Tuesday, 24 February 2015

As of April, eligible citizens will be able to apply for their Smart ID Cards at the Home Affair's kiosks in their nearest bank, Home Affairs Minister Malusi Gigaba said on Tuesday.

The Minister said this when he led a briefing by government's Governance and Administration Cluster at the Imbizo Media Centre in Parliament on Tuesday.

The Minister said this would be a pilot project.

The Minister said to date, two banks - FNB and Standard Bank - have signed a memorandum of understanding with the Department of Home Affairs for the pilot project.

Nedbank has indicated its willingness to sign on the dotted line and Minister Gigaba hopes Absa will also join the partnership.

He said his department had also approached the South African Post Office with the aim of reaching an agreement on how some of its infrastructure could be used as well.

"There are several new innovations that are going to be introduced by the department in the course of this and the next financial years to assist South Africans in applying for their Smart ID Cards and passports in an extremely convenient way.

"That is why the President announced that we will soon be able to apply for our Smart ID Cards at our bank...

"At the moment there are three banks that have come on board and we have signed a memorandum of understanding to start a pilot process with them - so that a person can ... go to the Home Affairs kiosk in the bank, submit all their applications, take their biometric photograph, automated fingerprint and their electronic signature and that is compiled to an electronic package and deposited to Home Affairs," he said.

The Minister said the innovation would help ease the queues at Home Affairs' 403 offices nationwide, while delivering a crucial service to citizens quicker, efficiently and professionally.

Those that are eligible to apply are pensioners older than 60 years or 16 year-olds.

Meanwhile, the Minister said government had a massive task to ensure that over 38 million citizens with green-coded ID books are converted to Smart ID Cards.

"To date we have issued over one million Smart ID Cards, in less than a year. We are confident of reaching the target of 1.6 million cards by the end of the 2014/15 financial year," he said.

Deadline for late registration of births

Meanwhile, Minister Gigaba said government will continue with its campaign to register children within 30 days of birth, as part of maintaining the integrity of the National Population Register.

"To this end, we have announced that we will cease the process of the late registration of births by 31 December 2015. This critical milestone will ensure that we safeguard our identity, citizenship and secure our population register."

Government will continue to brief media over the next few weeks regarding the implementation of the programme of action in the wake of President Zuma's State of the Nation Address 2015.

South Africans To Apply for Smart ID Cards At the Bank

As of April, eligible citizens will be able to apply for their Smart ID Cards at the Home Affair's kiosks in their nearest bank, Home Af...
10 Nigerian Banks on Fitch Ratings

Fitch Ratings has affirmed the long-term Issuer Default Ratings (IDRs) of 10 Nigerian banks.

They are Zenith Bank Plc, FBN Holdings Plc and its subsidiary, First Bank of Nigeria Limited, the United Bank for Africa Plc, Guaranty Trust Bank Plc (GTBank) and Access Bank Plc.

Others are Diamond Bank Plc, Fidelity Bank Plc, Union Bank Plc and First City Monument Bank Limited (FCMB).

The rating agency explained in a report yesterday that the outlook for all the banks are stable.

"Fitch has also affirmed the National Ratings of Stanbic IBTC Bank Plc (SIBTC) and Stanbic IBTC Holdings Plc (SIBTCH). The ratings are all in the 'B' range, indicating highly speculative fundamental credit quality, and factor in Fitch's expectation of increasingly challenging economic conditions and market volatility in Nigeria.

"The operating environment is affected by persistently low oil prices, continuing pressure on the domestic currency naira, likely further monetary policy and regulatory actions and increased political uncertainty. At the same time, the ratings are underpinned by continued strong underlying economic growth in Nigeria, particularly in non-oil sectors," it added.

Fitch said it expects non-oil gross domestic product (GDP) growth of 5.5 per cent in 2015, compared to the 7.5 per cent attained in 2014. This would be driven by continued economic reforms and limited impact from public sector austerity.

"The IDRs of FBN, UBA, Diamond, Fidelity, Union and FCMB are support-driven. Zenith's, FBNH's, GTBank's and Access' IDRs are driven by their standalone strength as measured by their Viability Ratings (VRs). "In assessing the probability of sovereign support, Fitch considers the authorities' willingness to support the Nigerian banks to be high as demonstrated in the past, but its ability to do so may be constrained by Nigeria's 'BB-' sovereign rating.

"Fitch assigns Support Rating Floors (SRFs) based on each bank's systemic importance. The most systemically important banks in Fitch's view are FBN, Zenith and UBA, which are assigned SRFs of B+'. The other banks have SRFs of 'B'. FBNH is the holding company of FBN. It's SR of '5' and SRF of 'No Floor' reflect Fitch's view that while the Nigerian authorities' propensity to support local banks is high, the same level of support would not apply to holding companies.

"The ratings and outlooks are sensitive to a prolonged and severe recession that would affect the ability or willingness of the Nigerian authorities to provide support. However, a one-notch downgrade of the sovereign would not necessarily lead to a downgrade of the SRFs. Zenith's and Access' IDRs would only be downgraded if both their VRs and their SRFs are simultaneously downgraded (both banks VRs and SRFs are currently at the same level) and revised lower.

"The IDRs of GTBank and FBNH are driven by their VRs and are therefore not sensitive to changes in their SRFs.The highly challenging and volatile operating environment in Nigeria constrain the VRs and the other key rating factors, particularly the banks' financial profiles. The recent oil price shock and subsequent currency pressure has weakened the Nigerian operating environment and is likely to result in lower GDP growth in 2015.

"In turn, the banks are likely to report weaker profitability, asset quality and capital ratios. These pressures are to an extent captured in Fitch's ratings, and partly explain the stable outlooks," it added.

Nevertheless, should the operating environment deteriorate faster than expected, particularly should it significantly impact the banks' capital and asset quality, VR downgrades cannot be ruled out.

Fitch forecasts sector non-performing loans (NPLs) to rise above the Central Bank of Nigeria's (CBN) informal cap of five per cent but below 10 per cent by end-2015.

This reflects high credit concentrations as well as emerging risks, particularly in the oil and gas and power sectors. These factors, together with a shift to Basel II and CBN's revised regulatory capital computation rules, are likely to add more pressure on capital than previously expected. Tier 1 capital ratios could fall below 15 per cent for many banks, which is low in the Nigerian context. Oil & gas exposures, particularly upstream segment lending, will be sensitive to low oil prices, in particular when loans are extended to indigenous companies rather than large international operators.

If low oil prices persist in 2015, Fitch expects some banks will have to restructure part of their portfolios by extending tenors to better match new cash flow projections.

Fitch expects liquidity to remain tight in 2015, amplified by higher central bank reserve requirements. New limits on foreign currency borrowing and net open positions are likely to reduce US dollar debt issuance.

Despite increasing competition for low-cost and stable deposits, customer deposit growth should remain healthy and help loans-to-deposit ratios remain below the regulatory limit of 80 per cent.

In addition to the general pressures stemming from the economy, the VRs of the Fitch-rated banks consider the following factors.

All references are made within the context of the Nigerian operating environment. Zenith's VR considers its strong franchise, management quality, conservative risk appetite and robust financial metrics.

Asset quality is sound and upstream oil and gas exposure represented a limited 6% of loans at end-September 2014. Zenith has a track record of good client selection and Fitch does not expect major impairments in its corporate book.

The bank's capitalisation and leverage compare well with peers and benefit from a strong funding franchise, sound liquidity and proven access to wholesale markets. Zenith's resilient financial performance stands out, and the bank should manage 2015 better than most peers.

GTB's VR considers the bank's sound financial metrics compared with most domestic peers.

This includes the bank's sound profitability, driven by efficiency gains from a low cost business model, healthy asset quality, driven by sound underwriting, and adequate capital.

The VR also considers a proven strategy implemented by a strong management team. FBNH's and FBN's VRs reflect the group's traditionally strong company profile and adequate capitalisation and profitability.

Asset quality metrics are acceptable but the group has the highest oil and gas exposure among peers (40% of gross loans at end-September 2014). This is a key risk, in particular the upstream book (12%).

FBNH has a strong funding franchise. Its retail franchise allows it to source low-cost deposits, and it successfully accessed capital markets in 2014. Group liquidity is adequate.

UBA's VR is constrained by weak, albeit improving, capitalisation. The VR also considers a strong company profile, including a broader international footprint than peers. This makes the bank less sensitive than peers to current turbulence in Nigeria, although 2015 will still be challenging. Asset quality is adequate.

NPLs are currently low, although Fitch expects these to increase. UBA has strong funding and liquidity. Its large pan-African network allows it to collect low-cost deposits, and the loan-to-deposit ratio is low.

Access' VR reflects the bank's adequate capitalisation, which will improve should a planned rights issue complete successfully.

The VR also considers the bank's stronger company profile since the Intercontinental Bank acquisition. This has benefitted Access' financial metrics, including improved earnings and asset quality.

Diamond's VR is constrained by weak capitalisation, which is inadequate in light of the bank's risk profile, despite the completion of a rights issue in November 2014. Asset quality is slightly weaker than most peers. While the level of impaired loans is currently acceptable, certain large exposures present downside risk.

Fitch views risk appetite as high, considering plans to materially expand retail and SME lending activities. While these segments are inherently risky, this is where the bank's expertise lies.

Furthermore, risk controls and underwriting standards in the retail business are advanced. The VR also reflects Diamond's acceptable earnings, funding and liquidity.

Fidelity's VR reflects the bank's weaker company profile than peers. The bank's lack of scale manifests in its niche business model. The VR also considers Fidelity's weaker and less stable earnings than peers, a high cost base, and a greater reliance on non-core banking revenues.

The VR also considers the bank's improved asset quality metrics over the last three years. Union's VR reflects threats to asset quality ratios from a sizeable portfolio of past due, but not impaired, loans and a material exposure to the oil sector.

The VR also considers a higher risk appetite than peers, indicated by loan growth above the sector average, albeit from a lower base than peers. The VR further considers some exposure to operational risk resulting from a weaker technological platform than peers, which Union is currently addressing.

 

10 Nigerian Banks on Fitch Ratings

10 Nigerian Banks on Fitch Ratings

10 Nigerian Banks on Fitch Ratings Fitch Ratings has affirmed the long-term Issuer Default Ratings (IDRs) of 10 Nigerian banks. They are Zen...

Sunday, 22 February 2015

Kenya Recognises a New Somalia State

Kenya has endorsed the latest regional state in Somalia, a move that is likely to offend Mogadishu.

The Central government of the neighboring country has been uncomfortable with Kenya's "continued fragmentation" of its fragile administration.

Deputy President William Ruto yesterday hosted the president of the new South West State of Somalia, Sharif Hassan Sheikh Adan in his Karen home in Nairobi.

"Kenya would assist in stabilising individual states of the Federal Government of Somalia as prerequisite to bringing stability to the whole country and the region at large," Ruto said.

Sharif Hassan is a former Finance minister and speaker of parliament. He was ousted in 2011 as speaker after he held "unauthorised" talks with the Union of Islamic Courts which later morphed into the al Shabaab militia group.

He has business interests in Nairobi as well.

Mogadishu has been uncomfortable with Kenya's "crowning" of regional leaders in the name of Somalia's unity and prosperity.

Last May, Somalia temporarily recalled its ambassador, partly in protest of Kenya's close association with the Jubaland region.

The Interim South West State of Somalia which brings together the Bay, Bakool and Lower Shabelle regions has its capital in Baidoa and it borders Jubaland to the east.

It was inaugurated in November last year in a process supported by Intergovernmental Authority on Development and United Nations Operations in Somalia (Unisom).

Baidoa is the headquarters of African Union Mission to Somalia's Sector Three, manned by Kenyan and Ethiopian forces. It is considered an important town in the fight against al Shabaab.

The formation of the state in Last November was vehemently opposed by the Somalia's parliament led by speaker Mohamed Osman Jawaari. There were also demonstrations in Baidoa opposing the new administration.

The South West state becomes the fourth semi-autonomous state of Somalia. Others are Puntland, Somaliland and Jubaland.

Somaliland cut links with Mogadishu years ago and is fighting for international recognition as an independent country. It has democratically elected its president and is largely considered a success story.

Abdiwahab Sheikh Abdisamad, an analyst with Southlink Consultants and Horn of Africa political scientist at Kenyatta University said Somalia's lack of a clear foreign policy towards Kenya has created fodder for former warlords to claim leadership within their ethnic base.

"While the central governmental of Somalia was aware and actually involved in formation of this state, the latest visit to Kenya by Shariff Hassan must leave Mogadishu uncomfortable as it considers it subordination by Hassan," he said.

Analysts say Kenya and Ethiopia want local administrative units to support them against al Shabaab and to avoid any influx of refugees into their countries. The state is also considered a favourite destination of repatriated Somalia refugees from Kenya.

Kenya was instrumental in the formation of Jubaland, another self-declared autonomous region, which it sought to use as a buffer against al Shabaab. Jubaland is led by Sheikh Ahmed Mohamed Islam (Madobe) who fought alongside the Kenya Defence Forces during Operation Linda Nchi in 2011.

He was the commander a militia called the Ras Kamboni brigade. Efforts to speak to speak to officials at Kenya's Foreign Affairs ministry did not materialise as phones went unanswered.

Yesterday, Ruto said Kenya "has no other interest in Somalia other than bringing peace and stability to the country".

"We do not want anybody to take advantage of the fragile situation in Somalia and incubate people to destabilise the country and the region," he said.

Ruto said the government is ready to participate in the reconstruction of Somalia through the Joint Cooperation Commission established in 2013 to tackle development issues between the two countries.

"As African leaders, we should be in the front line in helping our brothers and sisters in Somalia," he said.

"We can be limited in capacity but not in willingness to assist."

On his part, President Sharif Hassan Sheikh Adan thanked Kenya for its support against al Shabaab.

"We are happy with Kenya's assistance in resolving the problems in Somalia, and we are urging that Kenyan troops be allowed to traverse the interior of the country which is still under the control of al Shabaab and help in liberating it," he said.

He appealed to Kenya to assist in building the capacity of his government especially in police, the justice system and in intelligence gathering.

 

Kenya Recognises a New Somalia State

Kenya Recognises a New Somalia State

Kenya Recognises a New Somalia State Kenya has endorsed the latest regional state in Somalia, a move that is likely to offend Mogadishu. The...
Nigerian Military Recaptures Baga!

Nigerian troops fighting the insurgent group, Boko Haram, have reclaimed the town of Baga and other surrounding communities in Borno state after days of fierce fighting, the Nigerian defence headquarters has said.

The Director of Defence Information, Chris Olukolade, a Major General, posted via his twitter handle Saturday, "Troops on Sunday afternoon captured #BAGA after fierce battle with terrorists".

Mr. Olukolade indicated there were "heavy casualties" in the battle and that mop-up operations were ongoing.

Mr. Olukolade later issued a detailed press statement giving details of the Baga operation .

Boko Haram had on January 4 attacked the base of the Multi-National Joint Task Force, MNJTF, in Baga, eventually dislodging the soldiers, in what was said to be one of the fiercest battles in recent times as soldiers battled to hold their grounds without much success.

The terrorist later took over the town. Rights group, Amnesty International, said over 2, 000 people were killed in the attack, a claim denied by the Nigerian military which said the number of people killed did not exceed 150 - including terrorists, soldiers and civilians.

The operation to recapture Baga, Monguno and other territories held by Boko Haram kicked off February 14 as announced by the military in early February - the major reason the security services gave for their demand that presidential and National Assembly elections, earlier billed for February 14, be delayed.

Nigeria's National Security Adviser, Sambo Dasuki, and the military chiefs had warned that they could not guarantee security if the elections went ahead as planned.

According to details referred to by the Independent National Electoral Commission, the military said it was planning sweeping onslaught against Boko Haram starting February 14, and did not want a distraction.

The military assured that the six-week extension, which will allow time for the operations, will significantly turn the tide in the war against Boko Haram, a pledge re-affirmed by President Goodluck Jonathan during a televised media chat last week.

PREMIUM TIMES had last Saturday reported how the Nigerian security forces launched a huge military campaign to retake a swath of territory in the North East seized by the terror group.

Security sources had told PREMIUM TIMES of a massive deployment of troops and military assets, many of them newly-acquired, in the fight to re-take territories being held by the terrorists.

The operation, our sources said, was being personally led by L.O Adeosun, the General Officer Commanding of the Maiduguri-based 7th Battalion and the Commander of the 5 Brigade, Munguno, a Brigadier general Udoh, Mr. Adeosun, a Major General, was recently posted to Borno after the loss of Baga and Munguno to Boko Haram.

On February 16, the military announced it had reclaimed the town of Monguno and nearby communities after nearly two days of fighting.

Boko Haram had carried out a pre-dawn attack on Monguno, which is about 137 kilometres from Maiduguri, the Borno State capital over three weeks ago.

The takeover of Monguno and other communities brought Boko Haram closer to Maiduguri and the Army successfully repelled the insurgents' attempts to get into Maiduguri.

On February 19, the military said it has invaded the notorious Sambisa forest base of the terrorists.

Mr. Olukolade had said a concerted air campaign by the Nigerian Air Force was ongoing in the forest to clear the terrorists from their enclaves.

He said air strikes, targeted at the training camps and logistics dumps of the terrorists in Sambisa forests and parts of Gwoza were "highly successful".

He said a high death rate was recorded on the side of the terrorists while many others were scampering out of the areas invaded by the military.

The Nigerian military has been sternly criticised for not going after Boko Haram militants despite knowing their major bases.

The new strikes has however raised concerns over the safety of over 200 school girls believed to be held in the Sambisa area by the insurgent group since April 14 last year.

The girls were abducted from their hostel at Government Secondary School Chibok in Borno State.

The military had said in the past it was avoiding an all-out battle on the Sambisa enclave for the sake of the girls' safety.

 

Nigerian Military Recaptures Baga!

Nigerian Military Recaptures Baga!

Nigerian Military Recaptures Baga! Nigerian troops fighting the insurgent group, Boko Haram, have reclaimed the town of Baga and other surro...
#SwissLeaks -David Mark's Wife, Dangote, Adenuga, Others named in Secret Foreign Accounts

Some of Nigeria's wealthiest industrialists, former government officials and their relatives, were amongst thousands of individuals around the world who operated highly secretive foreign accounts with the Swiss branch of banking giant, HSBC, concealing their identities for years and using codes perhaps to shake off tax authorities from accounts, some of which held illicit assets from criminals, traffickers, arms dealers and other outlaws, secret files published last week by a consortium of journalists around the world have shown.

The trove, released by the French Daily, Le Monde and the International Consortium of Investigative Journalists, in partnership with PREMIUM TIMES, and a host of other major media organisations around the world, showed how HSBC profited doing business with people who stole from their countries and some of the world's most notorious con artists, including people who made a fortune fuelling wars in Africa.

PREMIUM TIMES is the only Nigerian publication involved in the investigation, which lasted several months.

The bank helped questionable characters conceal their wealth despite knowing their sources, and devised ways to hide the identities of the owners of the secret accounts from governments around the world.

At least 100,000 secret bank account operators who owned about $100 billion were exposed in the leaks, unsettling investigators in several countries.

A Roll-call of Nigerian Clients

French authorities have so far linked 201 individual and corporate HSBC clients with Nigeria - either nationals or having business interests in the oil-rich West African country. However the sorting procedure might be faulty and some of those listed may end up having nothing to do with Nigeria.

Top on the list of Nigerians whose names appeared on the file is Africa's richest industrialist, Aliko Dangote.

Another Nigerian businessman and owner of mobile telecom company, Globacom, Mike Adenuga, also appears on the files.

Vikky Preye Mark, estranged wife of Nigeria's Senate President, David Mark, was also listed.

Many of the accounts date back to the 1990s and up to 2005/2006, when the data were stolen by a former staff of HSBC, Hervé Falcian.

According to details pieced together by the ICIJ, HSBC fashioned a series of layers of privacy schemes to ensure the worst of criminals and characters were protected.

The methods used were simple but had complex implications.

First, the account owner opens an account in his or her name, and the bank, in connivance with the customer, replaces the account holder's name with a number code that is then given to the client.

At times, the clients are encouraged to incorporate offshore shell companies in notorious tax havens, which then indirectly hold the accounts on behalf of the real beneficial owners.

The bank repeatedly reassured clients it would not disclose details of the accounts to national authorities, even if evidence suggested that the accounts were undeclared to tax authorities in the client's home country.

The code meant the client would no longer be tied to the account with his name, but in all transactions with the bank, he or she will be identified with the number.

But correspondences from the bank would be sent to the holder's personal address. There was also an option for customers to ask the bank to withhold their mails. That practice was later discontinued.

The account holders were given the option of being contacted directly, or through proxies.

To access the account, there were options too. A client could do so from his home, whereby he will need to declare the account to tax authorities; or travel there in person, or do so through a courier who flies to Switzerland to collect cash from time to time.

Ultimately, the bank ensured the account details were kept secret and separate from the personal details of the holder.

That entire process allowed the bank's clients hide from tax authorities and governments around the world, while criminals could hide stolen wealth.

Not all holders of the HSBC private accounts are however criminals, but there are concerns regarding why they chose a banking platform with emphasis on secrecy and concealed identities.

Very little of Mr. Dangote's transactions with the bank were made available.

As head of a conglomerate operating in 16 African countries, including Nigeria, Mr. Dangote made his fortune producing salt, sugar, flour, cement and noodles. He has also expanded to real estate and oil.

Mr. Dangote is the president of the Nigerian Stock Exchange.

In November 2014, Forbes magazine ranked him the richest man in Africa and the 23rd in the world with an estimated fortune of $21.6 billion.

The mogul became an HSBC private account client in July 2003. The account appeared in the name of Development Projects Corporation, its registration address in Tortola the British Virgin Islands, a notorious tax haven, where individuals and corporations usually incorporate shell companies to hide assets. Mr. Dangote's account was in operation till August 2004.

It is not clear to what use Mr. Dangote put the account and perhaps because he closed it long before the data were stolen, bank records did not indicate any balance on the account.

Globacom's owner, Mr. Adenuga, had an account in his name tied to Sunbow Express Limited, a company based in Panama and for which HSBC described him as beneficial owner. The leaked file gave the company's postal address as 86 West Green Road, GB-London N15 and c/o Arosemena Noriega-Contreras, Calle Elvira Mendez Street, 10 ED. DEL Barco Do Brasil P-Panama City, Panama.

Mr. Adenuga's own address was given in bank documents as 37 York Terrace East GB-London NW1.

The businessman, who is among Africa's richest personalities, opened the account on February 2, 1997 and it had a balance of $115, 405.00 as of 2006/2007 when the data were stolen.

Mr. Adenuga did not respond to ICIJ's repeated requests for comment.

Mrs. Mark also operated an account with the bank but with details made largely secret. Although she was known within the bank as the beneficial owner of the account, she was largely identified with a secret code - 14312MP.

Mrs. Mark opened the account on December 18, 1989 and closed it July 12, 1991. About that time, her husband, then a top ranking army officer, had served as military administrator of Niger State and federal minister of communications, a period during which he is believed to have made a fortune.

He has been a senator since 1999 and President of the Nigerian Senate since 2007. Court papers during a messy divorce with his wife suggested that some of his children schooled in Switzerland, but it is not clear whether it was during that period that Mrs. Mark operated the HSBC account.

The court papers also showed that the Marks operated foreign accounts elsewhere. About six million pounds in four accounts - three at the Northern Bank, Isle of Man, and one at the Allied Irish Bank, Jersey - were frozen in October 2000 as a result of the ancillary relief sought by Victoria Mark in the couple's divorce case. Mr. Mark's operation of those accounts while a Senator is a violation of Nigerian law which bars public officials from operating foreign accounts while in office.

Nigeria's former defence minister, Theophilus Danjuma, was also linked to HSBC account 15731CD, which was opened in 1993 and closed in 2001. The documents did not provide details regarding the balances in the account and the use to which Mr. Danjuma put it.

Mr. Danjuma has emerged one of Nigeria's richest former public office holders through ownership of one of Nigeria's most lucrative oil blocs and a lucrative shipping firm.

Another notable name on the leaked file is Adamu Wakili, Nigeria's former Ambassador to the United States. Mr. Wakili was linked to account 17404B01, opened in 1991 and closed two years later. Mr. Wakili served as Minister of Agriculture and Rural Development as well as that of Environment,

The list also has Aminu Jibril, former Senator, Minister and Ambassador. Mr. Jibril's account has no details beyond his address, listed as Yola, former Gongola State.

Deribe Alhaji Mai, who also operates one of Nigeria's richest oil blocs, was listed in the leaks. His details were not provided.

Peter Igbinedion Osawaru, was also named in the leaked file as the Director at Okada Air with an account code of 15418MP, opened in 1991 and closed in 1995.

Ibrahim Dasuki, a former Sultan of Sokoto who was deposed in 1996, was linked to account 15372HTNL, opened in 1991 and closed in 1993. The account coincided with when he was Sultan.

Another prominent Nigerian listed on the file as an HSBC client is Inuwa Wushishi, a retired General, former chief of army staff between 1981 and 1983 and former Board Chairman of UAC of Nigeria. Mr. Wushishi, 75, and his wife, Aishatu, were identified as beneficial owners of an account with code 6808AW. The couples opened the account on December 18, 1989 and closed it July 12, 1991. It remains unclear to what use they put the account.

Also on the list is Mohammed Hayatudeen, a former CEO of FSB International Bank and immediate past Chairman of the Nigerian Economic Summit Group - Nigeria leading economic think tank. Mr. Hayatudeen and his wife, Hafsatu, are listed beneficial owners of an account with secret code 15409MZH, opened on June 15, 1992 and closed on September 3, 1996. Apparently the entire balance in the account was cleared long before the leaked HSBC data was stolen.

There are lots of other Nigerian businesspersons listed in the file. They include Victor Ifeanyi Odili and his wife Ifeyinwa, who had a balance of $18,518.57 in their account as at 2005/2006 when the data was stolen; a Lagos-based merchant, Abdallah Taofik, who had a balance of $3,480,942.94; Akindele Labode Oladimeji ($23,979,105.76); Nankani Jairaj ($1,131,097.72) among others. (PREMIUM TIMES will release the full list of Nigerian clients in the days ahead.)

Files Sheds More Light on Nigeria's Halliburton Bribery

The leaked file also opened a new window in the Halliburton bribery scandal involving Nigeria's former leaders and the bribery surrounding the award of contracts for Nigeria Liquefied Natural Gas plant.

The files reveal that Jefrey Tesler, the UK lawyer, who used a network of secretive banks and offshore tax havens to funnel $182 million in bribes to top Nigerian officials in exchange for a $6 billion contract to build Nigeria's LNG, had financial ties to two former Nigerian officials: now-retired Major General Chris Garuba, chief of staff to former Nigerian president Abdulsalami Abubakar who himself allegedly received bribes as president; and Andrew Agom, a senior government official who was killed in an attack on a motorcade.

Records show bank staff responding to a request from Mr. Agom's widow to unfreeze her husband's account, whose post was sent to Tesler's North London law firm and which was marked as subject to criminal investigations into Mr. Tesler. The files do not indicate whether or not the account was ultimately unfrozen.

Mr. Garuba, a former governor of Northeastern Bauchi state, is now chairman of Obekpa Petroleum, a Nigerian oil company. Before his death, Mr. Agom was a member of the Board of Trustees of the Peoples Democratic Party, which which was in power for most of the period the bribery scheme unfolded.

Mr. Agom was the beneficial owner of an HSBC account linked to a Gibraltar-based company, Hemisphere Services Limited, which held a maximum amount of $797,377 at one point in 2006 or 2007. Africa Confidential magazine previously named a company named Hemisphere Services (Nigeria) as a "recipient of largesse" from Tesler after viewing documents disclosed to the magazine during a French corruption investigation.

Mr. Agom's account was opened in 1991, on the same day that an account was opened in the name of former Nigerian Air Force Chief, Abdullahi Dominic Bello. A Nigerian government investigator has previously described Swiss accounts held by Mr. Bello as a conduit for "slush funds". The investigator did not specifically mention HSBC.

A spokesman for Mr. Bello told ICIJ that the account, which was used for business purposes and opened by Mr. Tesler when he was Bello's lawyer, had never been used for slush funds or bribes. "At no point has Mr. Bello been charged to any court over the bribery scandal," said the spokesman, adding that, "it must be a coincidence that Mr. Agom and [Mr. Bello's company] opened an account the same day."

The leaked HSBC files identify Chris Garuba and his wife Rita as HSBC clients; their names are listed along with Tesler's in an account named Bridlington Enterprises Limited, for which Mr. Tesler acted as an attorney. The files show that the account was opened the year before Mr. Tesler sent his first bribe payment to Switzerland, although the files do not show that Tesler transferred money into the Bridlington account, which held as much as $367,547 in 2006 or 2007.

The principal beneficial owner of that account is a certain Abu Shuaibu, a 65-year-old who effectively ran the account, repeatedly visiting HSBC in Switzerland, and making several withdrawals in cash. On one occasion - on November 11, 2005 - he visited the bank to request a transfer of 600,000 U.S. dollars. It is not clear to whom the money was sent.

PREMIUM TIMES and ICIJ have not been able to determine Mr. Shuaibu's real identity. Chris and Rita Garuba, who should know, did not respond to repeated requests for comment.

HSBC Apologises

Headquartered in London, HSBC has offices in 74 nations and territories on six continents.

The leaked account records show some clients making trips to Geneva to withdraw large wads of cash, sometimes in used notes. The files also document huge sums of money controlled by dealers in diamonds who are known to have operated in war zones and sold gemstones to finance insurgencies that caused untold deaths.

On Sunday, HSBC published a full-page advert containing an apology in several newspapers, over claims that its Swiss private bank helped clients evade tax.

The advert reproduced an open letter signed by chief executive Stuart Gulliver, which said recent coverage by the media had been "a painful experience".

Mr. Gulliver, whose letter was addressed to the bank's customers and staff, said in his letter that he wanted to reassure customers that its Swiss private bank had been "completely overhauled".

"We have absolutely no appetite to do business with clients who are evading their taxes or who fail to meet our financial crime compliance standards," he was quoted by the BBC as saying.

"The media focus has been on historical events that show the standards to which we operate today were not universally in place in our Swiss operations eight years ago.

"We must show we understand that the societies we serve expect more from us. We therefore offer our sincerest apologies."

Mr. Gulliver also said that the recent media coverage about its clients and past misdeeds must be put "into context".

"A former employee of the Swiss private bank stole data more than eight years ago.

"Major UK media outlets have focused on approximately 140 names included in the stolen data.

"Many of the people mentioned have been named simply because they are well-known individuals. The vast majority of these 140 people are no longer clients.

"The media has been mentioning a number of 100,000 clients. At its peak, the Swiss private bank had about 30,000 accounts.

"We have absolutely no appetite to do business with clients who are evading their taxes or who fail to meet our financial crime compliance standards."

Musikilu Mojeed and Ini Ekott Contributors to this story: Will Fitzgibbon

#SwissLeaks -David Mark's Wife, Dangote, Adenuga,named in Secret Foreign Accounts

#SwissLeaks -David Mark's Wife, Dangote, Adenuga, Others named in Secret Foreign Accounts Some of Nigeria's wealthiest industrialis...

Sunday, 8 February 2015

Anatomy of Nigeria’s Stolen $20 billion


ABUJA, Nigeria (Reuters) - In late 2013, Nigeria's then central bank governor Lamido Sanusi wrote to President Goodluck Jonathan claiming that the state oil company had failed to remit tens of billions of oil revenues it owed the state.

After the letter was leaked to Reuters and a local news site, Jonathan publicly dismissed the claim and replaced Sanusi, saying the banker had mismanaged the central bank's budget. A Senate committee later found Sanusi’s account lacked substance.

Sanusi has since become Emir of Kano, the country's second highest Islamic authority, and has smoothed over relations with the president. He declined to discuss his earlier assertions. Before he was sacked, though, the central banker submitted to Nigeria’s parliament more than 300 pages of documentation in support of his claim. Reuters has reviewed that dossier, which offers one of the most comprehensive studies of waste, mismanagement and what Sanusi called “leakages” of cash in Nigeria’s oil industry. Detailed here, the dossier includes oil contracts, confidential government letters, private presidential correspondence and legal opinions.

Sanusi’s letter and documents do not state whether he thinks the money was stolen or lost through mismanagement. Nor did he make allegations of illegal acts against any specific individuals or entities. Both corruption and bad governance are perennial problems in Africa’s most populous nation, and central issues in elections due on Feb. 14.

Nigeria’s oil industry accounts for around 95 percent of the country’s foreign exchange earnings. If Nigeria continued to leak cash at the rate described in his letter to the president, Sanusi said at the time, the consequences for the economy would be disastrous. Specifically, the failure of state-owned Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation “to remit foreign exchange to the Federation Account in a period of rising oil prices has made our management of exchange rates and price stability ... extremely difficult," he wrote. "The central bank of Nigeria is always blamed for high rates of interest,” but “given these leakages, the alternative is a devalued currency ... and financial instability."

That is exactly what has happened. As oil prices have plummeted to around $55 a barrel, half their level at the beginning of 2014, Sanusi’s successor Godwin Emefiele has devalued the naira, Nigeria’s currency, by 8 percent, and raised interest rates for the first time in more than two years.

Nigerian foreign exchange reserves are down around 20 percent on a year ago, while the balance in the country's oil savings account has fallen from $9 billion in December 2012 to $2.5 billion at the start of this year, even though oil prices were buoyant over much of that period. Finance Minister Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala told reporters at a press conference in November that a significant portion of that money was distributed to the powerful governors of Nigeria’s 36 states instead of being saved for a rainy day.

Nigerians are rarely shocked by stories of billions going unaccounted for, or ending up with politically powerful individuals. Africa’s largest oil producer has for years consistently ranked towards the bottom of Transparency International’s Corruption Perceptions Index.

Sanusi handed his documents to a parliamentary inquiry set up last February to investigate the assertion in his letter that billions of dollars in oil revenue had not reached the central bank. He told the inquiry that state oil group NNPC had made $67 billion worth of oil sales in the previous 19 months. Of that, he said, between $10.8 billion and $20 billion was unaccounted for.

A spokesman for the president declined to comment on the specific contents of Sanusi’s dossier. He referred to a statement made at the time the banker was pushed out. It said the government “remains committed to ensuring integrity and accountability and discipline in every sector of the economy ... And indeed we look forward to a situation whereby Mr. Sanusi will continue to assist the legislature in their investigations.”

Those investigations include a “forensic audit” of the oil industry set up by Okonjo-Iweala. The audit was given to Jonathan on Feb. 2 and he said he would hand it on to Nigeria’s auditor general. NNPC said on Feb. 5 it had received a copy of the audit, before it was made public. The firm said the audit cleared it of wrongdoing, although it found NNPC owed the government $1.48 billion for a separate shortfall.

A spokesman for NNPC rejected Sanusi's allegations and referred Reuters to last August’s Senate inquiry. The inquiry expressed satisfaction that most of the money not remitted was withheld for legitimate reasons. But it urged the NNPC to remit $700 million that the committee said it could not account for.

Diezani Alison-Madueke, the oil minister who oversees NNPC, did not respond to a request for comment. She told the inquiry at the time that the correct sum for money not remitted was $10.8 billion, which was to pay for subsidies.

The NNPC has consistently said it did nothing wrong. The oil company said last year that Sanusi’s allegations came from his "misunderstanding" of how the oil industry works. The central bank is “a banking outfit ... how will they understand petroleum engineering issues?" then managing director Andrew Yakubu asked journalists. "They are not auditors."

Sanusi’s claims were seen by some Nigerians as part of the historic tensions between the country’s wealthy, Christian south and poorer Muslim north. Jonathan and oil minister Alison-Madueke are Christians from the oil-producing Niger Delta in the south. Sanusi is a Muslim from the country’s north, as is Muhammadu Buhari, a former military ruler of Nigeria who is the main presidential candidate running against Jonathan. The two regions have historically taken it in turns to hold the presidency. Since 2009, though, Jonathan has broken with this tradition.

Sanusi has said any notion there were religious or ethnic politics behind his allegations is absurd. He has declined to be interviewed since becoming the Emir of Kano.

But last April, two months after he was sacked but before he took on his new role, Sanusi told Reuters he worried that the sheer quantities of cash going missing were “unsustainable.”

“You are taking what doesn’t belong to you and transferring it to private hands,” he told Reuters. “The state is captive to vested interests.”

NO-BID CONTRACTS

Sanusi’s documents identify three key mechanisms through which Nigeria has allegedly allowed middlemen to channel oil funds away from the central bank. Among the recipients, Sanusi alleges, are government officials and high-flying society figures.

The three mechanisms are: contracts awarded non-competitively to two companies that did not supply services but sub-contracted the work; a kerosene subsidy that doesn’t help the people it is meant to; and a series of complex, opaque "swap deals" that might be short-changing the state.

Sanusi’s concerns around the first of these mechanisms centre on the 2011 sale by Royal Dutch Shell of its interests in five oil fields. The blocks were majority-owned by NNPC. The government, keen to end the domination of the oil industry by foreign oil majors, had been encouraging Shell and others to sell to local firms.

Shell sold its interest in the fields to companies in Poland and Britain. But the new owners did not get the same rights Shell had. To promote local control, the NNPC gave the right to operate the fields to its own subsidiary, the Nigerian Petroleum Development Company (NPDC).

Without soliciting bids, the NPDC signed "strategic partnership agreements" worth around $6.6 billion with two other local firms to manage them.

One firm, Seven Energy, signed for three fields; another, Atlantic Energy, for two.

Seven Energy was co-founded in 2004 by Kola Aluko, an oil trader and Christian southerner. Aluko also co-owned Atlantic with another southerner, former oil trader Jide Omokore. Atlantic was incorporated the day before it signed the deals.

Geneva-based Aluko is a high-profile member of Nigeria's elite. He owns a fleet of supercars, including a Ferrari 458 GT2 that he races with Swiss team Kessel Racing. He also owns a $50 million yacht, according to Forbes magazine, and divides his time between a $40 million home in Los Angeles, an $8.6 million duplex on Fifth Avenue in New York, and homes in Abuja and Geneva. A colleague describes him as a "work hard, play harder kind of guy. He’s extravagant. That’s just his style.”

Aluko, whose stake in Seven is now minimal, did not respond to emailed questions.

Omokore has also become rich from oil and gas. Forbes has estimated annual revenue at another of his companies, Energy Resources Group, at $400 million. His jet-setting lifestyle is a regular feature in the local press. Omokore could not be reached for comment.

Reuters has reviewed the contracts the firms signed with NPDC. They give Seven Energy 10 percent of profits in the three oil blocks it operates, while Atlantic gets 30 percent of profits in its two blocks. The contracts also show that, unlike Shell, neither firm pays royalties, profit tax or duties to the state.

Both companies quickly sub-contracted production work to other operators, according to Sanusi's submission to parliament and several market sources. The companies did not disclose terms of these contracts.

Atlantic does not publish accounts, but Seven’s 2013 annual report shows its deal with NPDC helped its revenue more than triple to $345 million.

In May 2013, Nigeria’s parliament threatened to investigate the NPDC contracts because they were not issued through competitive tender. But the NNPC argued no tender was needed because the contracts involved no sale of equity in the oil fields; the probe did not go ahead.

Sanusi did not accuse Seven and Atlantic of any illegalities, but he did question why the NPDC chose those companies. His report said the deals’ only purpose seemed to be “acquiring assets belonging to the federation (state) and transferring the income to private hands."

Asked about this, NNPC referred to the Senate report, which found that no-bid partnership agreements are not new. It also said that "it may be good policy to encourage indigenous players by giving them greater participation," but called for such deals "to be conducted in a transparent and competitive manner."

Seven did not comment. It says on its website its agreement with NPDC pre-dated the Jonathan administration and included an allowance for taxes. The company says it has invested more than $500 million, more than doubled production from its three blocks, and paid $48.8 million in taxes in 2013. Atlantic did not comment.

KEROSENE SUBSIDIES

The second mechanism Sanusi’s report identifies as problematic is a decades-old state subsidy provided to retailers of kerosene, the fuel most Nigerians use for cooking.

Nigeria lacks the refining capacity to make kerosene, so imports it instead. The government then sells the kerosene to retailers at a cheaper price than the import price. This subsidy is meant to make kerosene affordable for the poor. In reality, though, retailers have long hiked prices so consumers pay much more than official levels.

In June 2009, Jonathan’s predecessor, Umaru Yar'Adua, ordered a halt to the scheme on the grounds that it was not working. But the subsidies carried on regardless. The NNPC told parliament last February that it still deducts billions of dollars a year from its earnings to cover it.

In his report, Sanusi called the kerosene subsidy a "racket" that lines the pockets of private kerosene retailers and NNPC staff. The report estimated the cost of the subsidy at $100 million a month. It said kerosene retailers – there are hundreds of them around the country – routinely charged customers much higher prices than the government pays to import the fuel.

Sanusi’s report included an analysis of kerosene prices across Nigeria’s 36 states over two years. It found that the government buys kerosene at 150 naira per litre from importers and then sells it to retailers at just 40 naira per litre. Sanusi’s analysis found consumers pay an average of 170-200 naira per litre, and sometimes as much as 270 naira.

“The margin of 300 percent to 500 percent over purchase price is economic rent, which never got to the man on the street,” Sanusi wrote.

NNPC said in a statement last year that it can't force retailers to sell kerosene at the subsidised price.

SWAP DEALS

The third mechanism Sanusi identified involves other types of refined petroleum products, such as gasoline. Like kerosene, these are also imported. Nigeria is Africa’s biggest oil producer but it depends on imports for 80 percent of its fuel needs because its refining capacity is tiny.

To pay for the imported products, Nigeria barters its crude oil. Sanusi’s dossier focuses on these barter exchanges, which are known as "swap deals." The idea is that importers who bring in refined fuel worth a given amount receive an “equivalent value” in crude oil.

How that equivalent value is determined is unclear. Sanusi said he was uncertain how much, if anything, is lost in these deals. But he expressed concern at the sheer value of oil that changes hands and the lack of oversight. His report estimated that between 2010 and 2011, traders involved in swap deals effectively bartered 200,000 barrels of crude a day – worth nearly $20 million at average crude prices over the period - for a loosely determined equivalent value in refined products. It is impossible to tell, he said, if all the refined products were delivered, let alone if the terms were fair.

“It was clear to us that these transactions ... were not properly structured, monitored and audited,” he wrote.

Sanusi wrote in his report that mismanagement and “leakages” of cash in the industry cost Nigeria billions of dollars a year.

Since the price of oil has fallen by around half since the start of 2014, such losses are even more significant. As it approaches elections, Nigeria faces plummeting oil revenues and a lack of buffers to shield the economy. Construction projects are on hold and the government is struggling to pay its sizeable workforce.

Multiple scandals in the oil sector since Jonathan took power have boosted the popularity of his rival, former military leader Muhammadu Buhari. Remembered by some for deposing a civilian government in a 1983 coup and trampling on civil liberties, the sandal-wearing general often promises to "free Nigeria from corruption."

Jonathan, too, says he will “clean up” Nigeria. By using technology and strengthening institutions, “I will solve the problem of corruption in this country,” he told a crowd in Ibadan in January.

Diezani Alison-Madueke,Stolen Billions,Nigeria,NNPC,Nigeria

Anatomy of Nigeria’s Stolen $20 billion

Anatomy of Nigeria’s Stolen $20 billion ABUJA, Nigeria (Reuters) - In late 2013, Nigeria's then central bank governor Lamido Sanusi wrot...

Govt Disgraced Nigeria-Buhari


ABUJA (Reuters) - It is a "disgrace" for Nigeria that its neighbours have been more successful in battle against its Boko Haram insurgency than its own army, opposition presidential candidate Muhammdu Buhari said in an interview a week before the election.

Troops from neighbouring Chad, Niger and Cameroon, all much smaller and poorer than Nigeria, have been battling the Islamist militants who have seized territory in northeastern Nigeria in a five-year insurgency.

Thousands of Nigerians have been killed and 1.5 million displaced in the uprising by militants known for executing and kidnapping civilians.

"It’s a big disgrace for Nigeria. It is now Cameroon and Chad fighting the insurgency more than Nigeria. We will build the capacity and Nigeria should be able to secure its territorial integrity," Buhari told Reuters.

A former military ruler, Buhari is hoping his strongman reputation will resonate with voters disheartened by incumbent President Goodluck Jonathan's failure to tackle the insurgency.

The election itself, set for Feb 14 although there has been talk of possible delays, will be another big test of security in Africa's most populous country. Eight hundred people died in violence after the last election in 2011.

In a country where the population is about 50 percent Christian and 50 percent Muslim, Buhari is a Muslim northerner and Jonathan is a Christian southerner.

Buhari said that he was committed to using the courts if there are irregularities in the voting, and would not call his followers into the streets.

"I'm optimistic that I won’t lose. But we signed an undertaking that it will be violence free," Buhari said. "We are attempting to stabilize a multi party democratic system."

The country is already on edge over reports the election may be delayed. Jonathan's ruling People's Democratic Party has put pressure on the election commission, INEC, to postpone the polls arguing it is not ready to hold them.

Buhari's opposition All Progressives' Congress insists on the date, saying the only reason the pro-Jonathan camp is pushing for a delay is that it knows he will lose if voting goes ahead now.

"There will be no delay. But if INEC is compromised then it will be too bad," said Buhari.

Buhari said his administration also intends to tackle corruption within the Nigerian National Petroleum Corp (NNPC) and plans to reopen an investigation into missing crude revenues of around $20 billion.

He would also tackle the theft of crude tapped from pipelines in the Niger River delta.

"Our main objective is to secure the country. We will not tolerate insurgency, sabotage of the economy by the blowing up of installations, by stealing crude and so on.... All these things will be things of the past."

 

Govt Disgraced Nigeria-Buhari

Govt Disgraced Nigeria-Buhari

Govt Disgraced Nigeria-Buhari ABUJA (Reuters) - It is a "disgrace" for Nigeria that its neighbours have been more successful in ba...
AU To Rescue Nigeria From Boko Haram

YAOUNDE (Reuters) - African nations pulling together a regional force to fight Nigeria's Boko Haram militants on Saturday pledged 8,700 soldiers, policemen and civilians, an increase from earlier estimates for the mission.
The African Union had previously authorised a force of 7,500 troops from Nigeria, Chad, Cameroon, Niger and Benin to take on the Islamists, who have seized large swathes of northeastern Nigeria and mounted attacks on neighbouring nations.

Nigeria's military is struggling against the five-year insurgency, which has killed thousands of Nigerians and displaced some 1.5 million people.

With Nigeria also trying to organise elections and the militant threat turning increasingly regional, diplomats have said neighbouring nations must bury mutual mistrust and join the fight to defeat the militants.
The new troop pledges came after three days of talks in Cameroon between experts from the nations of the Lake Chad basin, the region where Boko Haram is seeking to create an Islamist enclave.

No budget for the regional mission was given. Nor were any details provided on when troops would be deployed.
Further talks are to take place before the African Union seeks support for the mission from the United Nations Security Council.

Chad has already dispatched 2,500 soldiers to Cameroon and Niger and its troops have engaged the militants in a series of battles that have killed hundreds along the border zone.

U.S. intelligence officials estimated on Friday that Boko Haram has about 4,000-6,000 "hardcore" fighters.

(Reporting by Anne Mireille Nzouankeu; Writing by David Lewis; Editing by Dan Grebler)

AU To Rescue Nigeria From Boko Haram

AU To Rescue Nigeria From Boko Haram YAOUNDE (Reuters) - African nations pulling together a regional force to fight Nigeria's Boko Haram...

Saturday, 7 February 2015

The Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) on Saturday night succumbed to intense pressure, as its Chairman, Attahiru Jega, announced the postponement of the scheduled elections by six weeks.

The shift, according to Jega, is the result of wide consultations, which gave serious consideration to the current security situation in parts of the country, especially in the North East.

Addressing the media after series of meetings with various groups in Abuja, the INEC Chairman said the Presidential and National Assembly elections originally scheduled for February 14 are now to hold on March 28, while the governorship and state Houses of Assembly elections earlier fixed for February 28, will now hold on April 11.

Jega announced this after a day-long meeting with Civil Society Organisations (CSOs), leaders of political parties as well as INEC’s National Commissioners and State Resident Electoral Commissioners (RECs) at the commission’s national headquarters.

He said the decision to shift the elections, which was based on provisions of the nation’s Electoral Act, followed advice by the National Security Adviser and security chiefs over the situation in the North Eastern states of Borno, Adamawa and Yobe.

Giving further details, he said the military had informed the commission that they will be embarking on maximum onslaughts against the Boko Haram insurgents within the initial period the elections were scheduled to hold.

Jega stated that the commission could not go ahead with the elections as earlier scheduled as the lives of thousands of the National Youth Service Corps (NYSC) members, its staff, observers and electoral materials cannot be guaranteed.

He said: “The commission cannot wave off the advice of the nation’s security chiefs.

“The commission is specifically concerned about the security of our ad hoc staff, the young men and women of the NYSC and students of tertiary institutions who constitute at least 600,000 young men and women that we are going to use for this election together with our regular staff, voters, arranging of ballot as well as election material which has been painstakingly acquired in the last one and half years.

“In a situation where security cannot be guaranteed. Under such circumstance, we believe that few election bodies in the world, if any, will contemplate proceeding with the election schedule under these circumstances.

“No matter the extent of INEC’s preparedness, if the security of personnel, voters and election observers, as well as materials cannot be guaranteed, the life of innocent men and women as well as prospect for free, fair and credible and peaceful elections will be greatly jeopardised.”

Continuing, he said: “Consequently, the commission has decided to reschedule the 2015 general elections thus: The National Elections, that is, the Presidential and National Assembly are now to hold on March 28, 2015, while the state elections, Governorship and State Assembly are to hold April 11, 2015.

“It should be noted that this new schedule falls within the constitutional framework for the conduct of the elections; notably Section 76(2), Section 116 (2), Section 132 (2) and Section 178 (2). See also Section 25 of the Electoral Act (as amended).

“For the avoidance of doubt, we would under no circumstances as a commission, approve an arrangement that is not in line with the provisions of our law.

“With this reschedule, the security services will do their best to ensure that the security environment needed for safe and peaceful conduct of the 2015 elections is rapidly put in place.

“We in INEC assure all Nigerians and the international community of our commitment to do everything within the law and to conduct free fair and credible elections.

“We call on security agencies to honour their commitment to restore efficient normalcy for election to take place within the period of extension.

“We also call on Nigerians, political parties, candidates and all other stakeholders to accept this decision in good faith and ensure the maintenance of peace.

“As for us in INEC, we would endeavour to use the period of the extension to keep on perfecting our processes for the conduct of the best election in Nigeria’s history.

“In particular, we believe that we would resolve all outstanding issues relating to collection of PVCs, which currently agitates the minds of many Nigerians.

“Finally, we need to call on all Nigerians to accept our decision which is taken in good faith and in the best interest of deepening democracy in our country.”

Meanwhile, the INEC chair has said he would not be cowed into resigning his role as head of the commission.

Answering question on the insinuation that he may be forced to resign within the waiting period, Jega said, “I will not be distracted by calls for resignation, I will only resign if there are legitimate reasons.

“I am here to serve my country to the best of my ability, and if for any reason I am found wanting, I will have no option but to resign.

“But like I said, if there are sufficient grounds for me to resign, I’ll resign but I assure that I will not resign.”

He also took time to respond to the rumour that he is in romance with the opposition, saying, “Instead of me to show bias and support one party over another in this job, I’ll rather resign.”

He, however, accused the media of not being fair on him and the commission.

He said: “We live in a country where anybody can just sit somewhere and conjure things about people, unfortunately the media just picks this and run away with it without checking out the facts.”

Details from the meeting held with the parties, as revealed to Sunday Independent, indicated that 16 political parties favoured the rescheduling of the elections, while nine were against.
Parties that reportedly voted in favour of re-scheduling the elections are: Action Alliance (AA), Action Congress of Democrats (ACD), Alliance for Democracy (AD), African Democratic Congress (ADC), Citizens Popular Party (CPP), Democratic Peoples Party (DPP), Labour Party (LP) and Mega Peoples Party (MPP).

Others are New Nigeria Peoples Party (NNPP), United Democratic Party (UDP), Peoples Popular Movement (PPM), Progressives People Alliance (PPA), Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) and Unity Party of Nigeria (UPN).
Parties against re-scheduling of the elections are Peoples Democratic Movement (PDM), All Progressives Congress (APC), United Peoples Party (UPP), Allied Congress Party of Nigeria (ACPN), Social Democratic Party (SDP), KOWA Party, Independent Democrats (ID), Hope Democratic Party (HDP), Africans Democratic Alliance (ADA) and Accord Party (AP).
However, All Progressive Grand Alliance (APGA) was not represented at the meeting, while National Conscience Party (NCP) was indifferent.

Reacting to the postponement, the PDP described it as a step in the right direction.

The party’s Presidential Campaign Organisation in a statement signed by its Director of Media and Publicity, Femi Fani-Kayode, said the decision “is in the best interest of deepening democracy and in the national interest.”

Fani-Kayode said that INEC ‘’must be commended for showing the courage to shift the elections after acknowledging the fact that its state of preparedness was not 100 per cent.’’

According to him, “Since this decision has been taken in the interest of deepening democracy and in national interest, we accept it in good faith and we commend INEC’s courage and obvious commitment to ensuring a free and fair election.”

Also, former Minister of Transport, Ebenezer Babatope, hailed INEC, saying the decision was in the best interest of Nigerians.

“All those who are shouting that they don’t want elections to be postponed are those who have got skeletons in their cupboards.

“They are the ones planning evil against Nigeria. So, apparently, with the postponement, the thing has broken on their heads.
“We are going have elections, but we must have it in a manner that the electorate is not deprived of their right to choose who will lead them,” Babatope told Sunday Independent on Saturday night.

Also speaking, chairman of the Lagos State chapter of PDP, Tunji Shelle, said the postponement will give INEC enough time to put certain things in place.

According to him, going ahead with the elections now may lead to legal tussle and security breaches, which may mar the polls.
“Many people have not received their PVCs and that could result to crisis at the end of the day,” he said.

But, in a swift reaction, the All Progressives Congress (APC)’s National Chairman, John Odigie-Oyegun, described the postponement as not only provocative, but a major setback to the nation’s democracy.

“This is clearly a major setback for Nigerian democracy, and our party is meeting in emergency session to study its implications and will inform Nigerians of its decisions in the next few days.

“In the meantime though what has happened is highly provocative, I strongly appeal to all Nigerians to remain calm and desist from violence and any activity which will compound this unfortunate development.

“We must not fall into this obvious trap. I want to assure all Nigerians that the All Progressives Congress will not abandon its commitment to change and will sustain the struggle to establish a new Nigeria.”

Meanwhile, the Nigeria Civil Society Situation Room (Situation Room) on Saturday accused security agencies of arm-twisting INEC to postpone the general elections.

In a statement, Agianpe Ashang, Senior Programme Officer with the Policy Legal Advocacy Centre (PLAC), Situation Room stated: “This afternoon, Saturday, February 7, 2015 met with the Chairman of the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) and with all of its 12 National Commissioners in attendance.

“At the meeting, INEC Chairman, Prof. Attahiru Jega, conveyed that he had received a letter from the security services advising that he postpones the general elections on the grounds that the security agencies were engaged in a renewed battle against insurgency in the North East that would require their full concentration.

“In the letter the military was demanding a rescheduling of elections by at least six weeks in the first instance”.

INEC Postpone Elections By 6 Weeks

The Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) on Saturday night succumbed to intense pressure, as its Chairman, Attahiru Jega, announ...
Watched by a large crowd of admirers and top personalities who converged on the ancient city of Kano, the Kano State governor, Rabiu Kwankwaso, on Saturday presented the staff of office to the former Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) governor, Sanusi Lamido Sanusi, as Alhaji Muhammadu Sanusi II.

Immediately, the Emir pledged to ensure that justice prevails inhis domain during his reign, even as he will be fair to all.

Sanusi was appointed the 14th Emir of Kano on June 8, 2014 after the death of Alhaji Ado Bayero, on June 6, 2014.

At the ceremony held at the newly constructed Coronation Hall at the Government House, Kwankwaso described the Emir as a “knowledgeable person who acquired both the Islamic and western education”.

He said that Sanusi’s appointment was based on his personal track record of service and education, which are the prerequisites, especially at this time.

“This occasion is a unique one for me personally as I present this staff of office to Alhaji Muhammadu Sanusi as the 14th Emir of Kano.

“Above all, he is heir apparent of the throne, who has distinguished himself as an outstanding religious scholar that is quite conversant with our time,” he said.

Kwankwaso commended all personalities and dignitaries who came from far and near to grace the occasion.

Responding, Sanusi promised to ensure justice and fairness in the discharge of his responsibilities.

He also promised to discharge his duties with the fear of God and to treat the people equally in order to ensure peace, unity and economic growth and development of the emirate and the country.

“With the responsibility vested on me, I promise to ensure justice and fairness to all for the sustenance of peaceful coexistence,’’ he said.

The Emir said he would continue to protect the rights of his subjects and in addition give useful and meaningful advice to leaders in the state and the country.

“We will continue to protect the rights of our people and give other leaders useful and meaningful advice for the development of our state and the country.

“Today is not a day for long speeches, but a day of joy and thanks to the Almighty God,” he said.

He used the occasion to call on politicians to ensure peaceful elections in the country.

Sanusi urged district heads and other traditional rulers in the state to accord priority to issues of health, security, economy and education in their domains.

Among dignitaries, who attended the ceremony, were the Sultan of Sokoto, Alhaji Sa’ad Abubakar III and the Shehu of Borno, Alhaji Abubakar Umar El-kanemi.

Others are: Etsu Nupe, Alhaji Yahaya Abubakar, Emir of Zazzau, Alhaji Shehu Idris, as well as former Heads of State, Gen. Yakubu Gowon and Major General Muhammadu Buhari.

Also in attendance were the governors of Kaduna, Sokoto, Zamfara, Yobe, Niger, Edo, Kwara and Borno, as well as Oba of Lagos, Rilwan Akiolu; former Lagos State governor, Bola Tinubu; business mogul, Aliko Dangote; members of the diplomatic corps and the business community.

Ex-CBN Governor Enthroned As New Emir of Kano

Watched by a large crowd of admirers and top personalities who converged on the ancient city of Kano, the Kano State governor, Rabiu Kwankwa...

 

Journey By Africans © 2015 - Designed by Templateism.com, Plugins By MyBloggerLab.com