Hehehe....A South African online media outfit, Mail and Guardian Africa,
came after Nigeria on Tuesday, saying, “The money ‘eaten’ there is
bigger than the Gross Domestic Product of 38 African nations.”
If the stolen fund it estimated at $50bn were a country, the online medium reported, it would be Africa’s 11th biggest economy.
“Some estimates put the ‘lost’ funds at
$50bn. If it were a country, it would be Africa’s 11th biggest economy,
at par with Tunisia’s entire GDP and larger than the economic output of
Ghana, Tanzania, Uganda, Ivory Coast or the Democratic Republic of
Congo,” the online report said.
It quoted a Nigeria’s transparency
watchdog as saying that the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation
diverted more than $30bn oil revenue since 2009. This figure, it said,
was bigger than the annual production output of “half of the nations in
Africa.”
Mail and Guardian Africa
said the financial shortfall caused by the theft, added to the falling
prices of oil, had put Nigeria – a country where “about two-thirds” of
the population live on less than a dollar per day – in a financial
strait.
For Nigeria’s investment in the NNPC, the
report said, the country had gained nothing but terrible disclosure
records and absence of accountability.
“For all its importance to Nigeria, the
NNPC is largely inscrutable. It had the worst disclosure record among 44
energy companies analysed in a 2011 report by anti-corruption
non-profit organisations, the Transparency International and the Revenue
Watch Institute.
“The NNPC consistently denies any
wrongdoing. Allegations of missing funds go back as far as when
President Muhammadu Buhari was a petroleum minister,” the post recalled.
While it admitted that the country’s oil
sector needed an urgent reform, the online news organisation said
history was not on the side of Buhari’s push to split the corporation.
It described the NNPC as the largest
government-owned company, saying Buhari may not succeed in his plan to
unbundle it. Arguing that the establishment was synonymous to
corruption, it recalled that it had faced allegations bordering on
financial frauds since 1978.
“A Lagos-based newspaper reported in
1978, a year after the NNPC took its current name, that the company
failed to remit an equivalent of about $3.5bn it owed the treasury. In
the 1990s, a military-sanctioned investigation discovered that $12bn oil
revenue was unaccounted for under the regime of Gen Ibrahim Babangida
(retd.).
“The Nigeria Extractive Industries
Transparency Initiative said, at least, $23.2bn due to the government
was not deposited into the federation account from 2009 to 2011.
Recently, the then-Central Bank of Nigeria Governor, Sanusi Lamido
Sanusi, alleged that the corporation retained as much several billions
of dollars that was due to the government,” the report said.
Back home, there is so much to read on
digital media about corruption, the pains it has inflicted on the masses
and how it could be tackled. Recent media reports on government’s plans
to probe key past public projects and investments merely fuelled the
online discussion.
The government revealed that it was
scrutinising bank accounts where the stolen funds had been kept.
Following the statement, bloggers and social media users have been
urging government to also look into highbrow mansions in Abuja, Lagos,
Port Harcourt and other major cities.
In recent times, several hashtags drawing
government’s attention to such houses have been trending. The stolen
money, according to social media posts, could be hidden in houses
belonging to relatives, wives and concubines of former public office
holders.
Blogging on this on Tuesday, one Chukwudi
Enekwechi said, “Recently, a huge sum of money was being frittered away
by relations, concubines and wife of a politician. Even more
interesting is that locations where such money is hidden are listed
online. For example, Lekki Phase 1, Ikoyi and Victoria Island, Port
Harcourt, Maitama and Asokoro were mentioned.”
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