President
Muhammadu Buhari has yet to take a decision on the report of the forensic
auditors, PriceWaterHouse, engaged by the administration of former President
Goodluck Jonathan to investigate the activities of the Nigerian National
Petroleum Corporation, SUNDAY PUNCH has learnt.
Jonathan
had on February 2 received the report of the firm, which was last year hired to
carry out the exercise following an allegation by former Governor of Central
Bank of Nigeria, Lamido Sanusi, that $20billion was not remitted to the
Federation Account by the NNPC.
The
former President, on April 27, directed that the full report be made public
less than 24 hours after Buhari, who had emerged the President-elect promised
that his administration would probe Sanusi’s claim.
The
Special Adviser to the President on Media and Publicity, Mr. Femi Adesina, told
our correspondent on Saturday that the present administration would wait for
the outcome of the ongoing investigation initiated by the Vice President Yemi
Osinbajo-led National Economic Council.
The
council, comprising all state governors, had during its first meeting on June
29 set up a four-man committee to scrutinise the account of the NNPC and the
Excess Crude Account managed by the last administration.
Governors
of Edo, Gombe, Kaduna and Akwa Ibom States were named members, while Lagos
State Governor Akinwunmi Ambode, was asked to join them at the NEC’s last
meeting.
Governor
Adams Oshiomhole of Edo State had told reporters after a meeting of the
committee during the week that two international firms would be hired to audit
the corporation’s account.
Adesina
said the President would rather wait for the Oshiomhole committee to turn in
its report before a decision would be taken on the matter.
He
said, “There is an ongoing investigation initiated by the NEC led by the Vice
President.
“You
will recall that Governor Oshiomhole made some pronouncements on the
committee’s activities during the week.
“We
will rather wait for that investigation to be concluded and the report turned
in.”
The
audit report as made public by the Jonathan administration noticed some
discrepancies in the subsidy regime among other infractions.
The
discrepancies included the duplication of Premium Motor Spirit and Dual Purpose
Kerosene subsidy claims, subsidy computation errors, subsidy claim on
un-incurred DPK cost and over-claim of subsidy.
The
sums from the subsidy discrepancies were embedded in the $1.48billion that the
report asked the NNPC to refund to the Federation Account.
Source:punchng
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