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House of Representatives in session
A House of Representatives Ad hoc Committee report has
implicated the country’s service Chiefs, in the continuing theft of crude oil
in the Niger Delta, a member of the Committee told Vanguard Thursday.
The Vanguard source, who pleaded anonymity, also revealed
that the long-awaited Petroleum Industry Governance Bill will be passed by the
House between February and March this year. The piece of modified legislation
has been on the floor of the two chambers of the National Assembly, since 2007.
“Of course the Service Chiefs, NNPC and IOCs, are not
serious enough to stop oil theft, and our report is very clear on that. They
have not convinced us that they are not involved in the illicit oil business”,
he said.
The Committee had quizzed the Chief of Naval Staff,
Inspector General of Police, the Group Managing Director of Nigeria National
Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) and other stakeholders in the oil and gas
industry, over continuing and alarming theft of crude oil in the Niger Delta
before the House adjourned last year for the Christmas recess.
The chairman of the Ad hoc committee on crude oil theft,
Rep. Peter Akpatason, had earlier told some journalists, that the panel will
invite Service Chiefs and other stakeholders in the sector, to explain the
continuous pilfering of oil by an alleged cartel in the country.
The Committee alleged the theft of crude oil, with the
assistance of some officers of the Nigerian Military and ex-servicemen.
Akapatason who is also the Acting Leader of the House decried the alarming rate
of oil theft recently.
He recalled that the Federal Government under the leadership
of former president Olusegun Obasanjo had set up a committee to look into oil
theft in 2001, which reported that oil theft by a group of highly placed
persons posed a threat to the oil sector.
He informed that the committee will hinge its enquiry on
2001 findings to uncover those behind the crime.
“Oil theft is a very serious problem that is as old as the
oil industry itself. Oil theft has assumed a very alarming rate in recent
times.
“As far as back as 2001, the federal set up a committee
which noted a major threat to Nigeria oil industry arises from the activities
of a cartel or mafia which comprises highly and powerful placed individuals
running a network of agents to steal crude oil and finished petroleum products
from pipelines in Nigeria and could be possible enjoying the patronage of some
retired or top serving military or security personnel, political allies of
government who benefit from the illicit oil business and have persistently
frustrated efforts by the international community to assist Nigeria in fighting
the menace.
“This a very serious allegation by the committee set up by
former president, Olusegun Obasanjo and we are going to take up this
investigation from that perspective to look at who are actually responsible and
how we can stop this criminality and ensure that revenue derivable from the oil
and gas sector is exactly what we ought be getting what in this country,
nothing short of that”, he said.
He said security Chiefs and other stakeholders will be
invited to explain the persistence of the crime.
Recall that on September 26, the House through a motion
raised the alarm, that Nigeria was losing about N5 trillion annually from oil
theft and about 22 million barrels of crude oil, counting for about N1.3
trillion loss of crude were stolen in the Niger Delta in 2019 alone.
The committee’s mandate was to determine the volume of crude
oil extracted in the country on a daily basis; determine the quantity sold at
the internal markets and the quantity consumed locally; ascertain the quantity
of crude oil stolen on a daily basis and the people responsible for the theft;
further determine the quantity of crude oil that is reserved daily to process
into kerosene, diesel and to ensure that a thorough environmental Impact
assessment of the damage caused to the ecology is carried out. (Vanguard)

