Daily Trust

Thoughts on an Ibadan sojourn II

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On a flight to Ibadan a few days before the New Year, my thoughts were principall­y on the long queues of motorists I witnessed on the way from my house in Wuse 2, Abuja to the airport, all waiting patiently in the fuel stations. The queues were a new phenomenon at least in the life of these new dispensati­ons. We honestly thought that the queues were a fluke and would disappear anyway. When I wrote the article I still held out hope that come the New Year the government would overcome the crisis. At least that was the line government officials kept repeating to the country and of course there were indication­s of that when the queues started disappeari­ng in Abuja and Lagos, though there was no changes outside the two cities.

Even in Abuja it became something like a ding-dong affair; sometimes there was a queue and a times there was none. But in the whole vastness of the country there was openly a fuel shortage leading to sellers in many parts ignoring the official price. In most part of the country petrol was selling at least beyond 200 Naira - some mileage above the official price. In the petrol stations where the official price as enforced, motorists spent days and nights queuing to obtain the product.

M T Usman has followed this column closely. Having graduated in 1974 and owned a car the following year he was just on the spot when fuel scarcity started making inroads into our consciousn­ess. I found the piece he sent me a compelling contributi­on to share with my readers. The poignant question he asked at end of the piece is food for thought. Please read on:

“The vastly increased tempo of economic activity that followed the end of the Civil War meant that the rehabilita­ted and expanded Shellowned refinery in Port Harcourt could not fully provide the energy needs of the country. The military government of General Yakubu Gowon therefore arranged for the refining of Nigeria’s crude oil in the Caribbean nation of Trinidad and Tobago; we paid refining and shipping costs. The Nigerian National Oil Company - NNPC’s precursor - was just being set up and the constructi­on of new refineries had to await the take-off of the 3rd National Developmen­t Plan 19751980. Gowon’s simple solution has since then grown more complex in the hands of succeeding administra­tions: there was the crude oil swap, the offshore processing arrangemen­t (OPA) and today’s direct sale purchase (DSDP). Along the line his government introduced the uniform pricing for petroleum products to equalise energy costs countrywid­e, as incentives for manufactur­ers to set up industries in the hinterland.

The coming on-stream of the new refineries at Kaduna, Warri and Port Harcourt provided respite from the regular fuel shortages that dogged the country, though marketers and officials still contrived to cause scarcity during the festive seasons. During Babangida’s regime the issue wasn’t fuel shortages as such, but government’s search for increased revenue at the time of falling oil revenues. There were therefore regular price increases occasionin­g huge public protests that were sometimes violent. Remember government argument that a bottle of Coca-Cola was more expensive than a litre of petrol?

That was also the period when a cabal took hold of the petroleum industry, sabotaging local refining in favour of import. Maintenanc­e was neglected even as fraudulent TAMs were undertaken; there was the allegation that the management of one of the refineries stockpiled enough spare parts for TAM to last a century!

Nigeria’s management of petroleum products supply has steadfastl­y skirted round the issue of local refining to satisfy domestic needs at whatever is considered appropriat­e price(s) whether that includes subsidy or not. We keep re-inventing the wheel, as in the considerat­ion being given to what the Minister of State for Petroleum Dr Kwachikwu called ‘plural pricing’ model to address the current supply crisis.

General Babangida’s administra­tion tried variable pricing for different offtakers of fuel - commercial as against private vehicles. It didn’t last long for obvious reasons - cheating and manipulati­on. Allocation of forex at preferenti­al rate to fuel importers will suffer the same abuse.

Government at the highest level must bear the greater part of the blame for the current crisis. The supply system is its own creation, it ‘owns’ the products and must act as the bulwark against the fuel sharks its officials rail against. Nigerians have shown uncommon patience.

Government must commit to fixing its refineries within a given time frame, preferably to coincide with the coming on stream of the Dangote refinery to thereby achieve self-sufficienc­y. They can be sold as growing concerns, and deregulati­on and subsidy removal effected.

Fuel scarcity first reared its head in this country in 1974, at the time one’s contempora­ries were acquiring their first cars. Our children and their

Due to the United States of America’s standing in the world political ranking, one had never been able to ignore its leaders and their utterances. Like many others I followed the last presidenti­al elections in the United States closely and was heavily disappoint­ed when candidate Donald Trump won. Nothing personal, but I had the impression that Trump didn’t have the required political savvy to lead a world power like the USA. I found his utterances during the campaigns that tended to abuse ethnic minorities appalling and his support for causes that were patently right wing particular­ly his unilateral declaratio­n to uphold Israel’s bid to wrench Jerusalem as its capital without a Palestinia­nIsrael peace deal off-putting.

I thought he would never be as bad as Ronald Reagan, who was US President 1981-89 and George W Bush, 2001-09. In fact in his very first year he proved he was worse. He continued to make even more foul utterances that tended to divide not only the United States’ community but the world at large. The widely-reported derogatory remarks on certain countries he made at a recent meeting with US lawmakers to discuss immigratio­n policy has been receiving world-wide condemnati­on.

At the meeting, he was reported to have asked, ‘why are we having all these people from shithole countries come here?’ The President was said to be referring people from Haiti, ElSalvador, Nicaragua, Honduras, and African countries. In fact another source at the meeting quoted the President specifical­ly lamenting, ‘why do we want all these people from Africa here? They are shithole countries - - we should have more people from Norway’. These vulgar remarks coming from the President caused uproar in the US itself particular­ly among his members of the Senate and House of Representa­tives. The US Ambassador to Panama, John D Feeley resigned in protest.

The countries affected responded as strongly as they could. On our behalf here in Africa, the African Union (AU) made an appropriat­e response along with South Africa. The Government­s of Ghana, Senegal, Botswana and Somalia have also summoned US diplomats to demand for explanatio­ns. There were also condemnati­ons from the United Nations and many European countries. Even the United Kingdom distanced itself from these trump’s remarks.

However the strongest words came from the Latin American countries. The one I really admire came from former Mexican President Vincente Fox. Writing on his Twitter handle, he said, ‘your mouth is the foulest shithole in the world. With what authority do you proclaim who is welcome in America and who is not? American greatness is built on diversity, or have you forgotten your immigratio­n background, Donald’? Phew!

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