Reps
Probe NNPC’s Alleged $6.8bn Fraud
The House of
Representatives, yesterday, started an all-inclusive investigation into alleged
fraudulent activities of the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation, NNPC,
with Vitol and Transfigura Commodity Trading Firms.
This was sequel to a motion entitled
Urgent Need to Investigate the Alleged Connivance of the Nigerian National
Corporation, NNPC, with Swiss Oil Dealers to Rob Nigeria Billion of Dollars,
moved by Abiodun Balogun (APC, Ogun State).
Balogun, in his prayers, said that the
long-standing allegation of secrecy surrounding the operations of NNPC and the
oil industry was recently blown open by a new report of The Berne Declaration,
a Swiss non-government advocacy organization that gave account of a series of
illegal practices involving NNPC, which also allegedly connived with major
Swiss oil trading companies to drain Nigeria of billions of dollars through the
sale of crude oil below the market value.
According to him, the report, entitled
Swiss Traders Opaque Deals in Nigeria, further stated that NNPC has so far
duped the country of 6.8 billion dollars through some “Letter Box Companies.”
He noted that “exclusive and
nontransparent” partnerships of Vitol and Transfigure with NNPC gave them over
36 percent of the market share with NNPC selling its crude oil at various
discounts.
Nigerian records
Nigerian records
The lawmaker stressed that it was
worrisome to learn that Nigeria is the only major oil-producing nation that
sells 100 per cent of its crude to private traders rather than in the open
market, which would enable it benefit from the resulting benefit with the
greatest number of beneficiaries of export allocations.
Also worrisome to Balogun was the fact
NNPC and its subsidiaries have not published their financial details since
2005.
In a unanimous decision thereafter, the
House sustained the motion when subjected to vote by the Deputy Speaker, Emeka
Ihedioha, who presided over the plenary.
It subsequently directed its standing
committees on Petroleum Resources (Upstream), Petroleum Resources (Downstream)
and Justice to probe all issues raised and report back within four weeks.
Meanwhile, attempts made earlier by the
Minority Leader Femi Gbajabiamila (APC, Lagos) to include Committee on Public
Accounts in the probe and another which came in the form of amendment motion by
Abubakar Momoh (APC Edo) to delete the inclusion of the Justice Committee and
replace it with that of Finance Committee, were killed by the lawmakers led by
Deputy House Leader, Leo Ogor (Delta PDP).
Ogor said it was irrelevant to include
the two committees when the House had appropriate committees for such
investigations. [Vanguard]


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