The Minister of Petroleum Resources Mrs.
Diezani Alison-Madueke, on Wednesday disclosed that the Nigerian
National Petroleum Corporation has started refunding the $1.48bn
unremitted fund into the Federation Account as recommended by an audit
firm, PriceWaterHouse Coopers.
She however did not disclose how much has for far been refunded by the corporation.
She also denied reports that she was
seeking the assistance of some highly-placed persons in order to escape
prosecution for alleged corruption from the incoming administration of
the President-elect, Muhammadu Buhari.
Alison-Madueke
spoke with State House correspondents at the end of the weekly meeting
of Federal Executive Council at the Presidential Villa, Abuja.
It will be recalled the Federation
Account Allocation Committee had on Monday night constituted a committee
to find out the reasons for the delay in the refund of the sum.
PriceWaterHouse Coopers had in the
report of its forensic audit report of the corporation recommended that
the NNPC should refund the amount to the Federation Account.
Alison-Madueke however explained that
the unremitted fund was owed by the NPDC for a block that had been
assigned from the NNPC to the NPDC.
She said, “The PriceWaterHouse Coopers
forensic audit that was done few weeks ago in his recommendation
mentioned that $1.48bn was owed by the NPDC for a block that had
hitherto been assigned from the NNPC to the NPDC which is its
subsidiary.
“They felt that the right process would
be that the NPDC will refund that money to the Federation Account. The
NPDC has apparently started those refunds and it is also in discussion
with the NNPC and the DPR on same. So the refund has actually began.”
While saying that the payment was being
done under her directive, she insisted that the sum was not missing but
transferred by the NNPC to the NPDC.
The minister also denied media reports
that she was reaching out to some prominent Nigerians, including a
former military Head of State, Gen. Abdusalami Abubakar (retd.), to seek
soft landing from the incoming government.
She said she had in the course of her
job as minister met with elder statesmen across the country and wondered
why her meeting with Abubakar would be singled out.
The minister said she could not be seeking for a soft landing because she was not aware that she had committed any crime.
She said, “I have not sought such
assistance because I am not aware that I have been indicted of any crime
that I will need a soft landing.
“Over the last four years, I have many times been unfortunately accused and libelled in so many malicious and vindictive ways.
“I have explained these things and
pushed back robustly on these accusations and I have even gone to court
on many of them. Yet, they keep being regurgitated.”
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