Missing NNPC money: Emir of Kano reviews PwC report, says report confirms $18.5billion was diverted
Former
Central Bank Governor and now Emir of Kano, Muhammadu Sanusi II who blew the
lid on the missing NNPC money has reviewed the recently released PWC auditors
report on the missing NNPC monies. He shared his thoughts in a piece titled
'Unanswered questions on Nigeria’s missing oil revenue billions" published
in the Financial Times yesterday May 13.
Read what he wrote below
Just over a year
ago President Goodluck Jonathan suspended me from my position as governor of
the Central Bank of Nigeria after I questioned an estimated $20bn shortfall in
oil revenues due to the treasury from the state oil company. As I said then,
you can suspend a man, but you cannot suspend the truth. The publication last
month of a PwC audit into the “missing billions” brings us a step closer to it.
When I was central bank
governor I raised three broad questions. First, did the Nigerian National
Petroleum Corporation remit to the government the entire proceeds of its crude
oil sales? Second, if it did not, is there proof of the purpose to which the
unremitted amounts were applied? And third, did NNPC have the legal authority
to withhold these funds?
Contrary to the claims of
petroleum minister Diezani Alison-Madueke, the audit report does not exonerate
the NNPC. It establishes that the gap between the company’s oil revenues
between January 2012 and July 2013 and cash remitted to the government for the same
period was $18.5bn. And it goes into detail about the NNPC’s account of how it
used that money, which raises serious questions about the legality of the state
oil company’s conduct.
The auditors say a significant
part of the unremitted funds is supposed to have gone towards a kerosene
subsidy that had been stopped two and a half years earlier by the late
President Umaru Yar’Adua. His decree never appeared in the official gazette,
leading some to question whether it ever had legal force.
Evidence disclosed in the
report suggests this is a sideshow. The executive secretary of the agency
charged with administering subsidies confirmed that, acting on Yar’Adua’s
orders, it had ceased granting subsidies on kerosene. There was no
appropriation for such a subsidy in the 2012 or 2013 budgets.
Throughout all this, Nigerians
paid 120-140 naira a litre of kerosene, far more than the supposed subsidised
price of 50 naira. Yet the state oil company withheld $3.4bn to pay for a
subsidy that in effect did not exist. I have consistently held that this was a
scam that violated the constitution and siphoned off money from the treasury.
The second major item raised
in the report relates to the transfer of oil assets belonging to the federation
to the Nigerian Petroleum Development Company, a subsidiary of the NNPC.
NPDC has paid $100m for these
assets, from which it extracted crude valued at $6.8bn but paid tax and
royalties worth $1.7bn in the period scrutinised by the auditors. PwC was
unable to establish how much of the remaining $5.1bn should have been remitted
to the government. But the report showed that, along with the private companies
NPDC partnered with, it was extracting crude worth billions of dollars but
yielding very little revenue for the treasury. I was investigating related
transactions when I was suspended.
The third major item is a
claim of $2.8bn by NNPC for expenses not directly attributable to crude oil
operations; PwC said “clarity is required” on whether such upfront deductions
from remittances to the federation accounts are allowed, or whether the money
should have been remitted to the government. Finally, there are duplicated expenses,
“unsubstantiated” costs, computation “errors” and tax shortfalls; a total of
$1.48bn has to be refunded.
Of the $18.5bn in revenues
that the state oil company did not send to the government, about $12.5bn
appears by my calculations to have been diverted. And this relates only to a
random 19-month period, not the five-year term of Mr Jonathan, the outgoing
president.
Nigerians did not vote for an
amnesty for anyone. The lines of investigation suggested by this audit need to
be pursued. Any officials found responsible for involvement in this apparent
breach of trust must be charged.
The
writer is the emir of Kano and a former governor of the Central Bank of
Nigeria.
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