ABUJA—President Goodluck Jonathan is not foot-dragging on the
implementation of the report of the Nuhu Ribadu- Petroleum Revenue Task
Force because of any vested interest and will deal with the evil doers
wherever they are found, his spokesman Dr Reuben Abati said yesterday.
His assertion nonetheless, some members of the House of
Representatives, yesterday, chided presidential aides in the vanguard of
attempts to discredit the report, saying that the efforts would amount
to nullity.
While the House members condemned the onslaught against Mallam Ribadu
and his report, senators were, yesterday, evasive on the controversy
that had dogged the report since it was submitted penultimate weekend.
The report of the Ribadu led committee had slammed current practices
in the oil sector, alleging multiple corruption schemes and leakages
costing the country billions of naira.
The Ribadu report had also slammed the government that Nigeria was
the only country apart from war-torn Congo, currently selling its crude
on the spot market to oil traders. Observers had also argued that
Nigeria does not know the volume of crude oil sold daily.
The presidency through the Senior Special Assistant to the President
on Public Communications, Dr. Doyin Okupe, last Thursday, faulted the
report, alleging that same was poorly prepared and inconclusive.
The criticism had itself generated fears of a possible attempt by the presidency to cover up the issues raised in the report.
Reacting to the criticism that had trailed the submission of the Nuhu
Ribadu committee report, Dr Abati said the President was ‘working hard
at the Nigerian Project and taking every step to transform it for good’
as such, he should not be dragged ‘into the cheap arena of
opportunistic demagoguery.
“The President’s position that the work of the Ribadu Committee and
of the two other committees that presented their reports on that
occasion, the Idika Kalu committee on Refineries and the Dotun Sulaiman
Committee on Governance is useful and enlightening has not changed. Mrs
Daziani Alison-Madueke, Minister for Petroleum had further echoed that
position more than twice. The three committees were set up as
fact-finding and advisory bodies. That fact was further underscored by
the President’s mature response to the altercation that the Ribadu
Committee Report generated when he said that those who have issues to
raise should be free to make their own independent submissions. This
shows a determination to get every possible piece of information and to
accommodate all concerns. This shows a will to act. President Jonathan
has not dumped any input, rather he welcomes every possible input and he
has no private interest in this matter. So for anyone to say that the
Ribadu committee was “calculated to fail from the beginning,” is
absolutely uncharitable”.
Mr Daniel Reyenieju, representing Warri Federal Constituency and a
member of the Upstream Committee of the Petroleum sector in his reaction
to the controversy said: “My position is that the attitude of people
in government on this report is unfortunate and may discourage further
investigations in this nation.
“This attitude will discourage well meaning Nigerians to be part of a good investigative team in the future. “
Mr Chukwuemeke Nwogbo from Anambra State in his contribution,said
“Let’s wait and see. My prediction is that the National Assembly will
have the last laugh in this unfolding drama. Just wait.”
Reacting, Chairman of the House of Representatives Committee on
Petroleum (Downstream) Mr. Dakuku Peterside, said although, he had not
read the Ribadu report, but based on what he heard, there was nothing
contained in it that had not been said before.
Said he:” For instance, it is not news that Nigerian National
Petroleum Corporation, NNPC, has been selling crude oil to itself below
the international price or that NNPC fixes the exchange rate that suits
her or that the same corporation sells part of its 445,000 barrel of
crude oil per day since it refines at below 25 percent of installed
capacity.”
He added that corruption was becoming part of our body politic and would persist unless something was done genuinely about it.
“I don’t believe we are serious about fighting corruption,” he added.
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