Kachikwu’s camp hits Baru with six posers
| Bijschrift toevoegen |
‘GMD’s response full of distortions’
David-West: minister’s claims wild
Loyalists find gaps in NNPC’s
position
POSERS FOR BARU, BY KACHIKWU’S
LOYALISTS
•What
becomes of Sections 130(2), 148(1) of the Constitution and Section 1(1) of NNPC
Act?
•How can the NNPC Tenders Board appointed by Baru be responsible for approving
contracts in the light of Section 20(1) of the Public Procurement Act?
•What is the proof that Kachikwu as NNPC GMD did what Baru is doing?
•How can NNPC Board oversee budget without information?
•Why was Baru silent on the controversial appointments he made without briefing the board?
•Are there standards of transparency and due process when NNPC awarded contracts of
that magnitude without carrying NNPC Board along?
•How can the NNPC Tenders Board appointed by Baru be responsible for approving
contracts in the light of Section 20(1) of the Public Procurement Act?
•What is the proof that Kachikwu as NNPC GMD did what Baru is doing?
•How can NNPC Board oversee budget without information?
•Why was Baru silent on the controversial appointments he made without briefing the board?
•Are there standards of transparency and due process when NNPC awarded contracts of
that magnitude without carrying NNPC Board along?
The crisis
of confidence in the oil sector raged on yesterday, with some associates of the
Minister of State, Dr. Ibe Kachikwu, taking on the Group Managing Director of
the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC), Dr. Maikanti Baru.
Kachikwu
wrote to President Muhammadu Buhari, alleging that Baru
- awarded $25billion contracts unilaterally;
- ran a “bravado” management; and
- made appointments without consultations.
Baru denied
it all. He said no money was involved in the contracts and that the NNPC Tenders
Board had no business reporting to Kachikwu and the corporation’s Board. The
Presidency backed his position.
But
Kachikwu’s “loyalists” have described Baru’s response as a potpourri of
contradictions and distortions. To them, Baru’s and NNPC’s defence is
“unconvincing”.
These
verdicts were contained in a fact-sheet meant to clarify issues surrounding the
disputed $25billion transactions by NNPC.
The Nation stumbled on the fact-sheet
yesterday. It may have been prepared against the backdrop of NNPC’s Monday
statement, which described Kachikwu as a “liar” with his August 30 memo to
President.
The
loyalists of the Minister raised six posers for Baru and NNPC to answer.
The six
posers, based on the 1999 Constitution, the NNPC Act and the Public Procurement
Act, are as follows:
- What becomes of Section 130(2), Section 148(1) of the 1999 Constitution and Section 1(1) of the NNPC Act if Baru said he did not have to consult the Minister and NNPC Board?
- How can the NNPC Tenders Board appointed by Baru be responsible for approving contracts in the light of Section 20(1) of the Public Procurement Act?
- What is the proof that Kachikwu as NNPC GMD did the same things that Baru is doing?
- How can NNPC Board oversee budget without information?
- Why was Baru silent on the controversial appointments he made without briefing the board? Did the silence confirm that the appointments were irregular or wrong?
- Are there standards of transparency and due process when NNPC awarded contracts of that magnitude without carrying NNPC Board along?
The
fact-sheet reads in part: “While not joining issues, it will be worrisome if
relevant section of Nigerians and keen watchers of oil and gas industry are not
put through on the response of the NNPC GMD, Dr. Maikanti Baru on policies on
public procurement as enshrined in the relevant laws and regulations governing
procurement in Nigeria, which include Public Procurement Act 2007 and
Procurement Procedures Manual.
“The Public
Procurement Act 2007 provides procurement guidance to all Federal ministries,
extra-ministerial agencies, departments, agencies, parastatals, corporations
and other public entities set up by the constitution or Acts of the National
Assembly and /or whose funding derives from the Federation Accounts, their own
internally generated revenue, the Federation share of the Consolidated Revenue
Fund and special allocations in the federal budget or being entities outside of
the foregoing description, derive at least 35% of the funds appropriated or
proposed to be appropriated for any type of procurement described in the Public
Procurement Act 2007, which NNPC is one.
“The
procurement Act 2007 borders on Efficiency, Fairness, Transparency,
Accountability and Ethical Standards, and way and manner such procurement shall
be conducted, and the entities like Tenders’ Board with powers to do.
“And any
procurement system that fails to take into consideration these relevant
sections stimulated hesitation to compete, submission of inflated tenders
containing a risk premium, or submission of deflated tenders followed by
delayed or defective performance, collusion in bribery, bad value for money,
and betrayal and abuse of the public trust for personal gain.
“Dr.
Kachikwu’s leaked memo to the President sought among other things, to promote
application of fair and competitive standard and ethical practices.
“But in his
public response to the private memo to the President, it is clear to all
fair-minded persons that the attempt of the NNPC GMD, Dr. Maikanti Baru, to
defend himself is unconvincing, clear embarrassment to the person of President
Buhari, his dream of sanctified institutions, and our dear constitution.
“The public
response to the issues raised in the leaked memo to the President is a
potpourri of contradictions, distortions, and clear breach of facts and logic.”
The
loyalists faulted Baru’s claim that he did not need to consult the Minister and
the Board on the alleged $25billion transactions.
They asked
the NNPC boss to be more forthcoming on his non-consultation of the Minister
and the Board in respect to the provisions of sections 130(2) and148(1) of the
1999 Constitution, and Section 1(1) of the NNPC Act
The
fact-sheet added: “The ministerial issue as viewed lacks substance. The 1999
Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria (3rd alteration) is very clear
on the powers of the President of the Federal Republic.
“By virtue
of Section 130(2) of the Constitution, “the president shall be the Head of
State, the Chief Executive of the Federation and Commander-in-Chief of the
Armed Forces of the Federation,” and by virtue of Section 148(1) of the
Constitution, ‘the president may, in his description, assign to the
Vice-President or any Minister of the Government of the Federation responsibility
for any business of the Government of the Federation, including the
administration of any department of government.’
“So by the
enshrinement of that Section 148(1) above, and the supremacy of the
Constitution, according to Section 1 sub-section (1), Baru’s submission
as regards Kachikwu’s role as an appointed Minister by Mr. President is wrong,
null, void and inconsistent with the constitution to the extent of its
inconsistency.
“Again apart
from the fact that every Board of parastatals, extra-ministerial or
corporations etc. are the supervisory entities of such, the NNPC Act in
Sections below are clear
“S. 1(1)
says: ‘There shall be established a corporation by the name of the Nigerian
National Petroleum Corporation (hereinafter in the Act referred to as “the
Corporation”) which shall be a body corporate with perpetual succession and a
common seal and may sue or be sued in its corporate name.
(2) The
affairs of the Corporation shall be conducted by a Board of Directors of the
Corporation which shall consist of a Chairman and the following other members,
that is (a) the Director-General, Federal Ministry of Finance and Economic
Development;
(b) The
Managing Director of the Corporation; and
(c) Three
persons to be appointed by the National Council of Ministers, being persons who
by reason of their ability, experience or specialised knowledge of the oil
industry or of business or professional attain.”
“Sub-section
(2) of the Act is clear that the NNPC Board has overall supervisory powers over
the corporation. How can these supervisory powers not include some kind of
oversight on contracts worth billions of dollars?”
The
minister’s loyalists faulted Baru’s claim that the NNPC Tenders Board is the
only legal body to approve contracts and not the NNPC Board.
The
fact-sheet said: “Baru’s claim that the NNPC Tenders’ Board, not the NNPC
Board, is the right body to approve such contracts in question is also false.
According to Public Procurement Act’s Section below:
S.20. (1)
The accounting officer of a procuring entity shall be the person charged with
line supervision of the conduct of all procurement processes; in the case of
ministries the Permanent Secretary and in the case of extra-ministerial
departments and corporations the Director-General or officer of co-ordinate
responsibility.
(2) The
accounting officer of every procuring entity shall have overall responsibility
for the planning of, organization of tenders, evaluation of tenders and
execution of all procurements and in particular shall be responsible for.”
“Apart from
the GMD as the appointor of the Tenders’ Board, which he also chairs, his duty
is purely to plan, organise, evaluate, execute and supervise the conduct of
‘procurement processes’ and not to approve contracts above his threshold under
the seal of the Corporation.
“He cannot
plan, organise, evaluate, execute procurement process, approve and execute
approved projects. He lacks the statutory capacity to be the sole determinant
of due process in the corporation.
“But after
the approval by the NNPC Board, President or FEC, it is worthy of note that the
Tenders’ Board, according to Public Procurement Act in Section 22 (3), ‘shall
be responsible for the award of procurement of goods, works and services within
the threshold set in the regulations.”
“Under the
seal of the NNPC Board, according to the First Schedule, Part A, Sections 11,
12 and 13 of the NNPC Act which says:
“11. The
fixing of the seal of the Corporation shall be authenticated by the signature
of the Chairman and any other person authorized in that behalf by the Board.
- Any contract or instrument, which if made or executed by any person not being a body corporate would not be required to be under seal, may be made or executed on behalf of the Corporation by any person generally or specially authorised to act for that purpose by the Board.
- Any document purporting to be a contract, instrument or other document duly signed or sealed on behalf of the Corporation shall be received in evidence and, unless the contrary is proved, be presumed without further proof to have been so signed and sealed.”
The
loyalists claimed that it was not true that Dr. Kachikwu as NNPC GMD did what
Baru is doing
The
fact-sheet states: “At the inception of Dr. Kachikwu’s term as the GMD NNPC,
there was no NNPC board in place, and this void Kachikwu bridged by briefing
the President weekly on all key issues. All actions and activities were
sanctioned by Mr. President.
“Beyond
that, it is on record that Dr. Kachikwu as the then GMD of NNPC instituted a
culture of transparency at all levels which culminated to monthly publications
of the operational activities and briefings of stakeholders of the corporation.
This practice, which is a key component of the oil and gas reform plan, has
since ended with his exit as the GMD.”
The
loyalists asked Baru to explain how NNPC Board oversees the budget without
information.
They also
challenged NNPC and Baru to explain their silence on some controversial
appointments made by the GMD.
They said
Baru could not hide behind illegality to justify wrong actions.
The
fact-sheet said: “Baru admitted that one of the NNPC board’s statutory
responsibilities is overseeing the budget. How can the board perform this
function if it has no information or input about contracts to be executed?
“Why was Dr.
Baru silent on the controversial appointments he made without briefing the
board? It is noteworthy that Dr. Baru was silent on the appointments which he
carried out without informing the NNPC board, and were not subsequently
ratified by the board. His silence confirms that his appointments were
irregular and wrong.
“The truth
is, there are no standards of transparency and due process that will allow NNPC
to award contracts of that magnitude without carrying the NNPC board along. Due
process is about being open, not taking refuge behind distorted and convenient
interpretations of the rules.
” Due
process is not just the letter of the law. It is also about the spirit of the
law. People who have nothing to hide, welcome the opportunity to share information
with relevant stakeholders. As they say, transparency is the best deodorant.”
No comments:
Post a Comment