Ezekwesili challenges Okonjo-Iweala to account for 'missing' $10.8billion' oil money
Former Minister of Education Mrs Oby Ezekwesili has challenged
the Minister of Finance, Dr. Ngozi Okonjo Iweala to clear the air on the
alleged $10 billion missing oil money.
Ezekwesili, a former Vice President of the World Bank, for African
region, want the minister of finance and the Nigerian National
Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) to give more detailed explanation of how
the money was spent.
According to her, the story as being told by the NNPC is not believable.
The Governor of the Central Bank of Nigeria, Lamido Sanusi, had, in a
memo to President Goodluck Jonathan accused the NNPC of diverting huge
oil revenue that should be paid to the federation account.
Mr. Sanusi had alleged that the NNPC systematically diverted more than
76 per cent of revenues realised from crude oil sales between January
2012 and July 2013, paying only 24 per cent of the proceeds from crude
oil sales within the period into the federation account.
Later, at the end of a purported reconciliation meeting with the NNPC
and other agencies, the CBN governor and Mrs. Okonjo-Iweala claimed the
bulk of the money was not missing, but that about $10.8billion was yet
to be accounted for.
The NNPC claimed, last week, that the missing $10.8 billion was spent on
oil subsidy payments, repairs of vandalized oil pipeline facilities and
operational costs.
However, the NNPC's explanation appeared not to have convinced some
Nigerians, who feel that the manner the issue was handled by the
government left much to be desired.
Premium Times reports that . Ezekwesili says she is is one of such
Nigerians dissatisfied with the explanations offered by the NNPC.
She wrote in her tweeter handle, @obyezeks, at about 4:44 p.m. Nigerian
time, on Wednesday, to express disappointment and frustration at the
NNPC's lack of accountability.
The former minister of education, popularly known as 'Madam Due Process'
for her consistent insistence on transparency and accountability, in a
series of tweets urged Nigerians to stand up and demand accountability
over the matter.
She challenged Mrs. Okonjo-Iweala to personally shoulder the
responsibility of accounting to Nigerians about the 'missing money,
pointing out that 'a good place to start would be if the Coo
(Coordinating) Minister of Economy can sign off on NNPC's breakdown of
the 'missing $10Billion'.
She said, 'Madam Minister, @NOIweala, can we please v (verify?) your
signed off breakdown of the 'missing $10Billion' that NNPC must account
for?,' she asked. 'It would help raise confidence in the administration
if you! @NOIweala took up the accounting for the 'missing $$10 Billion'.
She asked her former colleague in the Executive Council of the
Federation, FEC, to take advantage of her presentation of the details of
the 2014 budget on Monday to also give the breakdown of the 'missing
$10.8billion' oil money. 'Since you @NOIweala will be presenting
#Budget2014 breakdown on the 22nd. Also provide break down of 'missing
$10Billion. We cannot continue to have an NNPC that behaves as if it is
independent of our Ministry of Finance. Citizens must insist!,' she
said.
Justifying her demand for Mrs. Okonjo-Iweala to take personal
responsibility to render account, Mrs. Ezekwesili noted that
'statutorily, the NNPC must render accounts to her, @NOIweala, as our
finance minister. If she signs off, we ought to assume all is well.'
'… until NNPC realizes that Citizens will not believe their accounting
without @NOIweala …. Signing off the appropriateness and accuracy of
those 'operational expenditure', they will repeat bad behaviour again',
she said.
Pre-empting possible attacks from some Nigerians who might not share her
view on her advice to Mrs. Okonjo-Iweala, the former World Bank Vice
President noted: 'There will of course be some of the typical 'chicken
that defends Christmas' behaviour by some trollers on my TL (timeline),
but you waste your time….
'Some of the 'chicken that defends Christmas' behaviour would even be
put up by some of the 54% jobless youths that cannot connect the dots.'
She challenged other Nigerians who are worried over the issue to respond
to her tweet. 'If as a Citizen, you are as vexed as I am at the way the
issue of 'missing $10Billion' has been handled tweet @ me'.
The former minister continued, 'Citizens who allow politicians to set
the agenda while they just react have themselves to blame for lack of
tangible result from governance.
'The day we begin to see tangible results from governance is the day
Citizens master agenda setting around the deep challenges of our
society.
'Is there yet a detailed breakdown of the 'missing' $10Billion that NNPC said it used for 'XYZZY & Operational Expenses?'.
Apparently drawing the attention of members of the National Assembly to
what their role should be in resolving the issue, Mrs. Ezekwesili
queried: 'Can the NASS gain the confidence of citizens by ending 'tales'
of this kind where $$10 Billion is so lightly esteemed?'
'Does NNPC know that some African countries sweat to raise $5Million to stay afloat? And here, $10Billion is waved off?'
Mrs. Ezekwesili also took a swipe at the media for not paying sufficient
attention to the matter, saying 'When citizens and media act
unperturbed by the 'murky' accounting for the 'missing $10Billion, the
rest of the world hiss!'.
Drawing the attention of the NNPC to her campaign for accountability on
the issue, she said: 'Hello, NNPC! Here is one Citizen that demands
accurate accounting for the 'missing' $10Billion. What happened to it?
What?'
The handling of the controversy by the government has irked a lot of
Nigerians, who feel there are more to the explanations so far given by
the parties involved.
For the Chairman, House Committee on Finance, Abdulmumini Jubrin, who
was commenting on the issue during a recent television interview last
week, the NNPC's explanation on the missing billions is unacceptable.
'For me, NNPC's explanation is an afterthought,' Mr. Jubrin said. 'If
the NNPC knew the $10.8billion was spent on the payment of fuel subsidy
and repair of vandalized pipelines, why did they wait for several weeks
to tell Nigerians that?'
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