities, with the latter, she said, costing almost five times as much as those in neighbouring countries.

    So successful, she said, was her war against corruption that several other African countries had come to take lessons. “Tanzania has just approached us, Togo, Angola –even Egypt is sending a team to look at what we have done on corruption. Would you ever have believed that Nigeria would become a place where people would come to see how to tackle corruption?”

    Judging by The Independent’s enthusiasm for the minister, you would be forgiven the belief that she must’ve been the best thing to happen to Nigeria since independence in 1960. For, not only did the newspaper regurgitate her claim as the scourge of the corrupt Nigerian, it said in effect that hers was the very Midas touch that had already transformed the country’s economy. She, it said, was the one who privatised loss-making steel plants, removed restrictions on telecoms “which produced an increase from just 450,000 land lines to 16 million” mobile phones, reduced import tariffs, increased civil servants’ salaries while slashing their perks and introduced reforms in banking, insurance, pensions, income tax and foreign exchange!

    Reading all this you would find it hard not to wonder how this heroine of Africa did it all alone without help from anyone and without reporting to any boss.

    Four years after her boss unceremoniously removed her in 2007, not just as finance minister but also as head of his economic team, she returned as an even more powerful finance minister by taking over the quasi-official job of the Vice-President as the coordinator of the national economy. In serving as double minister, she apparently fell victim of her own propaganda as a super minister. The joke in many informed circles was that nothing important in any sector of the economy ever got done unless President Jonathan cleared it with her. This was, of course, an exaggeration, but it contained more than a grain of truth.

    Okonjo-Iweala’s total of seven years as a powerful finance minister was, of course, not all an empty barrel. Her boast of being the scourge of corruption may have been just that – a boast – but her innovation of monthly publication of the revenue allocations to the three tiers of government was a great blow for transparency. Again, the partial debt waiver for the country from the Paris Club she helped secure in 2006 may not have been the millennial achievement she and her boss had touted it as, but it certainly gave us a breather and an opportunity to mend our profligate ways.

    Sadly, that opportunity was squandered right under her very nose during her second tenure, when she looked away as the Big Boys – and the Big Girls – stole this country blind through so-called fuel subsidies, industrial scale oil theft, a dubious privatisation scheme, diversion of “Abacha loot”, etc., and, worse, when she herself arbitrarily approved duty waivers worth tens of billions of Naira to hardly deserving beneficiaries.

    The Independent’s “heroine of Africa” is, of course, not without her admirers and allies, many of them powerful outsiders, some of them probably genuine. Trouble is, it is well-nigh impossible for any of them to deny that her achievements have been more on paper than on the ground, as far as most Nigerians can see and feel.

    Here, it spoke volumes about how real her achievements were that she seemed very much on the defensive in a recent interview in London over lunch with the Africa Affairs correspondent of Financial Times, William Wallis.

    In that interview published in the newspaper’s edition of June 5 and reproduced by the Daily Trust on June 12, she could only speak in vague tones about the war against corruption.

    “I feel so alive in my country,” she said, “and I get so sad that the image people have is not of the 99.9 per cent, but this venal, kleptocratic, power-hungry elite that have colonised the country and refused to let go.”

    Reminded by the reporter that this same “industrial scale corruption” of the elite was a big factor in the defeat of her boss in the presidential election and that in the eyes of some Nigerians she was, at best, ineffectual in the fight against it and, at worst, had gone to “the dark side” herself, she resorted to name calling. “They are the ones,” she said on the dark side and I will frustrate them from morning till night…I am a simple person with the same simple taste.” With an apparent touch of sarcasm, the reporter pointed out that as she swore at her traducers, she “(tucked) into a simple chicken tagine.”

    And when he weighed in with the more specific case of former Central Bank governor, Malam Sanusi Lamido Sanusi’s, whistleblowing about the “missing $20 billion” from the federation account, she claimed she was at one with Sanusi but only disagreed with him on the size of the amount and his approach in exposing the amount without consulting her. “I was on top of this thing,” she said. “Months after months, we were recording the amounts…that fell short. We have the records. So we didn’t disagree that amounts were missing – not missing but unaccounted for.”

    Unfortunately for the finance minister, most Nigerians, I suspect, are not likely to recall the issue that way. Instead, they are more likely to remember that she took more than a year to release the report of the external auditors she had appointed to look into the matter. It is instructive that the report, conveniently released just before the presidential election and which initially faulted Sanusi’s claim, was quickly denounced by the auditors as soon as her boss lost his presidential bid.

    The lesson of all this for our president and his ministers should be obvious; at the end of the day, what people see and feel on the ground is what can redeem their image, not the say-so of even the best propagandists one can hire.

     

  • Okonjo-Iweala named in N1.17b ‘suspicious’ transfer

    Okonjo-Iweala named in N1.17b ‘suspicious’ transfer

    Reps probe how ex-minister dumped Jonathan’s directive

    A House of Representatives ad hoc committee is probing the “suspicious” transfer to another account of N1.17bilion approved for a Federal Government agency.

    The committee is seeking answers to why the immediate past Minister of Finance and Coordinating Minister for the Economy, Dr. Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala, reversed a presidential directive which approved the money for the Sokoto Rima River Basin Development Authority (SRRBA).

    Besides, the committee is seeking to establish:

    • Who applied for the withdrawal since payment was initiated through an application by the SRRBDA?
    • How a ministerial directive can override a presidential approval;
    • Where the money was returned to after it was withdrawn from the account of the Authority; and
    • Whether the withdrawal was politically motivated given the time of the withdrawal

    The committee has hinted of the likelihood of inviting the ex-minister.

    Mrs Okonjo-Iweala is at the centre of a storm over her release of $330m Abacha loot to the Office of the National Security Adviser (ONSA), without appropriation. The money, which she said was meant as a loan for arms procurement, later turned out to be part of the cash being shred to politicians and friends of that government before the last general election.

    President Goodluck Jonathan, in a letter, approved the release of the money to the River Basin Authority. The approval was conveyed to the Accountant General of the Federation (AGF) by the (then) minister of Finance, according to the office of the AGF.

    The payment was made into the accounts of the SRRBDA on March 9 but withdrawn in two tranches within a week, two months later in May.

    The first withdrawal of N784m was made on 6th May, 2015. The second, N90m, was effected on 12th May 2015 but executed on 16th May 2015 by the CBN.

    Only N874.6million was withdrawn by the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) from the account of SRRBDA because the agency had started spending the money.

    The investigative hearing by the ad hoc committee was told how the CBN credited and reversed the payment on the directives of the Office of the Accountant General of the Federation (OAGF).

    The Committee, it was learnt, would request from the CBN records of tranfer and reversal of the money from the Natural Resources account and other accounts.

    SRRBDA’s Managing Director (MD) Mukhtar Anka said the agency made an appeal to (then) President Jonathan, knowing that the agency had some outstanding funds with the Federal government, “Because all our previous budgets were never fully released since 2012.

    “We could no longer meet our projects and contractual obligations while our contractors were bothering us.That was why we made the appeal,” he said.

    The representative of the CBN, Suleman Barau, told the committee that the bank carried out its duties based on approved and duly-signed mandates from the OAGF, who owns all accounts of Ministries, Departments and Agencies (MDA).

    Mr. M Dikwa, Director, Funds, who represented the Accountant General of the Federation (AGF), Ahmed Idris, said the reversal of the fund was carried out through a ministerial memoranda, unlike the approval that was effected through a presidential approval.

    He also disclosed that the OAGF will recover the balance from the SRRBDA when there is enough money in its account since it had already spent out of it.

    When the Committee asked the AGF why the withdrawals were made, Dikwa said some discrepancies were discovered after the payment.

    He said the one-page approval letter had no attachment detailing the purpose of the funds. It was also discovered that the Federal Government had already paid the said amount by way of budgetary allocations.

    The committee wondered if the reversal was politically-motivated, considering the period of reversal and the 2015 general elections.

    The Evelyn Oboro-led Committee regretted that many of such payments may have been made by the AGF in the past only to claim to have made new discoveries later.

    When the committee asked the AGF to produce the application for the withdrawal, the AGF could not produce any.

    Also, the AGF had no response when asked by the committee to justify effecting the withdrawal with a ministerial directive while the approval for payment was by a presidential directive .

    The committee faulted the AGF for failing to conduct needs assessment and due diligence before effecting payment of funds to MDAs.

    Oboro said: “Conduct of post mortem after payments does not seem to promote transparency and accountability.

    “We are interested in who applied for the withdrawal since payment was initiated through an application by the SRRBDA.

    “More importantly, there is a need to know how a ministerial directive can override a presidential approval.

    “We also want to know where the money was returned to after it was withdrawn from the account of the Authority.

    “We are only interested in how to make agencies of government can be responsive to the people.

    “This is an organisation that can bring a whole lot to the agricultural sector in that region and the country as a whole, yet through whatever what we are yet to understand, it was being deliberately starved of funds. We are determined to get to the bottom of the matter.”

    The investigation continues.

  • Okonjo-Iweala: Dasuki got $322m Abacha loot from me

    Okonjo-Iweala: Dasuki got $322m Abacha loot from me

    •Arms scam is breach of trust, says Buhari

    •Oshiomhole insists on ex-minister’s trial

    Former Minister of Finance Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala yesterday confirmed that she approved the transfer of $322 million Abacha loot to former National Security Adviser (NSA) Sambo Dasuki to prosecute the fight against Boko Haram. But she said it was a loan.

    Dr. Okonjo-Iweala has been under attack, mainly from Edo State Governor Adams Oshiomhole for allowing expenditure without authorisation.

    Through her media adviser, Paul Nwabuikwu, in a statement last night, the former minister said: “Some new Abacha funds of about $322 million were returned with another $700m still expected to be returned. Former President (Goodluck) Jonathan set up a Committee comprising the former Minister of Justice, former NSA and the former Minister of Finance to determine how best to use both the returned and expected funds for development.”

    Mrs. Okonjo-Iweala said at the meeting, “the NSA made a case for using the returned funds for urgent security operations since, he noted, there cannot be any development without peace and security. Based on this, a decision was taken to deploy about $322m for the military operations, while the expected $700m would be applied for development programmes as originally conceived.”

    Mrs. Okonjo-Iweala stated that based on the urgency of the NSA’s memo, she requested former President Goodluck Jonathan “to approve the transfer of the requested amount to the NSA’s Office for the specified purposes.”

    Mrs. Okonjo-Iweala, referring to the meeting’s memo, said she “insisted on three conditions: a. only a part, not the entire Abacha funds, would be spent on the arms; the rest would be invested in developmental projects as originally conceived b. the money was to be treated as borrowed funds which would be paid back as soon as possible and c. the NSA’s office was to account for the spending to the President who was the Commander-in-Chief, given the fact that the Minister of Finance is not part of the security architecture and does not participate in the Security Council.

    “Throughout 2014, there were public complaints by the military hierarchy to President Goodluck Jonathan about the inadequacy of funds to fight the anti-terror war in the North East, resulting in Boko Haram making gains and even taking territories. A lot of the criticism was directed at the Federal Ministry of Finance under Dr Okonjo-Iweala which was accused of not doing enough to find funds for the operations.”