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A Nigerian lawmaker who led a probe into the nation's fuel subsidy
program that saw billions of dollars lost through fraud has been charged
with allegedly soliciting a $3 million bribe from someone targeted by
the inquiry.
Rep. Farouk Lawan and his aide Emenalo Boniface pleaded not guilty
Friday to the charges they face in a Federal High Court in Nigeria's
capital, Abuja. Justice Mudashiru Oniyang ordered the two men to be held
in prison until a bail hearing Feb. 8.
The allegations surrounding Lawan and Boniface stem from their
investigation of Femi Otedola, the chairman of Zenon Petroleum and Gas
Ltd. and a powerful ally of Nigerian President Goodluck Jonathan.
Charging documents released by the court Friday show investigators claim
the two men sought a $3 million bribe from Otedola to remove his
company from a list of firms suspected of stealing some $6.7 billion
from the government through the subsidy program.
Prosecutors accused Lawan of receiving at least $500,000 of the
demanded bribe, while Boniface received $120,000. The alleged bribery
scandal erupted when Nigerian newspapers published stories claiming
Otedola and his associates filmed the encounters. The films have not
been released publicly, though Otedola co-operated with police in their
investigation.
The bribery allegations quickly overshadowed the work of the House of
Representatives, which launched a probe of the subsidy program in the
wake of a January 2012 nationwide strike over the removal of the fuel
subsidies.
The subsidies, in theory, keep prices artificially low for buyers
while paying companies for bringing in refined gasoline at a loss
against the world market price. Nigeria, despite producing about 2.4
million barrels of oil a day, has decrepit refineries unable to meet the
nation's demand for gasoline due to years of mismanagement and
sabotage.
However, gasoline importation licenses became a means of patronage,
as the number of companies involved jumped from six in 2006 to 140 in
2011, according to the report. In 2009, when there were 36 companies
licensed to import, government officials once issued about $800 million
in 128 transactions in a 24-hour period without proper documentation,
the report reads.
The probe ultimately called for $6.7 billion to be repaid by
importers, the state-run Nigerian National Petroleum Corp. and other
agencies. Allegations of corruption continue to hound the subsidy
program, which eats away billions from Nigeria's federal budget.
However, the comparatively low fuel prices as a result of the subsidy
program are one of the few benefits seen by the masses in Nigeria.
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