
• Says corporation’s action exposed nation to possible price shocks
• Ezekwesili wants Okonjo-Iweala to sign off on NNPC's explanation
The Governor of the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN), Sanusi Lamido Sanusi
Friday insisted that the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC)
had no right retaining $10.8 billion oil revenue, saying it contributed
to the drop in savings “that left the nation exposed to possible price
shocks.”
In a related development, former Vice President of the
World Bank, Oby Ezekwesili, yesterday said she was among Nigerians
dissatisfied with the explanations offered by the NNPC for the $10.8
billion and took to her tweeter handle on Wednesday to challenge the
Minister of Finance, Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala to sign off on NNPC's
explanation.
Sanusi who spoke in an interview with Bloomberg in
Abuja said: “Given where the oil price is, we should have more in terms
of reserves and savings, and because we don’t have that we are
susceptible to shocks in the event of a decline in the oil price.”
The central bank governor had written a letter to President Goodluck
Jonathan alleging the NNPC withheld $49.8 billion in revenue. This had
sparked a public outcry.
Thereafter, a reconciliatory meeting that
involved the Minister of Finance, Dr. Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala, Minister of
Petroleum Resources, Mrs. Diezani Alison-Madueke, the CBN Governor
amongst others, had shown that unaccounted oil receipts stood at $10.8
billion.
But Sanusi maintained: “No one has the right to retain
money that should have gone to the federation account; so the fact that
you’ve admitted retaining or withholding $10 billion is itself bad
enough. This money was supposed to come in and if it came in, it would
be part of our reserves and part of our excess crude savings.”
Nigeria’s forex reserves stood at $43.257 billion as at January 16th.
THISDAY had reported that the external reserves derived mainly from the
proceeds of crude oil production and sales, had depreciated by $1.778
billion in the fourth quarter of 2013. The development was largely
blamed on the dwindling federal government revenue. Also, the Excess
Crude Account (ECA) had dropped to only $3.18 billion.
Nevertheless,
NNPC’s Group Executive Director of Finance and Accounts, Bernard Otti
had explained that the $10.8 billion was spent on pipeline repairs, fuel
subsidies and strategic reserve.
“This whole process for me is one
in which we need to force greater transparency over oil revenues. The
NNPC has now given explanations and they’re going to be called to show
evidence,” Sanusi declared.
The lack of accounting in oil revenues has increased pressure on President Goodluck Jonathan.
THISDAY had reported that Jonathan told Sanusi to resign because he
allegedly leaked his letter about the NNPC unremitted revenue to
Obasanjo.
But Sanusi had said his letter to the president was never meant to be made public.
“What was in fact an invitation to investigate somehow became read as
the end of an investigation, the conclusion from an investigation and
that wasn’t it. This was an initial report given. That, for me, raises
sufficient concern to ask the president to have an investigation so we
can know exactly where the money is,” he explained.
Furthermore, he
noted: “Lower savings are not explained by a huge increase in government
spending, because there wasn’t between 2013 and 2012. So, if spending
didn’t increase much and if the oil price didn’t crash much and exports
didn’t crash much, there’s a leakage. A decline in oil production
doesn’t explain the draw down in savings either because the crude price
has exceeded the government’s budgeted price.
The spot price of
Nigeria’s benchmark Qua Iboe crude has exceeded $100 a barrel for most
of 2013, above the $79 budgeted price that year.
He expressed optimism that the finance minister would be able to keep spending under control in the run up to the election.
“I have had a number of discussions with the finance minister and I get
a sense she is very, very committed to keeping a tight leash on
spending especially as we come towards elections,” he said.
Sanusi however declined to comment on who he thought would be his successor.
Ezekwesili, in her tweets urged Nigerians to “stand up and demand accountability over the matter.”
She urged Okonjo-Iweala to personally shoulder the responsibility of
accounting to Nigerians about the 'missing money” pointing out that "a
good place to start would be if she could sign off on NNPC's breakdown
of the "missing $10 billion."
She added: “It would help raise
confidence in the administration if you took up the accounting for the
missing $$10 Billion.” Statutorily, the NNPC must render accounts to her
as our finance minister. If she signs off, we ought to assume all is
well. Until NNPC realises that citizens will not believe their
accounting without Iweala signing off the appropriateness and accuracy
of those operational expenditure, they will repeat bad behaviour again.
"If as a Citizen, you are as vexed as I am at the way the issue of
"missing $10Billion" has been handled tweet me. Does NNPC know that some
African countries sweat to raise $5 million to stay afloat? And here,
$10 billion is waved off?"
Source: Thisday