President Buhari Takes Up New Job As Oil Minister
Four long
months after taking office President Muhammadu Buhari finally
announced his cabinet positions, with the most controversial and lucrative –
oil – going to himself.
Buhari campaigned on a pledge to end
corruption, and nowhere is that corruption more insidious than in the oil
ministry of Africa’s most populous country. Yet whether Buhari, himself a
former oil minister, can clean up an industry that two years had $20 billion in
missing funds is quite unclear. Critics say the new president is over-reaching
with what amounts to a full-time second
job.
As Africa’s biggest oil producer, crude runs
through the arteries of the Nigerian economy. Some 70 percent of the Nigerian government’s $22 billion revenue
comes from crude. More than 80 percent of foreign trade is tied to
oil. When oil prices dipped last year by nearly 40 percent, Nigeria’s
coffers were so devastated that Buhari called them “virtually empty” when he
came into office.
But mismanagement and the theft of billions have
also plagued the ministry for decades. Most oil is stolen through accounting
and oversight gaps. But much goes missing far away from the minister’s eyes:
from oil fields, pipelines, and even from the export terminals.
Buhari said last week he is taking the oil
ministry job because he doesn’t trust anyone else. His plans include stepped-up
accounting of oil receipts and recovering of stolen funds. Such plans
would head off reports like that in 2014 when the Central Bank of Nigeria
announced $20 billion in missing oil receipts from the Nigerian National
Petroleum Corporation (NNPC), a state-owned enterprise.
Much of the malfeasance appears to have taken
place under Diezani Alison-Madueke, the oil minister under former president
Goodluck Jonathan, Buhari’s predecessor. Ms. Alison-Madueke was arrested Oct. 2
in London on charges of bribery and money laundering. Her five-year reign at
the ministry is widely seen as a period of rampant corruption and theft.
“Nigeria has surely been short-changed by
Nigerians who were trusted with public offices in the oil sector,” says
Osadolor Etiosa, a prominent Nigerian journalist who has covered Nigerian
politics for decades.
Alison-Madueke’s arrest underscores the
complexities in the petroleum sector. But while it could open a path for Buhari
to address corruption in an industry he served as government minister for in
the 1970s, some question if Buhari’s effort to take charge of oil is constitutional
and whether he is the right person for the job.
Buhari’s biggest obstacle may be reining in the
NNPC. The huge state oil firm is Nigeria’s largest employer. It'a also the
according the least transparent oil company in the world, according
to Transparency International and
Revenue Watch.
The NNPC has diverted more than $30 billion in oil revenue from the
state since 2009, according to a Nigerian watchdog agency. A 2013
PricewaterhouseCooper audit stated that the oil behemoth had a “blank check” to
spend without oversight.
Buhari knows the company intimately. He oversaw
its creation in the 1970s while he was oil minister. It is this expertise that
many say could help him clean up the organization.
Since taking office, Buhari has already starting
a major NNPC overhaul: He sacked the entire board, appointed a new managing
director, announced a probe into accounting practices, and split the company
into two entities that are easier to watch. (Buhari says he may break up the
firm further in 18 months to improve efficiency.)
Though Some critics say the constitution forbids
a sitting president to hold another public office, others claim that reforming
oil in Nigeria is a distraction from presidential duties. But
President Buhari seem less-concerned about what the critics say as he continue
to unveil his surprises for the people
of the country.
Garbu Shehu, the president’s spokesman, counters
by saying that Buhari’s reform efforts are creating fear among many
“briefcase-carrying crooks because they know that Buhari is not a
dealmaker.”
Buhari’s main focus appears to be the pursuit of
missing oil funds. In his independence day speech on Oct. 1, he spoke about the
prosecution of those involved in misappropriation of funds relating to the
NNPC.
The next day Alison-Madueke was arrested. News
of the former oil minister’s detention in London sent shockwaves through
Nigeria. Part of the surprise was news that she was part of a joint
British-Nigeria probe, something rarely seen in Nigeria where corrupt acts by
politicians are rarely investigated.
Local investigations into Alison-Madueke’s
conduct as oil minister, for example, have yielded little result. After
she left office, the new government said that between 2012 and 2015, some $19
billion in oil revenue is unaccounted for.
Many Nigerians see her arrest as part of
Buhari's clean up. Mr. Etiosa, the journalist, says he is happy the arrest
happened in the UK rather than in Nigeria, where she could more easily escape
the law.
Moving
forward, a critical question is whether the arrest of the former oil minister
is the beginning – or the end – of Buhari’s NNPC probe. Etiosa says there are
many other figures who need to be brought to justice.
Mr. Emeke
Okoye also commenting on the decisions of the president said the efforts are
commendable but the president must apply caution in the probe process in other
not to break the Human Right Law. He also called on the president not to be
sectional in the exercise.
President Buhari Takes Up New Job As Oil Minister
Reviewed by Unknown
on
10:56
Rating:
No comments