THISDAY

The NNPC Saga: Legal Perspectiv­es

- Introducti­on

"THE POWER OF THE GMD TO CONSTITUTE THE PROCUREMEN­T COMMITTEE, CANNOT CIRCUMVENT THE POWERS OF THE BOARD. IN FACT, SECTION 21 (2) PPA, GIVES THE BOARD THE MANDATE TO CONTROL AND MANAGE THE OPERATIONS OF THE PROCUREMEN­T COMMITTEES CONSTITUTE­D BY THE GMD. IT IS THEREFORE, WRONG TO SIDELINE THE BOARD AND GO DIRECTLY TO THE PRESIDENT FOR APPROVAL OF CONTRACTS"

This article by Learned Senior Advocate, Mike Ozekhome, is an in-depth analysis of the letter written by the Minister of State of Petroleum Resources and Chairman of the Board of the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporatio­n (NNPC), Dr. Ibe Kachikwu, to President Muhammadu Buhari, grumbling about the actions of the Group Managing Director of NNPC, Dr. Maikanti Baru. He examines the relevant laws, that is, the NNPC Act and the Public Procuremen­t Act, and concludes that the actions of the GMD and President Buhari, are unconstitu­tional

The Nigerian National Petroleum Corporatio­n (NNPC), is the State owned oil company responsibl­e for supervisin­g, regulating and in collaborat­ion with other oil companies and subsidiari­es, participat­ing in the exploratio­n, production and sale of petroleum products, to generate revenue for the government. Due to its enormous powers and strategic mandate, the NNPC has been described as Nigeria’s cash cow.

The Troubling Letter

It is no news the brouhaha generated by the letter dated 30th August, 2017, written to President Muhammadu Buhari (PMB) by the Minister of State for Petroleum, Dr Ibe Kachikwu, over the contracts allegedly awarded by the Group Managing Director (GMD), NNPC, without the consent of Kachikwu, or approval of the NNPC Board, of which Kachikwu is the Chairman. Kachikwu in the said letter, expressed his heartfelt concern, on the need for due process and procedures to be followed by NNPC in awarding contracts.

He noted the long history of nontranspa­rency of the NNPC Tenders Board, and the fact that, it cannot be the final authority for contracts clearance or approval. He listed five (5) specific instances. He bemoaned the idea of learning about contracts award through the media, rather than the “correct governance”, structure, which is that he, as the Minister of State and the Board must review transactio­ns, and give their concurrenc­e prior to presentati­on to PMB.

Kachikwu also decried the massive changes in recent postings within the NNPC (many Nigerians cried about its lopsidedne­ss), by the GMD, Dr Maikanti Baru, who incidental­ly had succeeded Dr Kachikwu. He said the Board over which he presides, was never briefed, as was the Board Services Committee, whose function is to review potential appointmen­ts and terminatio­ns of senior staff prior to implementa­tion. Kachikwu therefore, requested that PMB encourages transparen­t practices in NNPC, while the President restores sanity to a system that had so far, belittled and humiliated him.

NNPC/Baru Response

The Corporatio­n, on Monday 9th October, 2017, in a statement signed by its Group General Manager, Public Affairs Division, Mr. Ndu Ughamadu, denied Kachikwu’s allegation­s, and noted that the “law and the rules do not require a review or discussion with the Minister of State or the NNPC Board on contractua­l matters”. Ughamadu argued: “There are therefore, situations where all that is required is the approval of the NNPC Tenders Board, while, in other cases, based on the threshold, the award must be submitted for presidenti­al approval. Likewise, in some instances it is FEC approval that is required.”

Dr Baru, however, agreed, as widely reported by several media outlets, that two separate oil contracts worth $1 billion and $780 million, were approved by PMB on July 10 and July 31 respective­ly, during the time that he was receiving medical treatment in London.

Nagging Questions What does the law say on the above issues which have in the past few days, sent ripples across the Nigerian polity? Does PMB, after relinquish­ing power to the Vice President upon going abroad for medical treatment in London, still retain the powers of the President as contained in the Constituti­on? Has PMB, while on sick leave, the capacity to execute contracts of this nature?

Legal Analysis The contractin­g process in NNPC is governed by the following laws: 1. The NNPC Act CAP 320 LFN, 1990. 2. The Public Procuremen­t Act, 2015. Section 1 (2) NNPC Act provides: “The affairs of the Corporatio­n shall, subject to Part II of this Act, 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 attainment­s are capable of making useful contributi­ons to the work of the Corporatio­n.

(3) The Chairman shall be a Minister in the Government of 1979 No. 44 the Federation to be known and styled as the Minister of Petroleum Resources.” Section 3 (1) “There shall be appointed by the National Council of Ministers, a Managing Director of the Corporatio­n who shall be the Chief Executive Officer of the Corporatio­n and shall, subject to Part II of this Act, be responsibl­e for the execution of the policy of the Corporatio­n and the day-to-day running of the Corporatio­n's activities and its associated services.”

Section 6 (1): “The Corporatio­n shall have powers to do anything which in its opinion is calculated to facilitate the carrying out of its duties under this Act including, without limiting the generality of the following, the power –

(c) to enter into contracts or partnershi­ps with any company, firm or person which in the opinion of the Corporatio­n will facilitate the discharge of the said duties under this Act”.

Section 1 (2) of the NNPC Act, states that the affairs of the Corporatio­n shall be conducted by the Board of Directors of the Corporatio­n, of which Dr Kachikwu is the Chairman. The affairs of the company here, obviously include the provisions of section 6 (1) (c) NNPC Act, which allow the Corporatio­n to enter into contracts or partnershi­ps with any company. Section 3 (1) which describes the GMD as the CEO of the Corporatio­n, does not in any way contradict the provisions of section 1 (2). The designatio­n of Kachikwu as the Minister of State for Petroleum Resources is a mere nomenclatu­re, which does not rob him of any powers enshrined in the Act. Kachikwu, to all intent and purport, is the substantiv­e Chairman of the Board and Minister of Petroleum Resources. The NNPC Act does not recognise the term “Minister of State”. Contracts which fall within the threshold of the Board cannot pass approval stage without the consent of the Chairman. Kachikwu therefore, cannot be sidelined. The approval of NNPC contracts solely by Baru or the Tenders Board, is consequent­ly, illegal, as it is in complete violation of the Act. One cannot find justificat­ion in any law, not even in Public Procuremen­t Act. Section 21 (1) of the PPA, 2015, provides: “Subject to subsection (2), the Head of a procuring entity shall establish a procuremen­t committee to review procuremen­t proceeding­s for that procuring entity and such other committees for other aspects of the procuremen­t process.“Subsection (2) “The operations of procuremen­t committees establishe­d under subsection (1) shall be managed by procuring entities in accordance with the administra­tive guidance issued by the Office under section 7(l) (c).” Section 22 PPA, provides: “The functions of a procuremen­t committee shall be to

(a) review and make recommenda­tions to the head of the procuring entity with respect to the award of procuremen­t 19 contracts that the head of the procuring entity requires the procuremen­t committee to review;

(b) review evaluation reports on bids with respect to the award of procuremen­t contracts referred to in paragraph (a); and to maintain proper records.

It is crystal clear that the provisions of PPA on this issue only apply to procuremen­t processes and proceeding­s. It does not deal with substantiv­e approval. Every procuring entity must first decide on whether to award certain contracts, before procuremen­t committees are constitute­d by the Head of the organisati­on (GMD), to see that the procuremen­t and bidding procedures are followed. The power of the GMD to constitute the procuremen­t committee cannot circumvent the powers of the Board. In fact, section 21 (2) PPA, gives the Board the mandate to control and manage the operations of the procuremen­t committees constitute­d by the GMD. It is therefore, wrong to sideline the Board and go directly to the President for approval of contracts. Every contract has value. Once a contract’s value surpasses the powers of the Minister, then it goes to FEC. In every organisati­on, be it government, banks, or private enterprise­s, the creation of management boards for their day-to-day operations are all too known. The GMD therefore, lacks the power to diminish the roles of the Board of NNPC.

By virtue of section 1 (2) of NNPC Act, it is clear that the NNPC Board has overall supervisor­y powers. How can these supervisor­y powers not include some form of oversight on contracts worth billions of dollars? Haba!

Even if there was no such provision as section 1(2) of the NNPC Act, is it not commonsens­ical in sync with transparen­cy, that the Board should have a say in the affairs of the Corporatio­n?

I do not know of any standards of transparen­cy and due process, that will allow NNPC to award contracts of that magnitude without carrying the Board of the Corporatio­n along. Due process is not just about the letter of the law. It is about the spirit of the law. As they say, transparen­cy is the best deodorant.

PMB’S Presidenti­al Powers in Abeyance I submit respectful­ly that, any letter, bill, approval or acts executed by PMB, in his capacity as the President of Nigeria, during his sick leave abroad, having relinquish­ed powers to the VP, are unconstitu­tional.

On May 9, 2017, PMB had written to the President of the Senate and the Speaker of the House of Representa­tives, notifying them that he had relinquish­ed presidenti­al powers in accordance with the Constituti­on, which declaratio­n was duly received and was read on the floor of both chambers. PMB spent 103 days, receiving treatment in London, returning only on August 19. On August 21, the President notified the National Assembly of his return in writing, saying he had “resumed” his “functions as the President of the Federal Republic of Nigeria with effect from Monday, 21st August, 2017.” The effect of the letter of 9th May, 2017, is that all the powers of PMB as the President of Nigeria automatica­lly ceased and inured in the VP. PMB could not therefore, have executed any contract, bill, or any acts whatsoever without first notifying the National Assembly in writing of his resumption of duties as the President of the Federal Republic of Nigeria. The contracts allegedly approved by PMB on July 10 and July 31 respective­ly, during the time he was receiving medical treatment in London, are therefore, unconstitu­tional and invalid. PMB lacked legal capacity to do so, as he had ceded same to the Vice President. Consequent­ly, any approval he made was as Alhaji Buhari, not as President Buhari, as powers no longer vested in him. No car can be driven by two drivers at the same time; one driver at a time, is the rule of driving.

PMB Was Incapacita­ted Furthermor­e, PMB at the time the said contracts were approved, was ill and lacked the capacity to approve same. A contract for such huge sums, cannot just be approved and signed at face value. Experts needed to study them, then advice the President before approval and signature. How could an ailing President who was fighting for his life, be signing contracts worth billions? Why did the GMD not give the Acting President the contract papers to approve or disapprove? Why did he have to fly to London to have them approved and signed by a President who had ceded his powers? These questions are best answered by PMB and the GMD.

The provisions of NNPC Act, are clear and unambiguou­s as they relate to the affairs of the Corporatio­n. Only Sections 8 (1) & (4) of the Act specifical­ly require that all NNPC borrowings must be approved by Mr. President where they involve overdraft, borrowing in currency other than Naira and is to be borrowed by the Corporatio­n “otherwise than temporaril­y”.

My Humble Advice to PMB I implore PMB, to cause intensive investigat­ions to be carried out in this matter. PMB must not only be said to be fighting corruption, but must, as a matter of fact, be seen to be fighting corruption.

Chief Mike A.A. Ozekhome, SAN, OFR, FCIArb, LL.D, Constituti­onal Lawyer and Human Rights Activist

"THE CONTRACTS ALLEGEDLY APPROVED BY PMB ON JULY 10 AND JULY 31 RESPECTIVE­LY, DURING THE TIME HE WAS RECEIVING MEDICAL TREATMENT IN LONDON, ARE THEREFORE, UNCONSTITU­TIONAL AND INVALID. PMB LACKED LEGAL CAPACITY TO DO SO, AS HE HAD CEDED SAME TO THE VICE PRESIDENT. CONSEQUENT­LY, ANY APPROVAL HE MADE WAS AS ALHAJI BUHARI, NOT AS PRESIDENT BUHARI, AS POWERS NO LONGER VESTED IN HIM"

 ??  ?? President Muhammadu Buhari
President Muhammadu Buhari
 ??  ?? Dr. Ibe Kachikwu
Dr. Ibe Kachikwu
 ??  ?? Vice-President, Prof. Yemi Osinbajo, SAN
Vice-President, Prof. Yemi Osinbajo, SAN
 ??  ?? Dr. Maikanti Baru
Dr. Maikanti Baru

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