Have
we heard the last concerning those that ripped the nation dry, from the
Petroleum Support Fund? Perhaps, a quick response to the question above
will satisfy our curiosity. This question has become necessary
following the new dimension in which discussions about petrol subsidy
has taken. It has all the while been call for the removal of fuel
subsidy and silence on the prosecution of indicted subsidy thieves.
To
keep the records straight, we recall that the Federal Government
decided to stop payment of fuel subsidy following the discovery of
escalated subsidy figure from N260bn in 2009, to N1.7tn in 2011. Thanks
to a very active citizenry who saw the impending hardship accompanying
such a decision and unanimously rejected the move. The magnitude of the
public reaction led to the call for investigation of the subsidy regime.
The committee set up was able to unravel what led to the sudden
increase of the subsidy figures.
We also recall
that the investigation carried out by the Farouk Lawan-led House ad hoc
committee exposed over 93 oil marketers and individuals. These
marketers fraudulently obtained money for fuel not supplied by
presenting unverified documents. A total of N960bn was discovered to
have been falsefully collected by these marketers. There are various
unverified amounts and cases claimed to have been recovered and cleared
by the court, but yet there is no basic information about the
prosecution of the companies or individuals; and the status of the
amount recovered.
Where are the subsidy thieves? Are they
roaming freely, going on with their normal business and possibly
obtaining more fraudulent funds from government?
This question is thrown to the concerned authorities, and several reasons warrant the asking.
First
is that, we have a country where a quick succession of crimes is
reported daily, as a result, new crimes take precedence over the old.
Unfortunately, these crimes all fade away after public attention has
been drawn to something more recent. I am afraid if this has also become
the status of the oil thieves.
Second, the government has been
canvassing strong campaign from different stakeholders for the removal
of fuel subsidy,whereas the root cause of the subsidy frauds has not
been dealt with. The government and its agents have been claiming that
subsidy payment is taking a lot of money from the nation. I beg to ask,
having determined the frauds associated with the escalation of the
subsidy figure, is the Federal Government still paying petroleum
marketers the same amount that previously made petrol subsidy
uncharitable? In essence, if the fraud claims can be clearly separated
from the actual claims, then the government should be currently paying
less on subsidy. In this case, parting with N260bn on behalf of the
citizens should not be too much sacrifice to make
Third, we seek
for the whereabouts of the subsidy thieves because we need to recover
the money they stole from Nigerians. It is not enough to set up
committees with taxpayers’ money and after spending such valuable time
and money and arousing public interest, they are left to walk away
without visible punishment meted out to them.
Fourth, if we
recover the stolen money from these marketers, it will make up for the
shortfall of revenue once recorded by the government and it can be used
to build more refineries so as to relieve the poor of the pains they
would suffer when full subsidy is eventually removed. In other words,
until adequate refineries are built in Nigeria, subsidy on petrol is
bound to continue.

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