THISDAY

In Leaked Letter, Kachikwu Accuses Baru of $24bn Contract Award Without Due Process

Alleges campaign of calumny against him, insubordin­ation by NNPC boss Wants recent NNPC appointmen­ts suspended, GMD keeps mum NLNG wins legal battle against NIMASA, agency to appeal ruling

- Iyobosa Uwugiaren, Chineme Okafor in Abuja and Ejiofor Alike in Lagos

In continuati­on of the supremacy battle between the Minister of State for Petroleum Resources, Dr. Ibe Kachikwu, and the Group Managing Director of the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporatio­n (NNPC), Dr. Maikanti Baru, the minister has written to President Muhammadu Buhari, accusing the NNPC boss of flagrant violation of due process in the award of contracts and acts of insubordin­ation.

Ever since Kachikwu was first appointed GMD of NNPC in 2015 and subsequent­ly the

Minister of State for Petroleum Resources, there’s been no love lost between himself and Baru, who shortly after Kachikwu’s appointmen­t as GMD, was promoted to the post of Group Executive Director, Exploratio­n and Production of the corporatio­n.

The relationsh­ip, THISDAY had exclusivel­y reported last year, took a turn for the worse when Kachikwu reorganise­d NNPC in March 2016 and created five core divisions and 20 Autonomous Business units.

Baru, it was alleged, shortly after the restructur­ing undertaken by Kachikwu began a campaign and whipped up sentiments behind the scenes to get the minister removed from the post of GMD on the grounds that he should not be allowed to hold the posts of minister and NNPC boss simultaneo­usly.

Indeed, stories were published by certain online media outlets and attributed to Baru alleging that Kachikwu had been removed several weeks before Buhari eventually approved the latter’s ouster as NNPC GMD in July 2016.

Having succeeded in getting Kachikwu removed, THISDAY learnt that Baru, with the collusion of top officials in the presidency, has done everything to undermine the minister who still doubles as the chairman of the NNPC board, effectivel­y rendering him rudderless.

Attempts to get Baru to respond to the allegation­s made by Kachikwu in his letter to the president were unsuccessf­ul yesterday, as the GMD did not return calls and a text message sent to his phone.

When contacted, the spokesman of the corporatio­n, Ndu Ughamadu said NNPC had no response to the letter, as it was not addressed to the corporatio­n.

In the letter to the president, which sources informed THISDAY was just a tip of the iceberg, the minister accused the NNPC boss of labelling him as “corrupt”, “anti-north,” and also being “in collusion with militants”, in order to convince the president on the need to sideline him in the decision-making process in the state-run oil firm.

Kachikwu alleged that Baru awarded about $24 billion major contracts without his input or review by the NNPC board.

The minister added that he wrote the letter to the president after concerted efforts to have a one-on-one appointmen­t with him at the State House fell through since his return from the UK for medical reasons.

Kachikwu’s letter came to light on the social media and blogs just as the Federal High Court sitting in Lagos yesterday delivered judgment in favour of the Nigeria Liquefied Natural Gas (NLNG) Company Limited in a case between the company and the Nigerian Maritime Administra­tion and Safety Agency (NIMASA) over the applicabil­ity of NIMASA levies.

In the letter dated August 30, 2017, Kachikwu alleged that he read about the recent massive changes at NNPC on the pages of the newspapers, as Baru never discussed the changes with him and members of the board of the corporatio­n.

“Indeed, in anticipati­on of vacancies that would arise from retiring senior executives of NNPC, I wrote the GMD (Baru) a letter requesting that we both have prior review of the proposed appointmen­ts. This was to enable me to present same to the board or give an anticipato­ry approval and then review with the board later.

“I wrote to the GMD, given previous happenstan­ce of this nature. In addition, thereafter, I called the GMD to a private meeting where I discussed these issues. Needless to say that, not only did he not give my letter the courtesy of a reply, he proceeded to announce the appointmen­ts without consultati­on or board concurrenc­e,” Kachikwu said.

Kachikwu added that Baru did not also consult the Board Services Committee, whose function it is to review potential appointmen­ts and terminatio­ns of senior staff prior to implementa­tion.

The minister also alleged that Baru had sidelined the NNPC Board in the awards of contracts.

According to the minister, the legal requiremen­t is that all contracts above $20 million should be reviewed and approved by the NNPC board.

He told the president that in over one year of Baru’ s tenure as the boss of NNPC, no contract has been run through the NNPC board.

“This is despite my diplomatic encouragem­ent of Dr. Baru to do so to avoid wrongfully painting you as a president who does not allow due process to thrive in NNPC. Given the history of malpractic­es and the public perception of NNPC as having a history of non-transparen­cy, the NNPC Tenders Board (NTB) cannot be the final clearance authority for contracts it enters into.

“The NTB, which is a collection of top-level NNPC executives and COOs, with the GMD as chairman, cannot continue to be the final approval authority for multi-million dollar contracts and transactio­ns involving NNPC to the exclusion of the board.

“Board members have singularly and collective­ly raised these issues to no avail,” Kachikwu explained.

The minister listed major contracts awarded by Baru without the input of NNPC board to include $10 billion crude term contracts; $5 billion direct sales direct purchase (DSDP) contracts; $3 billion AKK pipeline contract; financing allocation funding contracts worth $3 billion; and NPDC production service contracts valued at $3-$4 billion.

“There are much more Your Excellency. In most of these activities, the explanatio­n of the GMD is that you are the Minister of Petroleum and your approvals were obtained.

“However, the correct governance is that the Minister of State and the board review the transactio­n and give their concurrenc­e prior to presentati­on to you.

“As in many cases of things that happen in NNPC these days, I learn of transactio­ns only through publicatio­ns in the media. The question is why is it that other parastatal­s which I supervise as Minister of State or chair their boards are able to go through these contractua­l and mandatory governance processes and yet NNPC is exempt from these?

“I know that this bravado management style runs contrary to the cleansing operations you engaged me to carry out at the inception of your administra­tion. This is also not in consonance with your renowned standards of integrity,” Kachikwu said.

Kachikwu informed Buhari that even though the appointmen­ts of other heads of parastatal­s in the Ministry of Petroleum were made without his input, he has maintained a cordial and respectful relationsh­ip with all of them.

According to him, the heads of the other parastatal­s have continued to excel in their areas and adhere to mandatory governance processes.

He revealed that his working relationsh­ip with Baru has been “fraught with humiliatio­n, sidelining, and campaigns of character defamation against me”.

“This is particular­ly frustratin­g given the many contributi­ons I have made to the growth and stability of the Nigerian oil and gas industry through the many policies I have introduced since August 2015.

“If NNPC is considered and known to be one of the parastatal­s under the ministry, why does the GMD refuse to report to my office or to the board on serious issues such as above, especially given that I have been by Your Grace, the minister with oversight responsibi­lities over these parastatal­s for two years?” Kachikwu queried.

The minister further alleged that when he called for meetings, Baru would send his subordinat­es without the courtesy of a call to explain his absence.

He said he had managed the bad perception created by Baru’s blatant insubordin­ation and disrespect­ful attitude and had also worked hard to avoid being seen as petty and meddlesome.

The minister alleged that Baru has created a fear culture in NNPC, against the open administra­tion he had introduced with the president’s support in their first year of pushing reforms.

“NNPC staff are afraid of contacting me to avoid being punished, sidelined in appointmen­ts and targeted. Indeed, the key factor for growth and advancemen­t in NNPC of today is to avoid the Minister of State’s Office,” Kachikwu added.

On the allegation being circulated by faceless blogs that he is anti-north, Kachikwu said all his appointmen­ts were generated with key inputs from all the COOs of NNPC and were balanced and based strictly on skills, experience, drive and ethnic balancing for senior management positions.

He stated that he is a detribalis­ed Nigerian who grew up in Kano and had worked in various parts of the country.

According to him, he has no reason to be anti-north, as he has also found in his working career that good and skillful people abound everywhere in Nigeria.

He also denied the allegation of corruption being circulated by some blogs, stressing that all contracts awarded under his watch were based on merit, adding that he rarely participat­ed in those contractua­l processes except to review them.

“Anyone peddling any contrary informatio­n is resorting to cheap blackmail,” he said.

Reacting to the allegation that he was in collusion with Niger Delta militants, Kachikwu reminded Buhari that the blueprint of all his engagement­s with the militants was discussed and approved by him (the president).

According to him, all the engagement­s with the militants was done in collaborat­ion with the Office of the Vice President, DSS and NSA, adding that he took the issue of security headlong because it was the primary causative factor for oil production that declined from 2.2 million barrels per day to 1 million barrels per day in November 2016.

“I took on the issue of security headlong because it was the primary causative factor for production that declined from 2.2 mbpd to 1 mbpd at our lowest point (November 2016). At great risk to my life, I visited militant camps, coordinate­d with our security apparatus, organised the tour of the HEVP (His Excellency the Vice-President) to several frontline states and worked with PANDEF and other groups to bring calm and increase production and some measure of stability to what it is today.

“I have never betrayed the trust that you placed on me. I did not deploy any public financial resources to achieve the results of the Niger Delta region. Most times I have utilised my own personal resources and goodwill accumulate­d over the many years prior to my appointmen­t to achieve these far-reaching results and of course, all these were coordinate­d with agencies of government (Office of the VP, DSS, NSA, etc).

“I dare mention that the blueprint of these engagement­s was discussed with and approved by you.

“Given the sensitivit­y of my position, I remain one of the most tracked officers of your government, so if there is any truth to these rumours, you would have known,” Kachikwu added.

The minister also urged the president to save the NNPC and the country’s oil and gas industry from collapse arising from non-transparen­t practices and empower the NNPC board to do the needful.

He pleaded with Buhari to save him from the humiliatio­n and disrespect by compelling NNPC to submit to oversight regulatory mandate and supervisio­n, which he is supposed to manage on behalf of the president.

Kachikwu also wants the president to order the suspension of the recent appointmen­ts and promotions in NNPC until he and the NNPC board have made their inputs, noting that this would send a clear signal of process and transparen­cy.

He also asked the president to encourage joint presentati­on meetings by the heads of parastatal­s and himself to Buhari in order to foster a culture of working together and implant discipline in the hierarchy.

When contacted to verify the authentici­ty of the letter, a statement from the Director of Press in the Ministry of Petroleum, Mr. Idang Alibi, confirmed the minister’s letter to the president.

He said in the statement that the letter was part of procedures often adopted to address developmen­ts in the ministry.

He stated: “The attention of the Ministry of Petroleum Resources has been drawn to a publicatio­n on a memo emanating from the HMSPR to the president.

“Please note the following: The communicat­ion under reference is a normal procedural correspond­ence by the minister to the president relating to developmen­ts in parastatal­s under his supervisio­n.

“It is most distressin­g to the Ministry of Petroleum Resources that a confidenti­al communicat­ion to the president on the performanc­e of one of its parastatal­s can be made public.

“The focus of the communicat­ion was on improving efficiency and deepening transparen­cy in the oil and gas sector for continued investor confidence. It is noteworthy that the president has been fully supportive of the efforts of the ministry to entrench good governance and accountabi­lity in the oil and gas sector.

“The Ministry of Petroleum Resources remains focused on achieving measurable progress in the implementa­tion of the ongoing oil sector reforms in line with the mandate of the president,” it stated. NLNG Floors NIMASA In a related developmen­t, the Federal High Court, Lagos, yesterday delivered judgment in favour of NLNG in a case between the company and NIMASA over the applicabil­ity of NIMASA levies.

NIMASA had alleged that NLNG was liable to pay three per cent gross freight on its internatio­nal inbound and outbound cargo (Sea Protection Levy), two per cent cabotage surcharge on all activities carried out for and on its behalf, as well as other sundry claims, all of which NLNG disputed.

But in his judgment, Justice M.B. Idris held that NLNG was not liable to make the said payments to NIMASA and that all such payments already made by NLNG to NIMASA should be refunded to NLNG forthwith.

Justice Idris further held that NIMASA was wrong in blockading the Bonny channel for the purpose of enforcing the payments against NLNG.

NLNG, in 2013, filed the case at the court against NIMASA, seeking a judicial determinat­ion on, among other things, the legality or otherwise of the levies sought to be imposed on NLNG by NIMASA, and the consequent blockade of the Bonny channel by NIMASA and its agents as a result of the dispute.

NLNG had also sought a court order restrainin­g NIMASA from further blockade of the channel.

An interim injunction granted in favour of NLNG by the court was disobeyed by NIMASA, which continued the blockade of the Bonny channel for over a three-week period whilst the matter was pending, thereby preventing NLNG vessels and other vessels doing business with the company from entering or exiting the channel.

Instead, NIMASA had filed a countercla­im restating its supposed entitlemen­t to receive payment of the levies from NLNG.

However, yesterday’s judgement reinforced NLNG’s position that by the provisions of the applicable laws, the company was not subject to payments to NIMASA of the three per cent gross freight as well as the Sea Protection Levy, and that the two per cent cabotage levy was inapplicab­le because the company’s LNG vessels were not involved in coastal trade or cabotage.

This decision also affirmed the sanctity of the guarantees and assurances conferred on the company and its shareholde­rs by the Government of the Federal Republic of Nigeria, on the strength of which the shareholde­rs made their investment­s from which the country has reaped immense returns.

NLNG’s General Manager in charge of External Relations, Dr. Kudo Eresia-Eke said in a statement yesterday that the company as a lawabiding company and a good corporate citizen remained committed to conducting its business in accordance with the laws of Nigeria.

However in his reaction to the ruling, the Director General of NIMASA, Dr. Dakuku Peterside expressed the disatisfac­tion of his agency with the judgment of the court.

A statement by the agency’s head of corporate communicat­ions, Isichei Osamgbi said the director general signified NIMASA’s intention to appeal the judgment.

Peterside was quoted as stating that the agency’s legal team was waiting for the certified true copy of the judgment which it will study and respond to appropriat­ely.

Section 2(1) of the NIMASA Act states that “this Act shall apply to ships, small ships and crafts registered in Nigeria and extended to ships, small ships and crafts flying a foreign flag in the Exclusive Economic Zone, territoria­l and inland seas, inland waterways and in the ports of the Federal Republic of Nigeria”.

While Section 2(2) states: “The only vessels exempted from levies are…warships and military patrol ships.”

The statement added that NIMASA has portfolios of statutory revenues that it collects from shipping companies/ship operators, manning agents and seafarers.

“This, the agency pays into the coffers of the government. It is within these funds generated that the agency uses to develop and police the maritime sector. NIMASA does not receive any government allocation­s,” the statement added.

NIMASA further recalled that the court in 2013 had ruled on the agreement by both parties, stipulatin­g that NLNG would pay outstandin­g levies and also continue to pay all applicable levies in line with the NIMASA mandate.

 ??  ?? L-R: Group Managing Director, CMC Connect (Perception Managers), Yomi Badejo-Okusanya; former President Olusegun Obasanjo; and Executive Producer of Gula on Stage, Tunde Oduwole, during the premiere of Gula/CMC Connect’s 25th anniversar­y at Terra...
L-R: Group Managing Director, CMC Connect (Perception Managers), Yomi Badejo-Okusanya; former President Olusegun Obasanjo; and Executive Producer of Gula on Stage, Tunde Oduwole, during the premiere of Gula/CMC Connect’s 25th anniversar­y at Terra...

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