by Everest Amaefule, Olalekan Adetayo and Stanley Opara
The
leakage of the report of the Mallam Nuhu Ribadu-led committee that
probed oil and gas transactions covering 2002 to 2012 and which
uncovered widespread corruption and abuse of processes, is meant to
embarrass the government.
The Presidency said this while reacting to the publication of excerpts from the report by an international news agency, Reuters, and local media outfits on Wednesday.
The Special Adviser to the President on
Media and Publicity, Dr. Reuben Abati, said the excerpts from the report
could not be taken as an official document because the committee had
not formally submitted its report to the appropriate authority.
Abati said as far as the Federal Government was concerned, the report in the public domain was suspicious.
He said if indeed the published report
was the committee’s genuine work, whoever leaked it to the press did not
mean well and was out to embarrass the government.
He said, “It is strange that government
will set up a committee, that report has not been submitted to the
authorities that set up the committee and the report will be found on
the pages of newspapers.
“The report cannot be taken as an
official document because the proper procedure is for committees set up
by the government to submit their reports to the government. In
principle, this report in the public domain is suspicious because it was
not submitted to the appropriate authority.
“If every committee set up by government
goes above the system to leak reports, there can be chaos. Whoever
leaked the report, if indeed the report is genuine, does not mean well.
Whoever is behind it is out to embarrass the government.”
When asked whether by his submission,
the Federal Government might probe the alleged leakage, Abati said the
first step was for members of the committee to come out and confirm
whether it was indeed their report.
One of our correspondents learnt that
the Senate Committees on Petroleum (Upstream) and Gas might subject the
outcome of the report to further investigation, following the gravity of
claims in it.
The Chairman, Senate Committee on Gas,
Mrs. Nkechi Nwogu, told our correspondent on the telephone on Thursday
that the committee would want to look at the report to find out the true
position of things as contained in it.
Nwogu said, “With all these revelations,
I can assure you that the Senate in particular will not want to sweep
such accusations under the carpet.
“I am sure the Senate will want to find out things for itself.”
However, the Minister of Petroleum
Resources, Mrs. Diezani Alison-Madueke, said there was no plan to cover
up the findings of the committee, but that another panel had been set up
to look into the contents.
Alison-Madueke had said while reacting to Reuters
enquiries that a committee had been set up by the Ministry of Petroleum
Resources to look into differences in perspective on the Ribadu
committee report.
She had said, “We have set up a team
that is looking at them across the board to see if there is a difference
in opinion or a difference in perspective.
“This team will complete its work and submit a comprehensive report in the next 10 days.”
The minister’s statement had fuelled
speculations that the new committee would remove aspects that the
government was not comfortable with from the report before making it
public.
However, in a telephone interview with
one of our correspondents in Abuja on Thursday, the spokesman of the
Ministry of Petroleum Resources, Mr. Kingsley Agha, said no cover up was
intended.
He said, “You cannot cover up the report
of the committee. You cannot cover up the report of a committee made up
of people of integrity. They will not agree to that. The minister does
not have anything to hide; otherwise, she would not have set up the
committee.
“It is too early for me to speak on the report since it has not gone to the President and I have not seen it.”
The Acting Group General Manager, Public
Affairs, Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation, Mr. Fidel Pepple,
said a reconciliation committee was necessary.
“When reports like this are produced, it
is normal practice to reconcile and clarify aspects of it that may not
be clear,” he said.
Reuters had on Wednesday quoted extensively from the report, which it said was confidential.
The Reuters report was widely quoted in the local media on Thursday.
The 146-page report, according to the
international news agency, had stated that a total of $183m (N28.73bn)
in signature bonuses paid by oil companies to the federation was
missing.
The report said that Ministers of
Petroleum Resources between 2008 and 2011 handed out seven discretionary
oil licences, but that $183m in signature bonuses was missing from the
deals.
Three of the oil licences were said to
have been awarded since the current minister, Alison-Madueke, took up
her position in 2010.
Punch
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