President
Muhammadu Buhari has finally revealed what will be the fate of the Nigerian
National Petroleum Corporation, saying the national oil company will be divided
into two successor entities under his administration.
The President,
who stated this in an interview with journalists in Washington DC during a
four-day visit to the United States, an extract of which was made available to one of the national dailies, explained
that the decision would form one of the key steps of his reform of the
country’s oil and gas sector.
There had been
insinuations that Buhari would unbundle the NNPC into four companies but the
President, in the Washington interview, said rather than breaking the NNPC into
four companies, it would be divided into two – regulator and investment vehicle.
While one of
the successor companies will be an independent regulator, the President said
the second would operate as an investment vehicle for the country.
He said, “I am
reforming the oil and gas sector, breaking up the NNPC into two parts – the
first will become an independent regulator for the sector, while the second
will act as an investment vehicle for the country.”
Buhari also
said there would be a new bid round for oil blocks in the country, adding that
he favours transparent auction process.
“I will also
end political control of the awarding of drilling and exploration rights by
introducing a system of independent, transparent auctioning for licences,” the
President said.
Senate
President Bukola Saraki had, recently, described the NNPC as the engine room of
corruption.
He lamented
that none of the perpetrators of illegal deals in the corporation had so far
been apprehended and brought to justice.
“You hardly
see where people who are the real engine room, which is the NNPC, where most of
these corruption cases on oil are, being put on trial,” he said.
Similarly,
Kaduna State Governor, Mallam Nasir el-Rufai, had last week called for the
setting up of another national oil firm as he argued that the present NNPC
would kill Nigeria if it was allowed to continue running.
“If you don’t
kill the NNPC, it will kill Nigeria,” el-Rufai said.
Buhari, as
part of the ongoing reform of several strata of the country, said his
administration would merge the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission and the
Independent Corrupt Practices and other Related Offences Commission into one
strong and more effective anti-graft agency.
He said,
“Corruption is one of the top three issues facing Nigeria, along with
insecurity and unemployment. We must act to kill corruption or corruption will
kill Nigeria. I am determined to lead that fight.”
“My government
is already taking several steps to cut out the cancer of corruption that has been
eating away at the state for so long.
“We are
reorganising the existing plethora of anti-corruption bodies into single
powerful agency that will have the focus, power and budget to clamp down on
corruption at the federal and state levels.”
The President
said ministers would no longer have power to award contracts while announcing
the introduction of a new system of plea-bargaining to encourage looters of the
government money and oil thieves to return the people’s stolen commonwealth.
He said, “I
have already acted to remove political control over awarding of contracts away
from ministers who use them to get political favours and kickbacks.”
“I will
introduce a new system of plea bargain, that will allow those who have stolen
assets and funds to return them – but if they do not take that opportunity we
will pursue them through the courts.”
Buhari
insisted that his administration would not relent in asking foreign countries,
including the US, to help in returning stolen funds that are sitting in private
accounts abroad, but rightfully belonging to the people of Nigeria.
The President
lamented that the country had become over-dependent on oil because of the
incompetence and corruption of government that concentrated on “how best to
steal oil revenues instead of how best to use our oil windfalls to invest in a
modern, growing economy.”
Rather than
continue to depend on oil, Buhari said Nigeria must become a manufacturing
giant.
“I will not be
satisfied until the label ‘Made in Nigeria’ is as common globally, as the label
‘Made in China,’” he added.
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