ABUJA-MEMBERS of the House of Representatives adhoc Committee on
Crude oil swap have vowed to expose all shoddy deals perpetrated by
government officials involved in all swap arrangements.
This revelation was made yesterday by the chairman of the adhoc
committee, Rep Zakari Mohammed, APC, Baruten/Kaima Federal Constituency
in a chat with the Vanguard.
The former House spokesman who spoke on behalf of fellow lawmakers
said”we are still studying all the memoranda sent to us by the agencies
but one thing we can assure all Nigerians is that all sharp practices
will be unearthed”.
“We’ll dig deep into all the transactions and make a powerful
delivery at the end of the day as this is not like any other probe of
the past”.
“As I speak to you now we are working round the clock to ensure that there are no mistakes that will rubbish our efforts”.
Asked whether the committee members are under any form of pressure to
alter their findings, Mohammed said”well that is a matter for another
day as it is we are only concerned about the volume of swap deals and
all the annual reports of the agencies involved”.
“One thing is however certain, all members of this committee promised
to work hard towards achieving success at the end of the probe”.
On when the probe intends wrapping up its investigative inquiry,
Mohammed said our deadline to submit our report I think is 6 weeks that
is why we work on Saturdays because the work is voluminous”.
“At the rate we are going once we conclude the investigative hearing
it won’t take us two weeks to lay our reports before the entire House”.
On what happened to the agencies that earlier failed to submit their
memoranda, he said”they eventually submitted before our 12noon November
18 deadline”.
Vanguard recalls that NNPC, the Crude Oil division and the PPMC had
failed to submit their memoranda until the committee threatened to issue
a bench warrant to the three defaulting agencies.
The Adhoc committee was set up following a motion promoted in June
2015 by Rep Michael Enyong ,Akwa Ibom PDP, who alleged that the country
has lost considerable revenue, from the oil traders involved in the
crude oil swaps and Offshore Shore Processing Agreements (OPAs).
There were allegations that the oil traders under-delivered petroleum
products to the PPMC, the NNPC subsidiary responsible for taking
delivery of the products after crude oil has been lifted by the traders.
The committee is charged with exposing corruption, inefficiency, and
waste in the operations of the swap agreement, as a prelude to the
efficient and transparent management of the nation’s resources for
improved revenue generation for the country.
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