Showing posts with label Dr Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Dr Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala. Show all posts

Friday, March 13, 2015

Missing $20 billion: Rep lambasts Okonjo-Iweala, Alison-Madueke for withholding report

A member of the House of Representatives, Moshood Mustapha, has criticised the Minister of Finance, Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala, and her Petroleum Resources counterpart, Diezani Madueke, for refusing to release the forensic audit report on the operations of the Nigeria National Petroleum Corporation, NNPC.


Mr. Mustapha, a member of All Progressives Congress from Kwara State, is the Vice-Chairman, House Committee on Petroleum Resources.


The audit, undertaken by international firm PriceWaterHouseCoopers, indicted the NNPC and recommended that the national oil company refund about $1.48billion to the Federation Account for various unreconciled transactions.


The investigation was carried out over claim that $20 billion oil money had not been accounted for the government-owned company.


The Nigerian government has refused to make the report public despite public outcry. President Goodluck Jonathan only ordered the release of a “highlight” of the report early February, several months after the completion of work by PwC.


Analysts believe the report contains far more serious indictment than reflected in the “highlight”, hence the government’s decision to keep the document under wraps as a crucial election approaches.


In February, Ms. Alison-Madueke said the report will not be published ahead of the elections because Nigeria’s “rabid opposition” will find “all sorts of minute detail (in the full report) to create concern.”


Mrs. Okonjo-Iweala and Alison-Madueke have refused to release the report despite a one-week ultimatum by the House of Representatives.


Speaking to PREMIUM TIMES, Mr. Mustapha condemned the refusal to publish the audit report, describing it as “part of characteristic impunity that defines this government”.


“A minister will feel she can do anything since she has a president that tolerates corruption or when she can go to the judiciary for injunctions to prevent the legislature from doing their constitutional work,” he said.


“Even if she does not honour the ultimatum issued to her to submit the audit report, we could have asked the police to arrest her but is the police independent under this administration to act rightly? But then, we allow Nigerians to see and judge them. And that’s why change is imminent come March 28. It’s not about Sarakis, Buharis, Ameachis but Nigerians’ determination to stop impunity and misgovernance,” he said.


He added that, “it seems to me as insanity when a government sees constructive criticism of the opposition as frustration. For me criticism from APC should make the PDP government more hardworking and do better in terms of governance, having had the consciousness some people are there to check them. Democracy as well as good governance is not possible without viable opposition,”


Mr. Mustapha said the current setting of Nigeria’s petroleum industry is characterised by a lack of transparency and accountability. This, he said, denies the government and citizens “huge funds that should have been freed up for developmental purposes.”


“The way it is nobody knows the quantity of oil we produce. Nobody knows what we earn daily, monthly or yearly. Nobody knows what we pay as part of our obligations in the exploration of crude oil. Nobody knows the account into which proceeds paid and in certain and transparent terms, what goes into the federation account daily.


“Let me give you an example which many find inconsequential but which in reality affects our development drive in this country. The funds meant for operation of Petroleum Trust Development Fund (PTDF) are not being remitted. With that, many of our citizens on scholarship abroad have been abandoned and not been funded adequately. Similarly, PTDF has been stifled and finds it difficult to perform its even domestic obligations in different areas including education which is the bedrock of any development,” he said.


Responding to the question of solution to the absence of accountability and transparency in the petroleum industry, the lawmaker said, “The way out is to have the Petroleum Industry Bill in place. “


“It is to regulate the oil and gas industry and promote transparency, accountability and best practices. It will also reform the regulatory, structural, commercial, as well as the fiscal framework of Nigeria’s petroleum industry in order to stop the mismanagement, inefficiency and lack of transparency that characterise the sector.”


He said the National Assembly was careful in passing the law to ensure Nigerians are given the best provisions.



Missing $20 billion: Rep lambasts Okonjo-Iweala, Alison-Madueke for withholding report

Tuesday, April 29, 2014

Boko Haram came up because of 2015 - Okonjo-Iweala

By Ehi Ekhator


The Federal Government has said yesterday that Boko Haram insurgents came up as a result of the coming Presidential election in 2015 as people are fighting for power using different necessary means.


This was made known by the Minister of Finance, Dr. Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala in an interview conducted by Reuters in Abuja as she was on her way to the airport en route New York.


Tax, Federal Government, Okonjo-Iweala, Nigeria economy Tax, Federal Government, Okonjo-Iweala, Nigeria economy


She said “There is no war… there is an insurgency. We are not in a Colombia situation,” she added, rejecting comparisons with Colombia which has, for decades, battled a major left-wing insurgency that often affected large swathes of its national territory.


Talking about democracy in Nigeria, she said: “We tend to notice that when the electoral cycle comes in, all these things heat up. What we are going through now is democracy in raw form, because people are fighting for power and they will use anything to get there … and to win the election,” .


She stressed that Boko Haram in their bid to carve out Islamic state has destroyed schools, churches, government offices and security posts in Adamawa, Yobe and Borno, but in all, their fight only affect around 5% of the country’s territory.


She didn’t forget to mention that the insurgents can expand to other terrories as they strike last month in Abuja, Nyanya Motor Park which took the lives of about 75 innocent Nigerians.


The Minister of Finance assured that the Federal Government are working round the clock to bring the insurgency to an end.


She highlighted some of the strategies put in place by the government to tackle the menace, which she listed as:


  • Recruitment of more people into the Armed Forces

  • Increased spending to tackle the sect’s threat and;

  • A Marshall plan for the northeast aimed at lifting the area out of poverty and underdevelopment.

She disclosed further that the sect was receiving support from Cameroon, Niger and Chad, adding that there were plans put in place to stop its sponsors from other militant Islamic groups in the Sahel.


She said : “We need to look at the source of this financing,” she said, stressing that President Goodluck Jonathan was working to obtain regional cooperation to remove Boko Haram’s support from Jihadi groups in the Sahel.”


She said that though Boko Haram had a negative impact on percentage point off Nigeria’s GDP in 2013, she assured that it could still be contained.


“We think we can absorb it, but of course, if like last year, it continues, then we have to make an estimate of the impact,” Okonjo-Iweala said.


She said that Nigeria had in the past stopped stopped insurgencies like Niger Delta militants, adding that Boko Haram can not in anyways be compare to Biafran War that divided the country from 1967-1970.


Responding to questions on abducted girls which has caused uproar among Nigerians, the minister said:  “We recognize that this is an inclusion problem … the fact that the human development indicators in that part of the country are among the lowest,” and hoped that politicians would heed President Goodluck Jonathan’s appeal for unity.


“Everybody has now come together and said this is ridiculous, crazy, unacceptable, for our children to go to school and be sleeping in their beds at night and for some people to come and abduct them,” Okonjo-Iweala said, referring to the schoolgirls’ abduction in which hundreds are still missing. Nigeria as a nation will overcome this,” she added, even as she stressed that the government was working to obtain backing from donors for the programme.


She stressed that despite the set back by the insurgents, the rebashing of the GDP last month, making the country the largest economy ahead of South Africa, more investors are looking closely at Nigeria.


She added “Nobody who is making an investment has so far said they will not make one, that we know of,” .


 



Boko Haram came up because of 2015 - Okonjo-Iweala