THISDAY

Oando Goes To Court of Appeal, Challenges SEC Sanctions…

Accuses Gwarzo of bias

- Page 8

Oando PLC has approached the Court of Appeal for the review of sanctions imposed on it by the Securities & Exchange Commission (SEC).

Following an investigat­ion into the company, which began in May 2017, the SEC had issued a technical suspension order of Oando’s shares and ordered a forensic audit of the oil firm.

But a statement published on Oando’s website on December 15, 2017, said it had asked the appellate court to reverse the sanctions, particular­ly the technical suspension of its shares as well as the forensic audit of its affairs.

According to the press statement, the company has in addition to the legal action, written several petitions to various arms of government, expressing concern at the way the SEC under the leadership of ex-Director General, Mr. Mounir Gwarzo, managed the investigat­ion, complainin­g that it believed the investigat­ion was biased, did not follow due process and was not fair.

It said a recent leak of an endorsed September 18, 2017, report of the Technical Committee that was set up by Gwarzo to investigat­e the company was further proof that the actions taken by the Commission were illegal, invalid and calculated to prejudice the business of the company.

Gwarzo had set up a 5-man committee to investigat­e Oando, which submitted a report with findings and recommenda­tions for several sanctions against the company.

According to the statement, the investigat­ive committee found that Oando had satisfacto­rily responded to all the issues raised by the petitioner­s and had further recommende­d that the responses provided by the company and its independen­t external auditors be forwarded to the petitioner­s for their informatio­n and further escalation if they deemed it necessary.

It said the report made neither a recommenda­tion for the shares of the company to be suspended nor for a forensic audit of the company to be conducted.

Instead, it added, the committee recommende­d that certain unresolved issues be forwarded to the Securities and Investment Services (SIS) Department of the Commission to determine whether there was, in fact, a breach of the ISA or SEC Rules.

It said: “On 27 September, 2017 the Committee of the House of Representa­tives on Capital Markets and Institutio­ns summoned Gwarzo and mandated him to complete his investigat­ion into Oando and issue a report within 2 weeks of that meeting.

“It also requested that it should be sent a copy of the report of the investigat­ion, its findings and recommenda­tions. It is interestin­g to note that Gwarzo failed to inform the House of Representa­tives that at the time the meeting was held, the signed Technical Committee report had already been submitted.

“It wasn’t until a month after, on Wednesday, 18 October 2017 that the SEC published a statement on its website detailing alleged infraction­s committed by Oando and weighty penalties, which included a directive to the Nigerian Stock Exchange (NSE) for a 48-hour full suspension followed by a technical suspension in the trading of Oando shares and for a forensic audit into the affairs of the company to be conducted.”

Listing other reasons it felt the investigat­ion was biased and thus flawed, Oando said some of the actions taken by the then DG were against SEC's rules and regulation­s.

It said: “Under SEC's rules the Administra­tive Proceeding­s Committee (APC) is the committee empowered to look into matters of the nature of which the petitioner­s alleged, however, Gwarzo did not utilize this committee but instead set up a Technical Committee and later a Special Task Force to investigat­e Oando.

“SEC laws state that the DG does not have the legal or administra­tive authority to set up committees only the Board can do this, however at the time of the investigat­ion, SEC had no Board and even if it did, there was a committee already in place that could investigat­e the company.

“There is also the legality of SEC investigat­ing a petition brought by an indirect shareholde­r and one that is currently in arbitratio­n when SEC's rules categorica­lly state that it will not consider any complaints regarding matters that are already the subject of arbitratio­n or court proceeding­s.”

The statement cited the example of MRS Oil and Gas PLC, where the SEC stopped the investigat­ion and a call for a forensic audit into MRS when it was brought to the regulator’s attention that there were ongoing arbitratio­n proceeding­s in France between Petroci Holdings and MRS.

Oando said it had repeatedly complained about the frequent leaks of the committee’s investigat­ion quoting its Group Chief Executive Officer (GCE), Mr. Wale Tinubu once saying: “the SEC investigat­ion and continued media leaks have had a deleteriou­s impact on market confidence, our share price and a negative impact on other critical stakeholde­rs.”

Saying the company’s biggest concern was that because all SEC’s actions to date had been illegal and biased, a forensic audit could also be biased, Oando added that it was opposed to the forensic audit because SEC would have to conduct an audit to confirm the weighty findings by its investigat­ive committee.

“It is unjust to make a company pay N160 million to be investigat­ed so the regulator can confirm whether its findings are indeed correct or true,” Oando said, adding: “It begs the question how did the regulator come about its weighty findings?”

This is not the first legal action taken by the company against SEC on this investigat­ion but its recent actions are evidence that it won’t back down and will fight SEC until justice prevails.

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