Wednesday, 16 December 2015

Dasuki, Bafarawa, 4 Others Plead not Guilty to Corruption Charges


160215F-Sambo Dasuki.jpg - 160215F-Sambo Dasuki.jpg
Former National Security Adviser, Col Sambo Dasuki, (rtd.)
  •   Fail to get bail
From Alex Enumah

Former National Security Adviser, Col Sambo Dasuki, (rtd.) and five others have pleaded not guilty to allegations of diversion, misappropriation and breach of trust in respect of N19. 4 billion criminal charges brought against them by the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC).

The six accused persons, according to the EFCC, diverted the said amount for personal and private purposes in the guise of payment for supply of security equipment.


The accused, including former minister for state for Finance, Bashir Yuguda, former Sokoto governor,   Attahiru Bafarawa, Shuaibu Salisu ‎and two others, however denied any culpability when the 22-count charges were read to them before Justice Peter Affem of the Federal Capital Territory (FCT) High court on Tuesday in Abuja.

Following their plea of not guilty, the prosecution counsel, Rotimi Jacobs, SAN, then requested for an adjournment till next year to enable him present his witnesses.

Reacting, counsel to Dasuki Ahmed Raji, SAN, however, raised the issue of application for bail, disclosing that application for bail has been filed and served on the prosecution.

Justice Affem then adjourned hearing on the bail application for this Wednesday and ordered that the accused persons be remanded in the custody of the EFCC pending the determination of the case.

In a similar case against the accused brought before Justice Usen Baba Yusuf, the judge fixed ruling on bail application for December 18, 2015, and asked counsel to produce witnesses in the case as accelerated hearing would be given the case immediately after ruling on the bail application.

Earlier, counsel to the accused had applied for bail for their clients. They said that the accused persons would not jump bail if granted.

Ahmed Raji, SAN, counsel to Dasuki, while stating that an accused person should be presumed innocent until his guilt had been proven said that the offences the accused was alleged to have committed was a bail-able one as such the court should grant the request.

He urged the judge to toe the steps of a federal high court judge that had earlier granted bail to his client, adding that Dasuki was a law-abiding person. He further stated that the crimes his client was alleged to have committed were finance-related and the law did not mandate imprisonment for all offenders of financial crimes.

Culled from Thisday

Monday, 14 December 2015

Lagos approves flyover bridges for Ajah, Abule Egba


By Oluwole Farotimi
LAGOS State Government has approved the construc­tion of flyover bridges for two of the state’s high-density traffic zones – Ajah roundabout and Abule Egba junction. The two ma­jor projects were approved by the State’s Executive Council and have been duly awarded to contractors.
In a statement yesterday by Commissioner for In­formation and Strategy, Mr. Steve Ayorinde, the projects will be completed within 16 months.
The statement said the construction of the rein­forced concrete flyover and signalized intersection at Ajah roundabout will be undertaken simultaneously with the rehabilitation of Freedom Road in Lekki, with a view to reducing the heavy traffic being recorded at the roundabout and the Lekki/Ikoyi axis.
The commissioner said the Ajah Bridge would have a solar-powered signalised intersection to improve traf­fic, while the upgrade of Freedom Road is expected to ease traffic considerably for vehicles using the Third Roundabout to connect Le­kki through Admiralty Way.
While the Ajah project will ease movement of resi­dents and commuters on the Lagos Island – Ibeju Le­kki areas, the construction of the reinforced concrete dual-carriage flyover bridge at Abule Egba junction will equally bring joy and relief to millions of com­muters that use the Lagos -Abeokuta Expressway in Ifako-Ijaye Local Govern­ment Area of the state when completed.

Culled from The Sun

Friday, 11 December 2015

Arraignment: Dokpesi pleads not guilty


ABUJA — The Economic and  Financial Crimes Commission, EFCC, yesterday, docked  erstwhile  Chairman of DAAR Communications Plc, High Chief Raymond Dokpesi, before a Federal High Court sitting in Abuja over alleged N2.1 billion fraud.
Dokpesi, a chieftain of the Peoples Democratic Party, PDP,  is answering to a six-count criminal charge bordering on alleged procurement fraud  and breach of public trust.
Former Chairman of Daar Communications Plc, High Chief Raymond Dokpesi, at the Federal High Court, Abuja yesterday. Photo: Gbemiga Olamikan.
Former Chairman of Daar Communications Plc, High Chief Raymond Dokpesi, at the Federal High Court, Abuja yesterday. Photo: Gbemiga Olamikan.
He was arraigned alongside  his firm, DAAR Investment and Holdings Ltd, owners of African Independent Television, AIT, and Raypower FM.
Specifically, EFCC, in the charge signed by its Deputy Director, Legal & Prosecution, Mr. Aliyu Yusuf,  alleged that Dokpesi received about N2.1 billion from the office of the National Security Adviser, NSA, for PDP’s  presidential media campaign.
According to the charge, the funds were released to the accused persons  between October 2014 and March 19, 2015.
The funds were allegedly transferred from an account the office of NSA operated with the Central Bank of Nigeria, CBN , to a FirstBank  of Nigeria Plc account owned by DAAR Investment and Holding Company Limited.
The prosecution maintained that the transaction was in breach of  section 58 (4) (b) of the Public Procurement Act 2007 and punishable under Section 58 (6) and (7) of the same Act, as well as under Section 17 (b) of the EFCC Act, 2004.
Dokpesi pleads not guilty
Meanwhile, Dokpesi, yesterday, pleaded not guilty to the entire six-count charge, even as Justice Gabriel Kolawole adjourned till today to consider his application for bail.
In the interim, the court gave the EFCC the nod to detain the accused person in its custody pending determination of his bail request.
Dokpesi had shortly after his arraignment, prayed the court to grant him bail on liberal terms.
The defence counsel, Chief Mike Ozehkome, SAN, urged the court to  consider the status of his client and release him on self recognition or “on the most liberal term,” saying the offences against him are ordinarily bailable.
However, the prosecuting counsel, Mr. Rotimi Jacobs, SAN,  objected to the court allowing Dokpesi’s lawyer to move the bail application which he said was just served on him yesterday.
Jacobs told the court that he would need time to study and react to fundamental issues he said were raised by the accused person in the bail application.
Consequently, by consent of the two lawyers, Justice Kolawole, adjourned till today to entertain arguments on whether Dokpesi should be granted bail or not.
The Judge,  however, slated February 17, 18 and March 2 and 3, 2016, to begin full-blown hearing on the substantive charge before the court.
Some of the charges against him read: “That you Dr. Raymond Dokpesi and Daar Investment and Holding Company Limited between October 2014 and March 19, 2015 in Abuja, conducted procurement fraud by means of fraudulent and corrupt act, to wit: receipt of payment into the account of Daar Investment and Holding Company Limited with FirstBank of Nigeria Plc of public funds in the sum of N2,120,000,000 from the account of the office of National Security Adviser (NSA) with the Central Bank of Nigeria for the funding of media activities for the 2015 presidential election campaign for the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) and you thereby committed an offence contrary to section 58 (4) (b) of the Public Procurement Act, 2007 and punishable under Section 58 (6) & (7) of the same Act.
“That you Dr. Raymond Dokpesi and Daar Investment and Holding Company Limited between October 2014 and March 19, 2015 in Abuja, entered into a purported contract on presidential media initiative and received payment in the sum of N2,120,000,000 into the account of Daar Investment and Holding Company Limited with FirstBank of Nigeria Plc, from the account of the office of National Security Adviser (NSA) with the Central Bank of Nigeria on account of the purported contract without a “Certificate of No Objection to Contract Award” duly issued by Public Procurement Bureau and you thereby committed an offence contrary to section 16 (1) (b), (4) & (5) of the Public Procurement Act, 2007 and punishable under Section 58 (6) of the same Act.
“That you Dr. Raymond Dokpesi and Daar Investment and Holding Company Limited between January 22 and March 19, 2015 in Abuja, knew that an aggregate sum of N2,120,000,000 directly represented the proceeds of criminal conduct of Col. Mohammed Sambo Dasuki (retd) and Shuaibu Salisu, who were National Security Adviser and the Director of Finance, office of the National Security Adviser (NSA) respectively to wit: criminal breach of trust in respect of the said amount, used the said property and you thereby committed an offence punishable under Section 17 (b) of the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (Establishment) Act, 2004.”
It will be recalled that Dokpesi was on December 1, arrested and detained in connection with money disbursed from the office of the former NSA under ex-President Goodluck Jonathan, Col. Sambo Dasuki, retd .
The EFCC maintained that he had questions to answer regarding huge sums of money it said was dished out to his media outfit while Dasuki held sway as the NSA.
Nevertheless, Dokpesi was reported to have claimed that the payments were for media coverages his organisation rendered to former President Jonathan prior to the 2015 general elections.
Dissatisfied with his detention, Dokpesi, through his lawyer, filed a motion ex-parte before the high court on December 3, wherein he sought for an enforcement of his fundamental right to freedom.
Ozehkome, SAN, told the court that his client was detained for more than 48 hours without the EFCC entering any charge against him.
He further told the court that Dokpesi was on December 1, summoned via the telephone to report to the EFCC headquarters in Abuja.
He said that Dokpesi had since then remained in custody of the anti-graft agency, adding that he was grilled for so many hours despite the fact that he did not have fore knowledge of why he was wanted by the EFCC.
We’ll recover all stolen funds, EFCC boss, Magu, vows
In a related development, Acting Chairman of Economic and Financial Crimes Commission, EFCC, Ibrahim Magu, yesterday, vowed to go after all those who looted the funds meant for arms procurement and bring them to book.
Magu said the commission would leave no stone unturned in ensuring that all those implicated in the diversion of the arms cash would be made to face the full weight of the law.
Magu said, however, that the commission had resolved to break the corruption chain in a fair, accountable and transparent manner in line with international best practice.
He disclosed that the commission has so far investigated a total of 1,881 cases within 2015 alone and would do more before the end of the year.
According to him, “Out of this figure, 280 cases were filed in courts and 78 convictions were secured.
Within the same period, eight interim and two final forfeiture orders were handed down by various courts on applications brought by the commission.
The EFCC boss further added that he had put in place machinery to sanitise the Commission internally.
Magu made the declaration at a public event to commemorate the International Anti-corruption Day with the theme “Break the Corruption Chain” in Abuja.
He also expressed gratitude to President Muhammadu Buhari for creating an enabling environment for the commission to carry out its mandate, adding that he would undertake institutional reforms to increase the Commission’s capacity to fight corruption.
He, therefore, urged civil service organisations as well as other partners to join hands with the Commission in the anti-corruption fight.
“Our common resolve is far stronger than the challenges we face in the fight against corruption.
“Corruption is like a chain whose effect impacts various aspects of the society, undermines democracy and the rule of law, distorts markets, erodes quality of life, leads to human rights violations and fans the embers of terrorism and other threats to human security.”
In his remark, the Director-General of the Bureau of Public Service Reforms, BPSR, Dr. Joe Abah, called for the enhancement of the Code of Conduct Bureau, CCB.
Abah stated that the newly introduced zero- based budgeting would ensure discipline in the implementation of budgets.
Also, Lilian Ekeanyanwu, representing the Technical Unit on Governance and Anti-Corruption Reforms, TUGAR, urged the anti-corruption community to take advantage of the positive body language emanating from the Presidency.
“We must hit the ground running. We must have a national strategy to bring awareness about the issue of corruption and find methods to curb the malaise, while keeping the populace involved,” she said.
The Deputy Chief Mission of the United States Embassy, Maria E. Brewer, in her remark, stated that corruption could undermine institutions and slow development of any nation.
She said that the United States was ready to partner with Nigeria in the fight against corruption.

Culled from Vanguard

Thursday, 10 December 2015

We'll Substitute Faleke If Need Be, Says APC

301014F-John-Oyegun.jpg - 301014F-John-Oyegun.jpg
 Chief John Oyegun
  •   Bello gets certificate of return
  •   Party expresses dissatisfaction with Bayelsa poll
Onyebuchi Ezigbo in Abuja and Atabor Julius in Lokoja  
The All Progressives Congress (APC) has said it may be constrained to replace its deputy governorship candidate in the recently concluded Kogi State governorship poll if the need arises.
The party also expressed its dissatisfaction with the decision of the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) to cancel the poll in Southern Ijaw Local Government Area in Bayelsa State, effectively rendering the governorship election inconclusive.
In an apparent reaction to the resolve by Mr. James Abiodun Faleke to boycott the swearing-in of the governor-elect, Alhaji Yahaya Bello, the National Chairman of APC, Chief John Oyegun, said if all reconciliatory efforts fail, the party would have no alternative than to seek for his replacement.
Faleke, a member of the House of Representatives who resumed at the House this week, was conspicuously absent when Bello was presented his certificate of return as the duly elected governor of Kogi State by INEC in Lokoja yesterday.
Addressing journalists at the party’s national secretariat yesterday in Abuja, Oyegun said the leadership of the party understood the frustrations most of the stakeholders in the Kogi governorship tussle encountered due to the sudden demise of its late governorship candidate, Alhaji Audu Abubakar, and as such was ready to allow things to simmer.
“On the Faleke issue, it is rather a straightforward and easy issue. We have replaced a governorship candidate. If the need arises and subject to what the law says, we will also get another deputy governorship candidate but we will cross that bridge when we get there, but the need had not arisen yet,” he said.
Oyegun however said that the party was still pursuing dialogue to settle all the differences and to accommodate the interests of the aggrieved stakeholders of the party in the state, with a view to achieving full reconciliation before the handover of power in January.
He said: “As a political party, we understand the frustration that emanated from the death of the late Prince Abubakar Audu. It is normal for us to accommodate the immediate reactions coming from the people involved.
“They were at the gates of victory but this was shut at their faces because of the unfortunate death of their mentor (Abubakar Audu) who would have been our governor in the state, so a lot of things which normally we would not have accepted happened.
“But we have to accept them so long as everybody would simmer down as time passes. Wielding the big stick in a situation like this might not be appropriate but there will be a timeline with which to sort this out; enough will be enough at a certain time.”
While defending the party’s choice of Bello as Audu’s substitute in the Kogi supplementary election, Oyegun said the leadership had to take the option that provided the best answer in line with the constitution and the Electoral Act.

Speaking on the decision of INEC to cancel the poll in Southern Ijaw and to declare the Bayelsa governorship election inconclusive, Oyegun said the party was not particularly satisfied with the conduct of the poll.
“We are unhappy that the results from the most populous voting areas which is a stronghold of the APC had to be cancelled and rendered the elections inconclusive.
“All one can say at this stage is pronouncements have been made. As a party, we will be patient, we will give them the benefit of the doubt and will go on whenever the election for Southern Ijaw is slated,” he said.
Oyegun also clarified that the federal government has not withdrawn the subsidy on petrol.
Speaking on the reports on the government’s budget highlights for 2016, which was released on Tuesday, Oyegun said there was nothing to indicate that the administration was in a hurry to jettison the subsidy very soon.
He said if any policy was in that direction, the government would make sure that it follows it up with adequate measures to cushion the effect on the masses.
“You do not know yet, even I do not know what is contained in the budget. So what is covered or what it does not cover, we do not know because it is still in various stages of construction.
“Whether subsidy goes or stays is an intricate and major issue. If it has to go, the government will have to introduce palliatives to cushion the effects on ordinary Nigerians.
“Anyway, eventually subsidy will have to go but we have not reached that stage yet because you cannot just wake up and announce that subsidy has been removed without putting an adequate programme in place to cushion the negative aspects that may be involved,” he explained.
His comments on the Kogi and Bayelsa elections, as well as the clarification on the retention of fuel subsidy occurred just as Bello was presented with a certificate of return as the duly elected governor of Kogi State.
The certificate was presented by the INEC chairman, Prof. Yakubu Mahmud, at 4.05 pm at the commission’s office in Lokoja, the Kogi State capital.
The chairman, who was represented by his national commissioner, Prof. Anthonia Taye Simbine, said the exercise was in conclusion of the governorship election in accordance with Section 75(2) of the Electoral Act.
The section, he said, prescribes for the issuance of a certificate of return to the winning candidate of a political party in a governorship election within seven days of the conclusion of the election.
Faleke was however not present to receive his certificate of return as the deputy governor-elect.
Responding, Bello acknowledged the role and contributions of everyone, particularly that of the late Audu, whose death led to his emergence as his replacement as the APC candidate.
He noted that the shoes Audu left behind were too big for him to wear even as he called for a minute’s silence in memory of the departed leader.
While appealing for calm and understanding, Bello said he was not unaware of the acrimony thrown up by his emergence, but promised to work tirelessly to unite all factions that have emerged due to Audu’s passing.
Source Thisday

Wednesday, 9 December 2015

Buhari Submits MTEF to N'Assembly, Budgets N500bn for Social Welfare



•This is best time to remove fuel subsidy, World Bank advises
•  Cautions against abuse of fiscal space to borrow
• Oil price may fall to $20 as OPEC ditches quotas

By Omololu Ogunmade, Damilola Oyedele, James Emejo and Jemima Bolokor in Abuja

The federal government has earmarked N500 billion for the implementation of its social security scheme for unemployed young graduates under the 2016-2017 Medium Term Expenditure Framework (MTEF) and Fiscal Policy Strategy (FPS) submitted to the National Assembly on Tuesday.
The N500 billion projection comprises the amount to be spent on the government’s school feeding initiative as well as conditional cash transfers of N5,000 to “the most vulnerable persons in the society”.
According to the MTEF, the scheme, which will commence in collaboration with state governments, will start as a pilot, following which the federal government will later seek the support of donor agencies.
“The federal government will collaborate with state governments to institute well-structured social welfare intervention programmes such as school feeding programme initiatives, conditional cash transfers to the most vulnerable and post-NYSC grant.
“N500 billion has been provisioned in the 2016 budget as social investment for these programmes.
“These interventions will start as a pilot scheme and work towards securing the support of donor agencies and our development partners in order to minimise potential risks,” the document stated.
The federal government also explained that in the future, a broader social welfare scheme would be created to cater for the larger population which it said would include the poorest and most vulnerable Nigerians “upon evidence of children’s enrolment in school and evidence of immunisation”.
In order to legalise the scheme, a bill seeking to provide a framework for a social security scheme passed through the first reading in the Senate last week.
However, the government only provided N63.29 billion as fuel subsidy in 2016, compared to the N42.20 billion budgeted in the 2015 fiscal year but failed to make a provision for emergency subsidy as was the case in the 2015 budget when N217 billion was provided for emergency petrol subsidy.
The government also made no allocation for kerosene subsidy, but budgeted another N150 billion as arrears for fuel subsidy claims carried over from 2015.
The government has spent N402 billion on subsidy in 2015. This amount was part of the N522 billion recently approved by the National Assembly in a supplementary budget sent by President Muhammadu Buhari.
It put the Niger Delta Development Commission (NDDC) share of the Excess Crude Account in the Subsidy Reinvestment Programme (SURE-P) in 2016 at N241.5 billion.
It also retained the Amnesty Programme in the Niger Delta with a projection of N20 billion, down from N63.2 billion spent in 2015.
The document also contained the report of N350.3 billion as projected recoveries by the federal government as misappropriated funds.
The breakdown of the recoveries showed that the government is projecting N137.90 billion from strategic alliance contracts entered into by the Nigerian Petroleum Development Company (NPDC) and some oil firms; another N162.43 billion from the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) and Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) while the balance of N50 billion is expected from other misappropriated funds.
It also projected a reduction in the National Assembly budget from N120 billion this year to N115 billion in 2016.
The federal government also projected N1.2 trillion in 2016 as domestic borrowing and N635 billion as foreign borrowing.
Domestic borrowings were however reduced to N1 trillion and N1.080 trillion in 2017 and 2018 while N416.82 billion and N433.650 billion was projected as foreign borrowings for 2017 and 2018 respectively.
The government also plans to spend N1.307 trillion for domestic debt service obligations and N54.48 billion to service foreign debt.
The document further puts the country’s debt relative to its gross domestic product (GDP) at 12 per cent, adding that the figure is one of the lowest in the world. It adds that “the government will ensure additional borrowing is kept within prudent limits and channelled towards infrastructure”.
According to the document, the N6.077 trillion budget with a revenue target of N3.82 trillion, projects a deficit of N2.22 trillion or 2.16 per cent of GDP, and projects that recurrent expenditure will drop from 84 per cent in this year’s budget to 70 per cent in 2016 while capital expenditure of 16 per cent in the 2015 budget was raised to 30 per cent in 2016.
The revenue target of N3.82 trillion shows that value added tax (VAT) in 2016 will contribute N67.7 billion from the N67.5 billion projected in 2015.
The government is also projecting an average growth rate in 2016 of 4.37 per cent and expects this to increase by 10 per cent year-on-year through 2017 to 4.61 per cent in 2018.
The government also said it would continue to prune the size of its ministries, departments and agencies (MDAs) without compromising efficiency, just as it ruled out the possibility of increasing salaries and allowances of workers as well as pensions and other benefits in the next fiscal year.
The government also explained the rationale behind the implementation of treasury single account (TSA), saying: “Multiplicity of government accounts had made it difficult to have an accurate picture of public financial resources.”
It added that it would pursue macro-economic policies and a sector growth strategy that would achieve fiscal stability and improve non-oil sector competitiveness.
The government also said its fiscal policy would support a low interest rate regime as well as low inflation through strict adherence to target levels of the fiscal deficit, adding that fiscal incentives would encourage industrial and manufacturing sectors and attract new domestic and foreign investments.
Meanwhile, the World Bank yesterday expressed concern over the impact of the huge cost of fuel subsidies on the Nigerian economy in the face of the economic slowdown and dwindling oil revenue, adding that the subsidy bill was likely to rise over time irrespective of whether oil prices remained low or rebound.
World Bank lead economist, Mr. John Litwack, who said the country spent $35 billion on fuel subsidy between 2010 and 2014, argued that the benefits of subsidy in Nigeria appeared quite limited amid high costs.
He added that fuel subsidy obligations in 2015 were expected to account for 18 per cent of all oil revenue or the equivalent of 25 per cent of the federal budget. He said the sharp decline in oil prices called for a major fiscal adjustment to lower oil revenue.
According to him, the benefits of petrol subsidy had become less evident, given that the price of oil is lower while enforcement at the pump had weakened.
Litwack said reports of widespread subsidy fraud are costly to the reputation of the government while price distortions encourage overconsumption of fuel.
Speaking in Abuja during the launch of the third edition of Nigerian Economic Report (NER) produced by the bank’s country office, Litwack added that the subsidy scheme appeared to have only benefitted fuel importers and the rich rather than the citizenry.
The NER report assessed the cost and benefits of fuel subsidy against the current prospects for oil prices and revenue, and posited that the scheme had modest benefits for majority of Nigerians at a rather high cost.
He said: “There is a strong tendency for the cost of the fuel subsidy to increase over time as increasing domestic demand for petrol outpaces growth in oil output or revenues.”
The report stated that the payment of $35 billion in fuel subsidy between 2010 and 2014 partly accounted for why the country could not build its fiscal reserves including the Excess Crude Account (ECA) which could have shielded it from the recent oil price shock.
Furthermore, Litwack warned of consequences of the decision by the fiscal authorities to hold on to the exchange rate rather than allow the naira to depreciate.
He said the reluctance to devalue the currency could be counterproductive in the long run.
He further cautioned the federal and state governments not to abuse the fiscal space to borrow in view of the country’s low debt to GDP ratio.
He said: “The reason there is pressure on the exchange rate is one, there is a lot of speculative movement on the exchange rate. Some people expect there is going to be a devaluation.
“Secondly, there are fundamentals: if there is an imbalance of payments or more money leaving the country than coming in because of the trade imbalance or credit crunch, then that’s another reason why there is a pressure on the exchange rate.”
He acknowledged that the fiscal and monetary authorities would prefer to do what they can to address speculative demand.
“But when fundamentals move, trying to hold on to the exchange rate in the end can be counterproductive; you could end up losing a lot of reserves. That’s the kind of area any country including Nigeria needs to be focused on,” he added.
Responding to questions from the media, the World Bank economist said: “It’s quite natural that when oil prices are declining, the expectations about oil prices are much lower, it is quite natural that the naira should depreciate because oil price is a major fundamental for Nigeria in terms of its external balance. It’s a natural phenomenon, so if you try to counteract it, it can be counterproductive.”
Although he commended the central bank for some of the policy initiatives to reduce pressure on the naira, he said holding on to the exchange rate could backfire.
According to him, “The logic of why the Central Bank of Nigeria is doing this is clear but I think there’s also a cost to this kind of extensive policy and Nigeria should consider this seriously.
“It certainly has a negative effect on the general attitude of investors towards Nigeria if this kind of regulation can change very quickly to alter profitability and that’s a one big cost.
“Another cost, as I mentioned, is a budgetary crisis. If the Federation Account is now getting N240 for every one oil dollar, there will be a lot more money for spending, rather than at N197.
“The depreciation of the naira can benefit budgets in situations like this and one can take the Russian Federation which is also an oil dependent country, they have also experienced a big oil shock, and they also have much slower growth, even recession.
“But they don’t have a budgetary crisis per se because the currency depreciated very strongly along with the decline in oil prices.
“It’s also the case that sometimes, markets know better than the officials whether there is potential for import substitution, for example, a weaker exchange rate gives the market opportunity to identify exactly where import substitution might be profitable.
“It is clear why the central bank has adopted the policies and adopted what it’s trying to accomplish, but I think that seriously needs to be weighed against the cost and seriously considered in Nigeria.”
Litwack admitted that though the bank was not in a position to force recommendations on the government on both fuel subsidy and exchange rate issues, it nevertheless had a compelling obligation to put the facts on the table.
The NER report showed that the fuel subsidy burden could grow steadily from 18 per cent of oil revenue to 35 per cent by 2018, while distributions to budgets fall to 29 per cent.
In its short term assessment, it noted that the outlook for the country remained difficult due to expected low oil prices, arguing that even if oil prices recovered, government oil revenue should continue to decline in the medium-term relative to the size of the Nigerian economy, further necessitating critical fiscal adjustment.
The report said investors are willing to bring considerable investment into the country if they received credible signals from the new administration of commitment to policy directions and regulations consistent with strong private sector growth.
It further assessed Nigeria’s natural gas sector and called for a regulatory framework to boost the sector.
But with the federal government setting a 2016 budget oil benchmark of $38 a barrel, current forecasts show that oil prices could fall as low as $20 per barrel next year, as the Organisation of Petroleum Exporting Countries’ (OPEC) decision to abandon a formal production quota exacerbates a bulging supply glut, reported Reuters yesterday.
Speaking as the price of a barrel of Brent crude, the benchmark international contract, slipped 5.2 per cent to $40.75 in New York, the lowest since February 2009, Ole Hansen, head of commodity strategy at Saxo Bank, said it was “difficult to rule out anything”.
“We could see a short-lived phase of all-out panic, which could trigger a free fall situation,” he said. “With no signs of non-OPEC producers, such as US and Russia, cutting back, the near-term outlook for oil remains very challenging indeed.”
A meeting of the OPEC cartel in Vienna broke up on Friday with no agreement between members on output levels.
The price of crude has already plunged nearly by 64 per cent since June 2014, when a barrel of Brent cost $114, after Saudi Arabia opted to pump at near-record levels to maintain market share while putting pressure on producers in North America.
Hansen said that downward pressure on crude oil prices would intensify in the first three months of 2016 because of increased output from Iran and a seasonal rise in US stockpiles.
Goldman Sachs also warned that OPEC’s inconclusive meeting could trigger further falls, to as low as $20 per barrel, and said that prices were now likely to remain “lower for longer”.
There was disagreement between OPEC’s 13 members on how to accommodate the extra Iranian oil expected to flood the market when Western sanctions over the country’s nuclear programme are lifted, probably in the first or second quarter of next year.
Iran has refused to consider reining back its production until it reaches its pre-sanctions level of four million barrels per day. Saudi Arabia has no plans to curb its own production without cooperation from Iran, Iraq and others.
“The market is taking on board the fact that Saudi Arabia’s production strategy is long term and they are simply not going to cut,” Michael Wittner, an oil analyst at Société Générale in New York, said.
OPEC’s present output is 31.5 million barrels per day — one third of the world’s oil and well above its previous official quota of 30 million barrels.
The group acknowledged that there was little it could do to shore up the market as long as non-OPEC producers continued to pump at near-record levels.
Emmanuel Ibe Kachikwu, Nigeria’s Minister of State for Petroleum and President of OPEC, said that the group was in “wait and watch” mode until its next meeting, in June. Uncertainty about Iran’s production was a driver for the decision not to make changes, he said.
Oil has not traded at its present levels since the collapse of Lehman Brothers in 2008 sent financial markets into a tailspin. The latest price fall came as the European Union said yesterday that it was dropping an investigation into alleged oil price manipulation during the financial crisis by groups, including Shell and BP.
Figures to be published this week by the International Energy Agency (IEA) are likely to point to a swelling global glut of oil, which already stands at about three billion barrels.


HIGHLIGHTS OF 2016 BUDGET
• FG to spend N6.077tn, projects revenue of N3.82tn
• Budget deficit raised to N2.22tn or 2.16% of GDP
• Recurrent expenditure slashed to 70%
• Capital spending raised to 30%
• To borrow N1.8tn
• Projects recoveries of N350bn misappropriated funds
• To spend N63.3bn on petrol subsidy and N150bn carried over from 2015
• Scraps subsidy on kerosene
• Pegs oil benchmark at $38/bl, exchange rate at N198/$
• Projects GDP growth rate of 4.37%

Culled from Thisday

Tuesday, 8 December 2015

Social media gag bill: I won’t sign law inconsistent with Constitution –Buhari


By Juliana Taiwo-Obalonye, Abuja and Oluseye Ojo, Ibadan


President Muhammadu Buhari has ‎reacted to the criticism trailing a bill aimed at gagging social media in the country. The bill has scaled the crucial second reading in the Senate.
President Buhari said he would not assent to any legislation that is inconsistent with the constitution of Nigeria.
He reiterated his administration’s commitment to the protection of free speech in line with democratic best practices.
In a statement by ‎the Senior Special Assistant on Media and Publicity, Garba Shehu, Buhari ‎assured that he swore to defend the Nigerian constitution and would not lend his hand to anything that is inconsistent with the document.
Shehu explained that President Buhari is fully aware of the public reservations about the proposed legislation but assured that there is no cause for alarm “because the Senate is a democratic Senate. The president won’t assent to any legislation that may be inconsistent with the constitution.”
“As a key component of democratic principles,” the president acknowledged that people in democratic societies “are so emotionally attached to free speech that they would defend it with all their might.”
In his reaction, National President of Nigeria Union of Journalists (NUJ), Mr. Waheed Odusile, assured that the media would not allow the social media bill before the National Assembly to become law.
Delivering a lecture entitled: “Nigeria Beyond Oil “ as part of the 2015 Press Week of NUJ, Oyo State Council held in Ibadan yesterday, Odusile said the social media bill could be likened to the controversial Decree 4 of 1983, meant to gag the press.
Odusile said: “It is a law targeted at restricting freedom of expression. I am imploring  our (NUJ) state councils to submit petitions at their respective state assemblies. We should also register our grievances at our respective governor’s offices.”

Culled from The Sun

Monday, 7 December 2015

Two DSS, One Soldier Arrested Over Bureau De Change Robbery


290815F-DSS-officials.jpg - 290815F-DSS-officials.jpg
Department of State Services
  •  N66.4 million recovered
Yemi Akinsuyi in Abuja
The Department of State Services (DSS) has arrested two of its operatives,  while the Nigerian Army has equally nabbed one soldier in connection with a robbery that took place in a bureau de change.
According to a release signed on behalf of the DSS by one Tony Opuiyo, the Service arrested two out of five of its staff involved in the robbery and sharing, on 20th November, 2015, of the sum of N310m belonging to a bureau de change operator in Abuja.
Opuiyo, in the release, said while three of the DSS staff are now at large, the military authorities have commenced a detailed investigation of five of its personnel involved in the crime.
Preliminary investigations, he said, have revealed that Abdulrasheed Ahmadu Maigari of the DSS, conspired with four  other colleagues of his, namely: Solomon Inusa, Peter Okoye, Patrick Ishaya and George Mwatapwa Ibbi, to carry out this reprehensible act.
He said the five military personnel were led by one Capt. Hussein Ishaku Mshelia.
"Meanwhile, the Service has arrested Maigari and Ibbi; and Mshelia was equally arrested by the Army authorities.
"Efforts are ongoing to apprehend those still at large. A total of Sixty-Six Million Four Hundred and Thirty Seven Thousand, Four Hundred and Forty-five Naira (N66,437,445.00) and Six Thousand Two Hundred Dollars ($6,200) have so far been recovered.

Culled from Thisday