The
presidency has dismissed the claim that $25 billion contracts were awarded by
the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) or that the amount is
missing.
According to
the Senior Special Assistant to the Vice President on Media and Publicity, Mr.
Laolu Akande, no contracts were awarded by the NNPC based on the memo of the
Petroleum Resources Minister of State, Dr. Ibe Kachikwu to President Muhammadu
Buhari, even though the impression has been maliciously created in the past few
weeks.
While
responding to media inquiries yesterday on the matter, Akande disclosed that a
closer look at each of the said projects reveals clearly that they are not
procurement contracts.
“When I tweeted
on Thursday morning last week, I had indicated that the vice president, while
acting as president, approved joint venture financing arrangements. But for
some curious reasons, a few media reports used that tweet to report that I said
the then acting president approved N640 billion worth of oil contracts. The
report is both false and misleading and therefore ought to be completely
ignored by all seekers of truth,” Akande said.
According to
him, what is more important is that “when you look diligently at the referenced
projects/transactions one by one, you will see, as NNPC has shown, that none of
them is actually a procurement contract.
“Take both
the Crude Term Contract and the Direct Sale, Direct Purchase (DSDP) agreements,
for instance, these are not procurement contracts involving the expenditure of
public funds. Both transactions are simply a shortlisting process in which
prospective off-takers of crude oil and suppliers of petroleum are selected
under agreed terms, and in accordance with due process.
“It is
therefore wrong and misleading to refer to them as though they’re contracts
involving the expenditure of NNPC funds, or public funds of any sort. As you
now know, the Minister of State for Petroleum Resources himself has clarified
that he meant to focus on administrative and governance issues, not to red-flag
any fraud because no fraud exists in this matter.”
Akande said
it was not true and also inaccurate to attach $10billion and $5billion values
to both transactions. “Attaching monetary values to these contracts is an
arbitrary act that completely distorts the understanding of the situation.
“Nigerians
ought to be informed clearly that whenever there is a monetary value on any
consignment of crude oil lifted in this country by any firm, the proceeds go
directly to the Federation Account and not to any company. In fact, the Buhari
administration in the implementation of the Treasury Single Account (TSA) has
closed down multiple NNPC accounts in order to promote transparency and
probity.”
The
presidential aide also explained that even in compiling the shortlist for the
prospective off-takers of crude oil and suppliers of petroleum under agreed
terms, “there were public placements of advert in the mass media seeking
Expressions of Interest (EoI). Bids were publicly opened in the presence of
NEITI, DPR, BPP, Civil Society groups and the press. In some cases even, these
events were televised live.”
He disclosed
that the Ajaokuta-Kaduna-Kano (AKK) gas pipeline contract “is a
contractor-financed contract which has not yet been finalised or awarded; it is
still making its way to the Federal Executive Council (FEC).”
According to
Akande, there are three presidential approvals given on joint venture financing
arrangements, meaning loans to cater for cash call obligations. He said that
one of them was okayed by the president in 2015, and two by the then acting
president in 2017.
On the
Nigerian Petroleum Development Company (NPDC), he said there was no contract in
the $3billion to $4billion range as reported in the media.
“You can
then see from the foregoing that the $25billion being bandied in the media does
not exist. There is no $25 billion missing,” Akande concluded.
Meanwhile,
elders of Bolo communities in Ogu/Bolo Local Government Area of Rivers State
have taken Kachikwu, Group Managing Director of NNPC, Dr. Maikanti Baru and
Shell Petroleum Development Company of Nigeria Limited before the Federal High
Court, Abuja, over alleged fraud in the ongoing Ogoni oil spill cleanup.
The
communities alleged that the compensation that ought to have been given to them
following two massive oil spills that occurred in their area between 2008 and
2009, was diverted. They said the spills were from the 24-inch Trans-Niger
Pipeline owned by Shell which is the seventh defendant in the suit.
While
Kachikwu, Baru and Shell were sued as the first, third and seventh defendants,
other defendants in the matter include minister of environment, chairman and
members, board of trustees of Hydrocarbon Pollution Remediation Project
(HYPREP), chairman and members of the governing council of HYPREP, and the
project cordinator, Dr. Marvin Barinen Dekil.
The
plaintiffs in the suit that was endorsed by two representatives of the
Amayanabo leaders, Chief Inyengimiesi Igbikowibo Ayomadiki and Chief Marshal
Da-Ockiya Oforibokakaka, told the court that Shell admitted liability over the
spills that affected their swamps, creeks, drinking water sources, fishes and
general environment and lifestyle.
They also
stated that owing to the level of devastation the oil spill caused to their
environment, the Federal Government, in conjunction with Shell and UNEP,
commissioned a study to look at the environmental pollution in Ogoniland and
its effect on the people, without getting them involved in the exercise.
According to
the communities, when the UNEP report was released in August 2011, their
communities discovered that oil well facilities in Bodo West oil fields
operated by Shell were arbitrarily regarded as part of Ogoniland oil
facilities, and the compensation meant for them diverted.
They told
the court that the Federal Government equally sidelined them in HYPREP that was
set up in 2016 to oversee the cleanup and restoration of polluted areas.
Specifically,
the plaintiffs through their lawyer, Mr. Ngo Obanga, are praying for an order
of court interpreting a portion of page 53 of the Environmental Assessment of
Ogoniland (UNEP) Report of 2011, which provides as follows: “That Bodo West is
an area within the extensive network of creeks. Though uninhabited, it included
a number of oil wells. The wells themselves are submerged, while the associated
production station (now decommissioned) is on land.
“That Bodo
West is officially mapped as belonging to Ogu/Bolo LGA but since there are no
local settlements, it has been regarded by both SPDC and the Ogoniland as oil
facilities. Bodo West was therefore included in the scope of UNEP’s work.”
Consequently,
they are asking the court to grant them N5 billion as general damages against
the seventh defendant for misrepresentation and attempt to erode the dignity
and deprive the plaintiffs of their constitutional rights under the 1999
constitution as amended.
0 Comments