Former Vice President Atiku Abubakar has asked President Bola Tinubu’s administration to explain why Oando Plc owned by the President’s nephew, got accelerated approval to buy the onshore assets of AGIP and ENI. At the same time, other transactions such as the Shell/Renaissance deal and the Mobil/Seplat continue to suffer delays.
The former Peoples Democratic Party presidential candidate also slammed the Tinubu’s administration for implementing a “sham subsidy regime as revealed in the financial statement recently released by the Nigerian National Petroleum Company Limited
In a statement issued through his media aide, Paul Ibe on Sunday, Atiku said, “Tinubu visited the FMDQ in New York, visited Qatar, visited France where he told lies about removing petrol subsidies.
“This is not a man who is serious about attracting FDI. More worrisome is that he is not even brave enough to admit that the subsidy is being paid. The NNPCL admits that N7.8tn is owed to the national oil company by the Nigerian government.
“IMF estimates that subsidy payments this year will constitute 3% of GDP, which is about $7.5bn. This will be about N11.8tn. Yet, the petrol scarcity continues to linger while the Tinubu administration continues to frustrate the Dangote Refinery and even its own NNPCL facilities.
The subsidy regime has become an even wider conduit pipe through which monies for funding the 2027 election will come from.”
The former Vice President reiterated and emphasized his claim that Oando was receiving unfair and favorable treatment in the oil and gas industry, which he believes is harming more capable and deserving investors.
Atiku also knocked the House of Representatives for failing to take proper action on the NNPCL which has now gone ahead to “mortgage the country’s national oil assets to vested interests”.
Atiku said, “Within just eight months, the Nigerian Upstream Production Regulatory Commission (NUPRC) approved a deal which saw the divestment of ENI/AGIP onshore assets to Oando.
“Within that same period, Nigeria controversially withdrew all litigation against Shell/ENI in the OPL 245 scandal in what has been described as a quid pro quo.
“However, the attempt by SEPLAT to buy Mobil’s onshore assets has continued to stall for the last three years even as the consent letter remains on Tinubu’s table. The deal between Renaissance and Shell continues to stall. The only deal that has fully scaled through so far is the one involving Oando. We now know why it got accelerated approval.
Recent Comments