A top director of the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation has said
that operatives of the Department of State Services have interrogated
him 11 different times since May over crude oil swap deals with traders.
“The DSS has been harassing some of us,” the Group Executive Director,
Refining and Petrochemicals, NNPC, Mr. Ian Udoh, was quoted as telling
Reuters.
The investigation by the DSS and anti-graft agencies involves crude oil
swap deals and offshore processing agreements in which the corporation
gives certain volume of crude oil to traders in exchange for refined
products.
Instead of ensuring that crude oil was made available to the nation’s
four refineries for domestic consumption, the immediate past Minister of
Petroleum Resources, Mrs. Diezani Alison-Madueke, in conjunction with
the Pipelines and Products Marketing Company, increased the crude oil
swaps and OPAs from 270,000 barrels per day to 445,000 bpd, thus
starving the refineries of crude oil.
President Muhammadu Buhari has instructed the NNPC to review the crude
for oil products swap contracts and offshore processing agreements with
trading companies because of the belief that the deals might have cost
the country millions of dollars in lost revenue and refined product
supply.
“There is a siege mentality here at the moment,” Udoh, an NNPC man of 36 years, was quoted as saying.
He said Buhari’s initiative had given fresh legs to media coverage of
the accounting holes worth over $20bn identified by two separate
investigations, and that the public pressure was dominating management
meetings.
The DSS operatives were said to be closely monitoring the headquarters
of NNPC in Abuja, with soldiers guarding the building, while visitors
were required to go through four separate security checks.

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