Probe Missing $15bn, ₦200bn Oil Revenues, SERAP Asks Tinubu

The Socio-Economic Rights and Accountability Project (SERAP) has called on President Bola Tinubu to immediately set up a pres­idential panel of enquiry to promptly probe the highly indicting al­legations that over US$15 bil­lion of oil revenues, and ₦200 billion budgeted to repair the refineries are missing and unaccounted for between 2020 and 2021, as document­ed by the Nigeria Extractive Industries Transparency Ini­tiative (NEITI).

SERAP also asked the president to name and shame anyone suspected to be re­sponsible for the missing and unaccounted public funds and to ensure their effective prosecution as well as the full recovery of any proceeds of crime.

President Tinubu was also urged to fully implement all the recommendations by NE­ITI in its 2021 report, and to use any recovered proceeds of crime.

In the letter dated Sep­tember 23, 2023, and signed by SERAP deputy director, Kolawole Oluwadare, the organisation said: ‘There is a legitimate public interest in ensuring justice and ac­countability for these serious allegations. Taking these im­portant measures would end the impunity of perpetrators.

“As President and Minis­ter of Petroleum Resources, your office ought to be con­cerned about these damning revelations, by getting to the bottom of the allegations and ensuring that suspected perpetrators are promptly brought to justice, and any missing public funds fully recovered.

“Any failure to investigate these grave allegations, bring suspected perpetrators to jus­tice and recover any missing public funds would have seri­ous resource allocation and exacerbate the country’s debt burden.

“It would also create cyni­cism, suspicion, and eventu­ally citizens’ distrust about the ability of your govern­ment to combat high-level official corruption, as well as deter foreign investment and limit growth and devel­opment.

“We would, therefore, be grateful if the recommended measures are taken within seven days of the receipt and/ or publication of this letter. If we have not heard from you by then, SERAP shall consid­er appropriate legal actions to compel your government to comply with our request in the public interest.

“The findings by NEITI suggest a grave violation of the public trust and the pro­visions of the Nigerian con­stitution 1999 [as amended], national anticorruption laws, and the country’s obligations under the UN Convention against Corruption.

“The allegations of cor­ruption documented by NE­ITI undermine economic development of the country, trap the majority of Nigeri­ans in poverty and deprive them of opportunities.

“Your government has a constitutional duty to en­sure transparency and ac­countability in the spending of the country’s wealth and resources.

“According to the 2021 report by the Nigeria Ex­tractive Industries Transpar­ency Initiative (NEITI), gov­ernment agencies including the Nigerian Petroleum De­velopment Company (NNPC) and the Nigerian Upstream Petroleum Regulatory Com­mission (NPDC) failed to re­mit $13.591 million and $8.251 billion to the public treasury.

“The NNPC and NPDC failed to remit over 70% of these public funds. NEITI wants both the NNPC and NPDC to be investigated, and for the missing public funds to be fully recovered.

“The report also shows that in 2021, the state owned enterprises (SOE) and its sub­sidiaries (the NNPC Group) reportedly spent US$6.931bil­lion on behalf of the Federal Government but without ap­propriation by the National Assembly. The money may be missing.

“The NNPC also reported­ly obtained a loan of $3 bil­lion in 2012 purportedly to settle subsidy payments due to petroleum product market­ers but there is no disclosure of the details of the loan, sub­sidy and the beneficiaries of the payments.

“The report also shows that N9.73 billion was paid to the NNPC as pipeline transportation revenue earned from Joint Venture operations but the money was neither remitted to the federation nor properly ac­counted for. The NPDC in 2021 also failed to remit $7.61 million realised from the sale of crude oil.

“The report documents that about N200 billion was spent on refineries rehabili­tation between 2020 and 2021 but ‘none of the refineries was operational in 2021 de­spite the spending.’ NEITI wants the spending to be in­vestigated, as the money may be missing.

“Section 13 of the Nige­rian constitution 1999 [as amended] imposes clear re­sponsibility on your govern­ment to conform to, observe and apply the provisions of Chapter 2 of the constitution. Section 15(5) imposes the re­sponsibility on your govern­ment to ‘abolish all corrupt practices and abuse of power’ in the country.

“Under Section 16(1) of the constitution, your govern­ment has a responsibility to ‘secure the maximum wel­fare, freedom and happiness of every citizen on the basis of social justice and equality of status and opportunity.’

“Section 16(2) further provides that ‘the material resources of the nation are harnessed and distributed as best as possible to serve the common good.’

‘Similarly, articles 5 and 9 of the UN Convention against Corruption also impose legal obligations on your government to ensure proper management of pub­lic affairs and public funds, and to promote sound and transparent administration of public affairs.

‘The UN Convention against Corruption and the African Union Convention on Preventing and Combat­ing Corruption to which Ni­geria is a state party obligate your government to effective­ly prevent and investigate the plundering of the country’s wealth and natural resources and hold public officials and non-state actors to account for any violations.

‘Specifically, article 26 of the UN Convention requires your government to ensure ‘effective, proportionate and dissuasive sanctions’ includ­ing criminal and non-crim­inal sanctions, in cases of grand corruption.

‘Article 26 complements the more general require­ment of Article 30, Para­graph 1, that sanctions must take into account the gravity of the corruption allegations.

‘Nigeria is also a partici­pating state of the Extractive Industries Transparency Ini­tiative (EITI), which aims to foster greater governmental accountability for the use of natural resource wealth through the creation of a set of international norms on revenue transparency.

EITI also aims to tackle corruption, poverty and con­flict associated with natural resource wealth. Nigeria has the obligations to implement the EITI standard, which sets out the transparency norms with which participating states including Nigeria must comply.

Africa Today News, New York

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