The
reported approval by Nigerian President, Goodluck Jonathan, for the
sale of the nation’s four refineries has been denied by the Presidency.
The
Special Adviser to the President on Media and Publicity, Dr. Reuben
Abati, told journalists at the Presidential Villa that President
Goodluck Jonathan has not given and does not plan to give approval to
that effect.
The oil and gas workers unions had
threatened to embark on a nationwide industrial action following the
announcement that the four refineries had been slated for privatisation
in 2014 by the Bureau for Public Enterprises, BPE.
Mr. Abati,
however, dismissed the threat by the oil and gas workers, insisting that
if the reason for the proposed strike is the issue of the refineries,
then the action would not take place.
An attempt to sell the
refineries was first made during the administration of former president,
Olusegun Obasanjo, but the decision was reversed by his successor, the
late President Umaru Yar’adua.
Also, a presidential committee
set up by President Goodluck Jonathan in the wake of the corruption
scandal in the oil and gas industry had recommended the sale of the
refineries as a way to avoid the wastage of government funds.
There
had been news that the President has approved the constitution of a
steering committee chaired by the Minister of Petroleum Resources with
13 members including the Coordinating Minister of the Economy, Minister
of Power, Minister of Labour and Minister of National Planning, to
oversee the privatisation process.
The national bodies of the
Petroleum and Natural Gas Senior Staff Association of Nigeria
(PENGASSAN), and the Nigeria Union of Petroleum and Natural Gas workers,
(NUPENG) had announced plans by their associations to commence an
industrial action in the first week of January 2014, if the Federal
Government failed to rescind its alleged decision to privatise the
refineries.
They claimed that the planned privatisation was an
attempt to hand over the nation’s refineries to cronies of the Federal
Government.
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