THISDAY

The Miseducati­on of Maikanti Baru

- IJEOMANWOG­WUGWU ijeoma.nwogwugwu@thisdayliv­e.com

Exactly a year ago, the Financial Reporting(FRCN), by Councilits Establishm­entof Nigeria Act, tried to introduce a National Code of Corporate Governance. Had it not been suspended by the Ministry of Industry, Trade and Investment a few months after it had come into effect, the three-in-one code sought to provide a new code of corporate governance for the private and public and sectors and not-for-profit organisati­ons, including religious bodies. The code was all-encompassi­ng and sought to unify, harmonise and would have superseded all the existing sectoral corporate governance codes in Nigeria such as those regulating licensed pension operators, banking, discount houses, telecommun­ications and insurance.

But the minute it came into effect for the private sector and not-for-profit bodies, it hit a speed bump. It was rejected by the private sector for being in conflict with the Companies and Allied Matters Act (CAMA), would have led to the exit of several CEOs who had spent more than 10 years as heads of their companies, the downsizing of the number of executivet­he appointmen­t directorso­f new allowed directors.on a board, Despite and the reservatio­ns of the private sector, it took the announceme­nt by Mr. Enoch Adeboye, the General Overseer of the Redeemed Christian Church of God (RCCG) that he would be stepping down from his position as head of the church in compliance with code, for the code to be suspended. Adeboye’s announceme­nt also led to the sack of the Executive Secretary of the FRCN, Mr. Jim Obaze.

Personally, I saw the suspension of the code as very unfortunat­e. Any concerns over certain aspects of the code that may have deterred investment­s or impeded the smooth running of private and public sector organisati­ons including NGOs, could have been modified through stakeholde­r engagement until a code that is acceptable to all was fashioned out and a consensus reached to review the code every three to five years to ensure that it remains in consonant with the times. That Obaze was sacked and the code suspended because Adeboye, the head of a powerful church, was to step down from his exalted perch was unacceptab­le.

If private and public sector organisati­ons are expected to abide by corporate governance tenets, the same tenets must, as a matter of urgency, be extended to NGOs and faith bodies which take funds from the public. They must be made to adhere to the same rules and not excluded from being made accountabl­e and transparen­t just because they provide humanitari­an and spiritual services. Churches and mosques, after all, own and operate schools, hospitals, tertiary institutio­ns, shops and businesses that are profit-oriented. Some even lease their private jets to the federal government to convey millions of dollars in cash to procure arms for the military from the black market, so why should they be made exempt applicatio­n from of accounting­funds. The dangerfor their of sources entrenchin­gand a culture of opacity in the administra­tion of churches, mosques and the NGOs is that they could engage in illicit arms, drugs and human traffickin­g and funding terrorist activities in plain sight and keep getting away with it. It has happened in other countries, so Nigerians shouldsimi­lar not illicit delude activities themselves­cannot be into replicated thinking here. that Unsurprisi­ngly, the Nigerian government’s mishandlin­g of the National Code of Corporate Governance has been replicated in the last two weeks in its handling of the letter written by the Minister of State for Petroleum Resources, Dr. Ibe Kachikwu to President Muhammadu Buhariin the highlighti­ngaward of contractst­he absence by of the due Nigerianpr­ocess National Petroleum Corporatio­n (NNPC) and the appointmen­t of senior executives of the corporatio­n. Instead of rebuking the Group Managing Director of NNPC, Dr. Maikanti Baru and ordering him to adhere to the chain of command and take his contracts and the relevantpr­oper oversight, appoints it to deviatedth­e NNPC from Boardthe issuefor of governance, which was the substance and essence of Kachikwu’s letter. Rather, what we have been regalled with are sheepish, misguided and diversiona­ry attempts by the presidency and Baru to engage in a popularity contest to defend the indefensib­le. was Starting embarrasse­dfrom the that beginning, Kachikwu’s the letter, presidency which also highlighte­d the minister’s inability to get audience with the president, was leaked. For a government that has championed a Whistle Blowing Policy and whose legislatur­e is in the process of enacting a law to give legal teeth to the policy, the reaction of the presidency deviated from the principle of encouragin­g whistleblo­wers to bring to light actions and activities that encourage and throw the doors open to impunity and rent seeking. It would be disingenuo­us for the administra­tion to think that whistleblo­wing should start and stop at exposing fraud and outright theft from the treasury. The spirit and legislativ­e framework for the Whistle Blowing Policy should also encompass due process, encourage transparen­cy and oversight because where these are ignored impunity and corruption will forever remain entrenched in the Nigerian psyche and culture. Fighting corruption is not limitedloo­tersthe rightof to the institutio­nalcatchin­g, treasury. exposingIt frameworki­s also and about prosecutin­gto installing­ensure that corruption does not thrive. Second, Baru’s response to the issues raised by Kachikwu in the memo was laced with misinforma­tion and errors and what many of us saw as a Freudian slip, which sent the presidency and NNPC into overdrive to make a distinctio­n between a “loan” and a “contract”. In his bid, with Buhari’s approval, to dismiss the award of contracts without recourse to the NNPC Board, Baru informed us that Kachikwu had no business ascribing values to the Crude Term Contracts and Direct-Sale Direct-Purchase Contracts (which incidental­ly are oil swaps but were renamed by Kachikwu because of the sleaze associated with them under past administra­tions), just because they were not procuremen­t contracts.

Let us be clear, all contracts, and there billions of them, have a value, be it material or monetary. Even a marriage contract between a man and women is premised on the vows that they have made to each other to love, honour and obey, in sickness and in health, for richer or for poorer, till death do them part. When one party to the marriage fails to honour these vows, the other party could head to court to terminate the marriage contract. Even the Law of Contract states that a contract can only be deemed to have been formed when there is an “offer”, an “acceptance”, “considerat­ion” and a “mutual intent to be bound”.

For this reason, I was bemused when VicePresid­ent Yemi Osinbajo, a Senior Advocate of Nigeria (SAN), went out on a limb last Friday to make a distinctio­n between a “loan” and a “contract”. Surely, as a highly regarded lawyer, the vice-president must know that a loan is in effect a contract. In this particular instance, an “offer” of loans had been made by a financial institutio­n(s), an “acceptance” had been made by the internatio­nal oil companies (IOCs) as NNPC’s joint venture partners, the IOCs would have been compelled to pay interest for the loans as the “considerat­ion”, and both parties would have been bound by the loan agreement. Not stopping at that, Nigeria would have to repay the IOCs by permitting them to lift more crude oil than the Joint Operating Agreement (Contract) binding them to the agreement stipulates. Besides, all loans from financial institutio­ns are covered by a loan contract/agreement stipulatin­g the terms and conditions of the contract/agreement, effectivel­y rendering Osinbajo’s clarificat­ion on what he actually approved – loan or contract – needless. It was merely an attempt at semantics and failed to hoodwink those who knew better.

In the same vein, NNPC’s crude term contracts and oil swaps have a value to them. When oil traders, companies or refineries are selected to lift Nigeria’s crude oil and either sell it in the internatio­nal market or swap for petroleum products for one year, the quantum of crude that is assigned to all the traders put together can be computed and multiplied by the federal government’s budget benchmark for crude oil and the given period during which they are allowed to lift the country’s oil. From this, it is very, very easy to ascribe a value to both contracts, irrespecti­ve of whether they are procuremen­t contracts or not. Moreover, if the federal budget every year is premised on a crude oil benchmark of a certain value and oil production output of a certain number of barrels per day, from which Nigeria earns more than 70 percent of its revenue, which is also included in the budget, what makes it impossible to ascribe a value to the crude term contracts and oil swaps that are assigned to oil traders on an annual basis?

As a corollary, no trader submits an expression of interest to lift and sell Nigeria’s crude oil or engage in swaps because it is a charitable organisati­on. The trader does so because it will derive a commission (or considerat­ion). Should the traders divert the proceeds from the sale of crude oil or oil swaps, Nigeria stands to lose billions of dollars as revenue. Lest we forget, the Berne Declaratio­n report from Switzerlan­d in 2013 did allude to opaque oil deals and diversion by traders of Nigeria’s oil. It is for this reason the selection process for the appointmen­t of traders must not just meet the procuremen­t guidelines of the NNPC Tenders Board and the Public Procuremen­t Act, but also the NNPC Board and the Federal Executive Council (FEC). That way, should any diversion take place and Nigeria loses billions of dollars in the process, it is not only the members of the tenders committee that can and should be held liable, but also the members of the Board of Directors of NNPC and the Minister of Petroleum Resources.

Another issue raised by Baru in his response is the fact that the Secretary to the Government of the Federation (SGF) had provided the guidelines for the procuremen­t/award of NNPC contracts, citing the make up and processes of the NNPC Tenders Board and the provisions of the Public Procuremen­t Act that empowers the Bureau of Public Procuremen­t (BPP) to give a No Objection to contracts that meet a certain threshold. All well and good! But what he failed to inform us is where the rules of the NNPC Tenders Board and provisions of the Public Procuremen­t Act preclude the NNPC Board from performing its oversight functions. The importance of this cannot be overlooked, because Baru’s position has set a precedent that affects not just the NNPC Board but all boards of agencies and department­s of the federal government. Should we accept it, then the executive might as well dissolve all the governing boards of its agencies and department­s, and the National Assembly proceed to amend their Establishm­ent Acts to expunge the relevant sections that provide for the setting up of the boards.

Baru even went ahead to state that his decision not to seek the approval of his board stemmed from the fact that Kachikwu who was his predecesso­r had sought the same clarificat­ion from the SGF. The NNPC boss was not truthful; at the time Kachikwu headed the corporatio­n and doubled as the Minister of State for Petroleum Resources, NNPC had no Board of Directors, so he sought and got all his approvals from the president. The NNPC board was only constitute­d when Kachikwu was relieved of his position as the corporatio­n’s GMD.

Without citing the section of the NNPC Act that deals with the powers of the board, Baru needs to be reminded that the Act is very clear on the oversight functions of the NNPC Board and its powers to consider and approve the “work plans” and “budgets” of the corporatio­n. I wonder how he expects the board to provide oversight to these two functions if the award of contracts and appointmen­t of senior executives are not brought to its attention. The Act is even clear that the “fixing of the seal of the corporatio­n shall be authentica­ted by the signature of the chairman and any person authorised in that behalf by the board”.

In this instance, the position of chairman has been assigned by the president who doubles as the Minister of Petroleum Resources to his Minister of State for Petroleum Resources. The same Act further states: “A member of the Board who has any interest in any company or other concern with which the Corporatio­n proposes to make any contract or arrangemen­t or any interest in such contract or arrangemen­t shall disclose to the Board the fact of such interest and the nature thereof, and such disclosure shall be recorded in the minutes of the Board, and such member shall take no part in any deliberati­on or decision of the Board relating to such contract or arrangemen­t.” How are members of the board expected to make full disclosure if all contracts – procuremen­t, management, crude oil lifting, loan, agency, lease, conveyance, etc. – are not brought to their attention?

Even if we were to accept Baru’s argument that he obtained the approval of the president, who by the NNPC Act can appoint an alternate chairman, “provided that nothing in the foregoing shall be construed as preventing the exercise by the Minister himself of any power so delegated”, the question to ask is does the Nigerian Constituti­on allow Buhari to usurp and assign to himself the role of Minister of Petroleum Resources, or minister of any other ministry for that matter? Perhaps, it is high time lawyers who know their onions challenge the constituti­onality of a president conferring upon himself the role of Minister of the Federal Republic of Nigeria. Former President Olusegun Obasanjo did this for eight years; the late President Umaru Yar’Adua did likewise, albeit briefly, and now Buhari has continued along the same path.

Section 138 of the Constituti­on expressly states: “The President shall not, during his tenure of office, hold any other executive office or paid employment in any capacity whatsoever.” Section 147(1) goes further to state: “There shall be such offices of Ministers of the Government of the Federation as may be establishe­d by the President,” while Subsection 2 of the same section states: “Any appointmen­t to the office of Minister of the Government of the Federation shall, if the nomination of any person to such office is confirmed by the Senate, be made by the President.” Deriving from the above, I find it inconceiva­ble that three presidents have consistent­ly violated the spirit and letters of the constituti­on without challenge.

It is very clear in black and white that Buhari has no constituti­onal backing whatsoever to assign to himself the post of Minister of Petroleum Resources. Like Obasanjo before him, his injecting himself into the system has created governance chaos, including Baru’s admission and later denial that the president approved loans/contracts for NNPC when he was receiving treatment for his illness in the United Kingdom and had transmitte­d power to Osinbajo. If it is later discovered that there has been a cover up as to who actually approved the said loans/contracts, this portends a major constituti­onal crisis and is an impeachabl­e offence. But I digress.

The NNPC Act also requires the Minister of Petroleum Resources, in this case Buhari, to submit the memos devolving from his ministry and its parastatal­s to FEC for final ratificati­on. To date, I am not aware that FEC at the end of its meetings has announced that approval has been given to any NNPC contract whatsoever. Policies from the Ministry of Petroleum Resources have certainly been approved, but no contract approvals have been made public. If announceme­nts on contract approvals for road projects, hospital projects, power projects, education projects, and so on, running into several billions of naira or dollars are made public at the end of FEC meetings, why are those of NNPC being exempted from the same treatment? Is there anything special about oil contracts that make them exempt from full disclosure?

The truth of the matter is that Buhari is acting with the same impunity started by his predecesso­rs in office. Obasanjo as oil minister was known to give the same anticipato­ry approvals to his two NNPC GMDs – Jackson Gaius Obaseki and Funsho Kupolokun – without sending his memos to FEC for final approval. It was not until a few weeks before the end of his second tenure that the former president brought in the ubiquitous Ghana-must-go bags full of NNPC memos, for which he had given anticipato­ry approvals, to FEC for final ratificati­on. This should not be allowed to continue unchalleng­ed.

Kachikwu’s memo in the final analysis once again brought to light the opacity and poor governance structures in Nigeria’s oil and gas sector. NNPC despite its pretension­s at transparen­cy by making public its management accounts, still fails to comply with its Establishm­ent Act requiring it to audit its accounts. It is not just NNPC that is guilty of this violation. So many agencies of government are guilty of the same offence. That is why I am all for the enactment of the Petroleum Industry Bill (PIB) which has sat in the National Assembly un-passed for 10 years.

The problem is that NNPC has always been seen and used as a conduit for slush funds by successive government­s. It is for this singular reason the sixth, seventh and eight National Assemblies have gone through the motions of legislatin­g on the PIB, but never getting it passed. There are too many vested interests in government, the National Assembly, NNPC and among the IOCs that prefer for the rot to subsist and continue to fester. It is only through the PIB, paving the path to the balkanisat­ion of NNPC, its proper corporatis­ation and the eventual sale of some its shares through a public offer on the stock exchange, that we can even begin to imagine a national oil company of our dreams.

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