President Muhammadu Buhari |
The people who
misappropriated billions of naira of funds belonging to Nigeria’s state oil
company NNPC, will soon be prosecuted, President Muhammadu Buhari has said,
according to his spokesman, Femi Adesina. President Buhari, who said this on Sunday in New
York at a meeting with President Xi Jinping of China, said his administration
was determined to fully sanitize Nigeria’s oil industry and make it totally
free of corruption and shady deals.
The
President did not, however, indicate how soon the prosecutions would start or
if indeed investigations have been concluded and clearly culpable individuals
established.
The
NNPC under the immediate past administration of President Goodluck Jonathan was
involved in several shady deals, many of which have been cancelled by the
present government. However, Mr. Jonathan’s Petroleum Minister, Diezani
Alison-Madueke, has been away from Nigeria, allegedly in hiding, since Mr.
Buhari was sworn-in as president.
PREMIUM
TIMES report continues:
At
the meeting held on the sidelines of the 70th General Assembly of the United
Nations, Mr. Buhari said that a necessary first step in reforming the oil
sector had already been taken with the appointment of a new management for the
NNPC and its subsequent reorganization.
The
president thanked Mr. Jinping for China’s ongoing help in curbing crude oil
theft from Nigeria.
He applauded China’s interception of shiploads of crude oil stolen from Nigeria, and which were to be sold and proceeds paid into private accounts.
He applauded China’s interception of shiploads of crude oil stolen from Nigeria, and which were to be sold and proceeds paid into private accounts.
“We
know your stand on corruption, and we are grateful. Your continued cooperation
in curbing oil theft from Nigeria will be appreciated,” Mr. Buhari told the
Chinese leader.
He
also assured President Xi Jinping that under its new leadership, the Nigerian
military had been re-trained and re-equipped, and was now making steady gains
against Boko Haram.
Mr.
Jinping told Mr. Buhari that China, which is already involved in Nigeria in
diverse areas like railway, airports, agriculture, and in the Mambilla
Hydro-power project, among others, will increase its investment in the
country’s agricultural sector to support the achievement of domestic food
security.
He also promised further
Chinese investment in Nigeria’s oil and gas industry, and more support for
human capital development in the country.
Dr Ibe Kachikwu |
Kachikwu:
more heads to roll in oil giant
Chinese
to increase investment
The Nation reports that President
Muhammadu Buhari yesterday sent a notice to corrupt Nigeria National Petroleum
Corporation (NNPC) officials – get set for trial. Buhari, who spoke in
the United States; stressed the need to sanitize the oil industry and free it
from shady deals. He said those responsible for the corruption in the oil giant
firm will soon be prosecuted.
The
President spoke in New York during a meeting with President Xi Jinping of China
on the sidelines of the 70th General Assembly of the United Nations (UN).
He
said the first step in this direction had already been taken, with the
appointment of a new management for the NNPC and its subsequent reorganization.
The
President did not indicate how soon the prosecution would start but many
contracts entered into by the Dr. Goodluck Jonathan administration have been
cancelled for being shady.
Buhari
praised President Xi for China’s assistance to Nigeria to curb the theft of
crude oil.
He
applauded China’s interception of a shipload of crude oil stolen from Nigeria,
which was to be sold and the proceeds paid into private accounts.
“We
know your stand on corruption and we are grateful. Your continued cooperation
in curbing oil theft from Nigeria will be appreciated,” he said.
Buhari
told his Chinese counterpart that under his leadership, the military had been
re-trained and re-equipped and was making steady gains in the fight against
Boko Haram.
President
Xi said China was involved in the development of Nigeria in diverse areas, such
as construction of railways, airports, agriculture, and the Mambilla
Hydro-power project, among others.
He
promised that China will increase its investment in Nigeria’s agricultural
sector to boost food security.
Xi
also promised that his country will invest in Nigeria’s oil and gas industry
and assist in the development of human resources.
More
heads will roll in the NNPC as part of the ongoing transformation, Group
Managing Director Dr Ibe Kachikwu said at the weekend.
Kachikwu
said: “I have introduced the three elements I call the three Ps – people,
process and performance. The people aspect is very key. Individuals who are
aged or affected in a wrong that impacted the corporation will obviously be let
out. There is no business in the world for you to keep doing wrong things and
keep progressing. The only way you can do that obviously is that your
performance modelling and evaluation must be very strong.
“Right
now in the system, I will like to see our human resources department doing a
better job of evaluating people’s performance every year. Salary increase will
be done for those who scale the hurdle. One of the things I have started doing
is that we will be doing a weekly report card. The report card takes an issue
every week and basically televised out to every staff and it runs on their
television, which will be the first thing to turn on to see
every Monday. It will happen every week from now till December and
we are dealing with all manner of issues- from performance to behavioural
norms, to where we are headed.”
The
NNPC chief said the idea was to carry everybody along because “in doing such a
restructuring, you ensure everyone is able to determine one’s performance, and
in doing so, people will know when they lost their tab”.
Kachikwu
also stated that as part of the transparency efforts, he would bring back the
auditing firm, PricewaterhouseCooper that just partially audited the NNPC to
conduct a full audit. He said: “The other aspect of transparency is how we deal
with the accounting issues. We are doing a couple of things in this direction.
First we are bringing back the auditors who gave the partial audit to come and
do a full audit.
“The
issue is that they didn’t get all the data, and we will give them all the data
this time. I need to know the true state of all the finances of the corporation
and statement of funds up to this day. Our accounts and finances were last
audited in 2010. They would be audited and drawn currently to 2015, which is
something I hope I will achieve before December.
“What
we know is that whether the account or performance is good or bad is secondary.
But at least we know what the state gets and know what it is you want to work
on. We are doing that and the President is very supportive of that.”
Kachikwu noted that through
the contracts that he cancelled and replaced with new models, including the
delivery of crude oil to the refineries, the Offshore Processing Agreements
(OPA) and the crude, for – product exchange agreement (SWAP), he has been able
to save an average of over US$150 million a month for the nation.
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