Minister of Petroleum Resources, Mrs. Deziani Allison- Madueke,
may be invited for questioning by the Senate if the management of the
Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation fails to provide documents relating to
the N10bn allegedly expended by her to charter private aircrafts.
The Senate Committee on Petroleum Resources (Downstream) had last week,
written to the NNPC demanding the financial dealings of the corporation
since 2012, including the private jet deals.
Already, the House of Representatives had said it would commence the
probe of the minister on April 28 as its Public Accounts Committee
investigating the expenditure had disclosed that it had secured the aircraft
travel logs to start the probe.
The committee had alleged that the minister and top management team of
the NNPC had refused to cooperate with it.
Chairman of the Senate Committee on Petroleum Resources (Downstream),
Senator Magnus Abe, told journalists in Abuja on Sunday that the NNPC had
consistently failed to volunteer information about its financial dealings since
October 2013.
Abe said, “We have not informed the minister of the delay from the NNPC
and there are issues we know will involve the minister but I don’t think this,
at this point, involves the minister. But if we can’t resolve it, we will ask
the minister to come with them.
“At the moment, it is between the committee and the NNPC. The NNPC is a
corporation. We believe we can sort this out.
“We asked about the crude swap transactions, to know exactly what
volumes are being swapped, what the country is getting in return. We haven’t
seen that.
“We also wanted information on the rehabilitation of the refineries to
know exactly how far they have gone with those programmes, we haven’t seen
that.
“We wanted information about the volumes of products that are being sold
via the PPMC. We actually haven’t seen that.
“We wanted information on the aircraft that has now become an issue.
We’ve actually asked for this information since last year and we haven’t seen
that.
“So, there are lots of what I would call routine information from the
NNPC which should be between us, the committee and the NNPC. Oversight is not
just visiting the facilities to walk around.
“It also involves taking a detailed look at how things are done, what’s
being done and how the country is benefitting from some of these things that
are happening and how we can work together to improve what is being done.
“Unfortunately however, we haven’t received the kind of cooperation I
would like to see from the NNPC and we are still believing they would step up
their game and work with us so that we can get the best for the Nigerian
people.”
Abe lamented that the NNPC did not send representative to his
committee’s last sitting where the information it required ought to have
been provided.
He said, “This is particularly bad! They didn’t send anybody; it was
only when I got back to the office that I saw a letter from the NNPC, saying
that they were still trying to collate this information…since last year,
they’ve been collating this information.”