The full details of the $3 million bribery scandal involving members of
the House of Representatives Ad-hoc Committee on the Fuel Subsidy probe
were revealed yesterday, as one of the major actors in the scandal has
opened up on what transpired.
In an exclusive interview with
THISDAY, chairman, Zenon Petroleum & Gas Ltd, Mr. Femi Otedola, who
hitherto was suspected of being behind the $3 million bribery scandal,
blew the lid on what transpired and how chairman of the ad-hoc
committee, Hon. Farouk Lawan, and the secretary of the committee, Mr.
Boniface Emenalo, had collected $620,000 from him in a sting operation
masterminded by the security agencies.
The amount was part
payment for the $3 million, which he alleged Lawan had demanded from him
to exonerate Zenon Oil from the ad-hoc committee’s report.
As
the scandal unfolds, it was learnt that operatives of the State Security
Services have sent a video recording of the incident to the Economic
and Financial Crimes Commission for further scrutiny and action.
Otedola,
who was opening up on the issue for the first time, narrated how Lawan
at the outset of the probe had approached him to get some insight into
the workings of the downstream oil and gas sector.
Otedola said
he obliged him and ensured that his managing directors of Forte Oil Plc
and Zenon Oil appeared at the subsidy probe during its public hearing
after both companies had been invited by the committee.
During
the probe, he said the committee was informed in no uncertain terms
that Zenon does not and has never made claims for subsidy payments from
the federal government, as the company was engaged solely in the
importation of diesel, a product that is not subsidised.
Zenon’s
managing director, Mr. Kanmi Kareem Otaru, during the probe had denied
that the company had anything to do with the subsidy regime. He told the
committee, “For the avoidance of doubt Zenon never participated or
benefited from the subsidy scheme or Petroleum Support Fund (PSF).”
According
to him, going by the Act which established the PSF scheme, “Zenon
couldn’t participate in it because we don’t have a network of PMS retail
outlets which was one of the key criteria beneficiaries must meet and
as such we are not qualified to participate to draw from subsidy
payments on PMS. So we never collected as records will show.”
Irrespective
of the clarification made at the hearing, Otedola said Lawan still
approached him a few days before the report was to be tabled on April
18, 2012 before the House of Representatives, demanding money so that
Zenon’s name will be kept out of the report.
“When this happened, I
was very angry and reminded him that Zenon has never participated in the
subsidy scheme and that it would be criminal to rope in the company for
something it did not do.
“But Lawan responded, stating
that several other marketers were playing ball and had offered the
members of the committee large sums of money to ensure that their
companies’ names were not published in the report,” he added.
Otedola,
said initially he balked at Lawan’s attempt to extort money from him
and told the legislator that he would not pay up, as Zenon had not
committed any crime.
“Then a day before the report was to
be submitted, Lawan called again, informing me that Zenon’s name had
been included in the report.
“I, of course, was very angry and asked
him to desist from his course of action, but Lawan insisted that I must
pay up as other oil marketers had done before me.”
Otedola said
he could not believe his eyes the next day when the report came out and
Zenon’s name had been listed under the category of companies that had
bought foreign exchange from the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) but had
not imported petrol.
The amount ascribed to Zenon in the
report was $232,975,385.13. The report had recommended that Zenon and 14
other marketers that had bought the foreign exchange be referred to the
anti-corruption agencies to determine what they used the monies for.
Otedola
said at this point he again called Lawan demanding that Zenon’s name be
removed from the list, as there was no way his company could have
bought that volume of foreign exchange without importing products.
“I
reminded him that the amount ascribed to Zenon was wrong as what the
company bought was over $400 million for importation of products through
the banks – Zenith, UBA and GTB – and that under Sanusi (CBN governor)
there was no way anyone could have bought that quantity of foreign
exchange and not imported the products having filled the Form M.
“Sanusi will simply clamp down on anyone who tries to pull that kind of stunt,” he said.
In
spite of this, Otedola said Lawan still demanded that the members of
the committee be given money in exchange for removing Zenon’s name from
the report before it is considered in plenary by the entire House.
Otedola said he then asked how much would be required to make the committee happy, to which Lawan responded $3 million.
“I
screamed at him, demanding to know why he was doing this to me. All he
said was other marketers were paying up to keep their names out of the
report so I should do likewise,” he said.
Otedola revealed that
it was this point he decided to involve the security agencies to catch
Lawan and his committee with their hands in the till.
According
to him, “As a law-abiding citizen, I decided to involve the security
agencies and they advised me to play along, which prompted me to offer
to pay part of the money with the promise that I would pay the balance
when my company’s name had been removed from the report."
The
security agencies, he disclosed, gave him serialised dollar bills for
the sting job and there are call logs, video and audio recordings in the
possession of the agencies to confirm all that had transpired between
himself and Lawan.
He said on April 21, the Saturday
before the plenary, Lawan came in person to his residence and collected
$250,000 in cash, as the first instalment, “then the next Monday night
he came and collected another $250,000.
“On Tuesday, at 9am, just before the House commenced seating, Boniface came and collected another $120,000.”
Otedola
confirmed that during the sting, Lawan and Boniface collected a total
of $620,000 in three instalments as part of the $3 million demanded from
him.
He added that with the
$620,000 that had been extorted by Lawan and the committee, during the
plenary, Zenon’s name was removed from the list of companies that had
bought foreign exchange but did not import products.
Otedola
continued: “He (Lawan) now asked for the balance of $2.5 million, but
when I told him that I had no money now that the money was in Lagos, he
suggested that I should charter a plane to fly the money from Lagos to
Abuja.”
Otedola stressed that his decision to get the
law enforcement and security agencies involved stemmed from the fact
that he had not broken any law, maintaining that as a law-abiding
citizen, he was saddened by the fact that he was being blackmailed by of
all people, members of the legislature.
“If you have information
that an armed robber is come to raid your home, won’t you notify the
police? So, that was the purpose of the sting operation.
“Besides,
my integrity is paramount to me. I started selling petroleum products
14 years ago in drums and somebody who has never run a petrol station is
trying to blackmail and extort money from me.
“If others (marketers)
have paid money, maybe they are guilty. But I did not do anything
wrong, so why should they extort money from me? As a law-abiding
citizen, I had to involve the security agencies. Indeed, I’m very
disappointed because I have worked hard to build my business.”
Insisting
that he had nothing to hide or fear over what had happened, Otedola
maintained if he was in the wrong he would not have involved the
security agencies in the first instance.
In a reference to the
strong denials made by Lawan since the scandal became public, Otedola
stated, “When he (Lawan) demanded the bribe, I called the agencies. That
is because I had nothing to hide. When the bribe was paid, why did he
not call and report it to the agencies if he had nothing to.”
Meanwhile,
THISDAY gathered that the videotape of the illicit transaction had been
sent to the EFCC to investigate the incident.
When contacted, the
EFCC, however, said it had neither received the videotape nor had it
commenced investigations into the bribery scandal.
EFCC Head of the Media Unit, Mr. Wilson Uwugiaren, said the allegation had not been brought to the knowledge of the commission.
According
to him, the only related matter currently being handled by the EFCC was
the report of the ad-hoc committee that the commission was studying to
establish the facts and track down anyone found culpable for the alleged
mismanagement of the PSF.
http://www.thisdaylive.com/articles/fuel-subsidy-probe-otedola-confirms-bribe-to-lawmakers/117757/
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