HURIWA Blasts NNPC Over Fresh Allegations Of Oil Smuggling

Postpone 2023 Census - HURIWA Charges Nigerian Govt
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The Human Rights Writers Association of Nigeria, (HURIWA) has come out on Monday to blast the Nigerian National Petroleum Company Limited which had been formerly known as Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation of allegedly shortchanging Nigerians in terms of crude oil marketing and statsistics.

Emmanuel Onwubiko who is the National Coordinator, HURIWA had in a statement, backed the Comptroller-General of Nigerian Customs Service, Hameed Ali and also faulted the N6.34tn subsidy payment which had been made on the Premium Motor Spirit popularly called petrol.

Read Also: Daily Fuel Supply Still 68m Litres, NNPC Clarifies

HURIWA had expressed their displeasure as to why Nigeria has not hired world-class forensic auditors who would be credible enough and can’t be compromised to comprehensively audit the total litres of fuel which would be consumed in Nigeria since most of the transactions on petroleum products had been metred across the Country and so it does not take Rocket Science to scientifically and accurately ascertained how much volumes of local fuel consumptions that take place in the entire Country daily.

It can also be recalled that Ali, had also last week during a presentation before the House of Representatives Committee on Finance in Abuja has revealed that the NNPC cannot scientifically prove the 98 million litres per day consumption it claimed, alleging that the nation’s oil company was supplying an excess of 38 million litres of PMS daily.

The Federal Government of Nigeria is coming out to propose a budget with estimates totalling ₦19.76tn while the deficit will hover between ₦11.30tn and ₦12.41tn in the 2023 fiscal year.

However, the NCS boss said the issue is not about the smuggling of petroleum products as claimed by Kyari at a State House briefing last week.

“If we are consuming 60 million litres of PMS per day, by their own computation, why would you allow the release of 98 million litres per day? If you know this is our consumption, why would you allow that release?

“Scientifically, you cannot tell me that if I fill my tank today, tomorrow, I will fill the same tank with the same quantity of fuel. If I am operating a fuel station today and I go to Minna depot, lift petrol and take it to Kaduna, I may get to Kaduna in the evening and offload that fuel. There is no way I would have sold off that petrol immediately to warrant another load. So, how did you get to 60 million litres per day? That is my problem,” Ali had stated.

However, HURIWA’s Onwubiko said, “It is shameful how two government agencies are publicly contradicting themselves. Col. Hameed Ali (retd.) has thrown an open challenge at his NNPC counterpart and Nigerians are waiting for the explanation of Mele Kyari.

“It is no doubt that the NNPC is shortchanging Nigeria and Nigerians using vacuous and bogus subsidy claims because for now, it is not clear if any open and public records exist to show these details to allow for transparency and accountability which are the hallmarks of good governance.

“This is condemnable. It is particularly shameful that the regime of President Muhammadu Buhari and the All Progressives Congress failed Nigerians after criticizing past administrations over the failure to stabilise the production capacity of NNPC refineries to allow for home refining of crude oil.

“The country’s refineries have been run aground in the last seven years since President Muhammadu Buhari came into office and has been the substantive minister of Petroleum resources. If this is not a national shame, then Nigerians wonder what it is.

“To think that the President himself is the petroleum minister for seven years now is utterly perplexing. Rather than working, the current regime has been engaging in alleged round-tripping scams in the name of the subsidy regime.

“Despicable for a government in an economic crisis. This is shown in the fact that even at the top levels the officials can’t say exactly why it costs the public a humongous sum to subsidise fuel locally consumed.

“We condemn the practice of Vice President Yemi Osinbajo running to the World Bank to ‘help’ Nigeria stop subsidy when as a sovereign entity ruled by an elected administration Nigeria should work out a home-grown economic formula to close the yawning gaps and leakages that results in ballooning funding claims from the petroleum subsidy subhead of the budget.

“Nigerian leaders should stop playing to the gallery and exposing the Country as a Banana Republic.”

 

Africa Daily News, New York

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