Do you know her..hehehe....Our madam for Oil...hehe....The Minister of Petroleum Resources,
Diezani Alison-Madueke, has sued Premium Times and 10 other individuals
and organizations to restrain them from further reporting on the
controversial missing $20billion oil money involving the Nigerian
National Petroleum Corporation, NNPC.
In an application before Justice AFA
Ademola of the Federal High Court, Abuja, Mrs. Alison-Madueke’s lawyer,
Godwin Obla, from Obla & Co., sought and obtained an interim
injunction restraining Premium Times and 10 others from “publishing or
causing to be published any further defamatory statements” stating or
suggesting that the minister “stole, misappropriate or colluded in the
stealing of $20billion crude oil revenue”.
In the application dated March 13,
2015, Mr. Obla warned the persons and organisations to desist from
“further publishing any disparaging defamatory or otherwise salacious
materia (sic) as it relates to or affects our client.”
Those listed as defendants in the case
are the All Progressives Congress, APC, Vanguard Media Limited and its
editor, Mideno Bayagbon; Leadership Newspapers Group Limited and its
editor Ekele Peter Agbo; Premium Times Services Limited and its editor
in chief, Dapo Olorunyomi, and Vintage Press Limited and its editor,
Lekan Otufodunrin.
Also joined in the application were the National Broadcasting Corporation and the Nigerian Press Council.
The Court directed the two government
regulators to ensure Mrs. Alison-Madueke is not linked in any report
regarding the alleged missing $20 billion either on broadcast media,
internet, print or radio.
The court specifically ordered the
media houses to “desist from publishing any materials or running any
programmme alluding to the complicity or collusion” the minister in
respect of “$20billion, $49billion or any other figure, howsoever
computed or arrived at, which are purportedly/allegedly missing or
‘unaccounted’ for”.
“You are hereby advised to immediately
ensure total compliance with the Order of the Hon. Justice Ademola and
to further cease and desist forthwith from publishing any material,
howsoever titled or presented and irrespective of its form and content,
which alludes to any amorous, immoral, salacious and defamatory matters
connected to or related with our client, including anything to do with
any allegation(s) or insinuation that our client colluded, was involved
with or is complicit in the matter of a purportedly/allegedly missing
$20billion, $49billion or any other amount whatsoever, until the
determination of the substantive suit,” it stated.
Warning that compliance to the court
order was not discretionary, but mandatory, Mr. Obla said that any
attempt to do otherwise would be tantamount to flouting a subsisting
order of a competent court.
“Failure to heed or give effect to the
subsisting orders of the court will lead to the full force of the law
being brought to bear upon your organization,” he said.
The missing $20 billion oil money was
first raised by former Central Bank governor, Lamido Sanusi, who accused
the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation, NNPC, of not accounting
for the amount.
As petroleum minister, Mrs. Alison-Madueke is the chairperson of the board of the NNPC.
While the government denied that funds
were missing, it ordered a forensic audit of the NNPC, carried out by
PriceWaterHouseCoopers Limited.
Several months after the completion of the audit, President Goodluck Jonathan has ordered the report be withheld.
Last month, Mrs. Alison-Madueke told
the Financial Times of London that the government was sitting on the
report to ensure a “rabid” opposition does not exploit every of its
detail to ridicule the government ahead of crucial polls March 28.
Under immense pressure from Nigerians,
the government released a “highlight” of the report, which indeed
proved the NNPC was indebted to the government, but at a much lower rate
of $1.49billion.
The petroleum minister has since directed the NNPC to pay the money to the federation account.
Notwithstanding, many Nigerians have continued to demand the release of the full report.
The minister and her finance
counterpart, Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala, have repeatedly flouted the directives
of the House of Representatives that the report be made public.
Source; Premium Times
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