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I Go Chop Your Dollar!

21 Jun 2012

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The Verdict according to Olusegun Adeniyi. Email,olusegun.adeniyi@thisdaylive.com

Whatever you may say about the State Security Service (SSS), one thing you must concede to them is that they don’t allow others to tell their stories. Whenever they conduct an operation, especially one in which the culprit is caught in the act or is killed, Mrs Marilyn Ogar would immediately address the media to give a blow-by-blow account of what happened. So when two months after a “sting operation” allegedly involving the SSS and the report was coming from Zenon Oil Chairman, Mr Femi Otedola, many Nigerians were quick to come to their own conclusion: the sordid affair was more an entrapment of a greedy politician by a desperate business man than any attempt to seek the end of justice.

Of course this is not denying that Otedola may have involved some rogue elements within the security agencies but to call what happened an official sting operation would be a disservice to the SSS and that is perhaps why they have not publicly claimed ownership. Whatever the cock-and-bull tales being bandied about some “operational mistakes” (all according to unnamed sources), it is more plausible to believe that Otedola, and not the SSS, conducted the “sting operation”.  In fact, the more I learn about what actually transpired between the duo (and I have been speaking to some of the principal characters in the saga), the more it reminds me of the banned song, “I Go Chop Your Dollar”, (described as the anthem for 419 scammers) by the inimitable Nkem Owoh, alias Osuofia.

Notwithstanding, to borrow a famous refrain, “whether Jonah swallowed the whale or the whale swallowed Jonah, the point remains that there was a swallow” so to the extent that Lawan still has in his “custody” the sum of $600,000 (or $620,000, according to the ‘unedited’ figure) there was bribery. And that is the real shame given the hope many Nigerians had placed in the House of Representatives Ad Hoc Committee on the Monitoring of Subsidy Regime.

But let us get some facts straight. Otedola and Lawan are very much known to each other as you would expect between a PDP financier and one of the most powerful members of the ruling party in the House. Therefore, the allegations and counter-allegations between the duo impose a grave responsibility on the security agencies to unearth what actually transpired beyond the lies and half-truths that we are being told by both parties. The police should also stop acting as if they want to help Otedola retrieve his loot in the name of a criminal investigation that is already bungled. In fact, the tardy manner in which this issue is being handled illustrates the incompetence within the security apparatus and why our country is now practically at the mercy of criminal gangs.

It is noteworthy that this “sting operation” took place almost two months ago and in the intervening period, all manners of negotiation, including the intervention of the PDP leadership, have reportedly taken place on an issue which ordinarily borders on criminality and abuse of public trust. We have even seen the police writing letters, while begging and cajoling Lawan to surrender money that even he has openly admitted does not belong to him.

However, given that Zenon was indicted by the probe committee but curiously "cleared" when Lawan claimed on the floor of the House that it was "listed in error", Otedola should assist the police in proving his allegation of bribery against Lawan. But by cynically re-inserting Otedola’s Zenon into the list of indicted companies last Friday, the House has not only put a question mark on its own integrity, it is also telling the world that it has no regard for due process. That is because its members and leadership are misreading the public mood.

In asking that the subsidy report be implemented by the executive, it is not that Nigerians don’t have issues with it (afterall, many big names in the subsidy cartel were curiously left out of the indictment list). What Nigerians are saying is that notwithstanding the fact that the report is now compromised, given what transpired in the course of the public hearing, it is very evident that our country was criminally shortchanged by people who simply shared over a trillion Naira in the name of subsidy payments. And they see no reason why those people should go scot free.

Some of the disclosures: Payment of N1.7 trillion for subsidy as against the N245 billion appropriated by the National Assembly in 2011. Even that initial figure by the CBN was later further adjusted upward. Confirmation by the Customs Service that it was officially prevented from inspecting ships bringing fuel to Nigeria. Diversion by many importers of hundreds of millions of dollars meant for fuel importation, according to the CBN. And then the N300 billion paid as subsidy for HHK in defiance of a subsisting presidential directive. These and many more scandalous revelations came into the open during the public hearing so to Nigerians most of what was going on in the name of subsidy payments, especially in year 2011, was direct stealing. That is why they still believe the committee’s final outcome should not be wished away even with all the scandals surrounding it.

But I do hope that the National Assembly has also learnt a lesson. Right now our lawmakers are the butt of jokes on the internet and I can quickly share with them the latest that is making the rounds: A woman was said to have thoroughly beaten her son caught stealing. After applying the corporal punishment, she decided to counsel him by asking: “Do you know where you will end up if you continue to steal?”

To the amazement of the mother, the boy said he knew where he would end up. So she asked him: “Where?”. The boy replied: “National Assembly!”

A word, as they say, is enough for the wise.

Dana Crash: Endless Tears

She was one of the few people on the Dana Airlines plane crash whose bodies were easily recognizable. Save for a few bruises on her arm and minor burns on her face,  her clothes and hair were all very much intact. So it was easy for her family to identify her corpse at the mortuary. Following the completion of an autopsy, her body was released from the LASU Teaching Hospital mortuary to her family on Wednesday June 6 in preparation for burial scheduled for Friday, June 8. Notices had been published in the dailies and all arrangements made but on Thursday morning when the family went to collect the death certificate and finalise the paper work, they were confronted with a different dilemma: the remains earlier released to them needed to be returned for DNA testing in what seemed like callous bureaucracy.

Behind the scenes, it was obvious that at play was turf politics between the different agencies involved in the processing of crash victims as well as officials from both the federal and state governments who were competing for supremacy. In the end, despite entreaties, the undertakers returned the body to the mortuary. The compromise was that the DNA sample would be taken and the body released in time for the burial the next day. Those responsible kept to their word but the family cannot forget the terrible experience while there are other families who cannot bury their loved ones because the bodies have not been released to them even though the conditions under which many of them are being stored are less than what is generally accepted. Now, some families are being offered the untenable option for mass burial.

Today, I had planned to conclude “Death Traps in the Air”, a series started last week on the critical challenges facing the Nigerian aviation sector but cannot, in the face of the pains being suffered by several families. It is one thing to lose loved ones in such a tragic manner, it is another to be made to undergo needless trauma in the process of retrieving their remains. What the situation depicts very clearly is that we lack the capacity to manage even simple things and it is sad. I therefore implore the relevant authorities to do all within their powers to put an end to some of the unpleasant stories that are coming out from the mortuary.

Descent into Anarchy

With last Sunday’s coordinated attack on three churches in Kaduna State by suicide bombers, it would appear that those hell-bent on destroying our country have not relented on their sinister agenda. And it is unfortunate, if not tragic, that there seems to be no solution in sight to what has now become an epidemic of violence and bloodletting.

According to reports, at about the time there was an explosion at the Evangelical Church of West Africa (ECWA) church, Wusasa last Sunday, another bombing was being carried out at the Christ the King Cathedral Catholic church on Sabon Gari, Zaria, just behind the Army Depot. A third explosion occurred at the Shalom Church of God in the Trikania area within the Kaduna metropolis. By the time the smoke cleared, no fewer than 24 dead bodies were counted with dozens of others wounded. The explosions sparked reprisal attacks from some Christian youths who practically took their fate (and faith) in their own hands. Now, the number of deaths is heartrending.

It is very clear that the serial bombing of churches is a calculated attempt to draw Christians into the kind of mindless killings which followed last Sunday’s attacks and right now, the virus of hate, according to a commentator, is now amok in Kaduna and environ. I have even read suggestions on the internet that it was time both the Christians and the Muslims began to “slug it out” because the state can no longer offer security and protection.

For decades, we have been able to manage our delicate fault-lines which are not peculiar to us as a nation. But right now, there are serious challenges which will take the collective resolve of all Nigerians to overcome. Those who attack places of worship understand what they are doing and it would be tragic if we play into their hands as it is now happening in Kaduna. That is why it is incumbent on the government, and indeed all people of goodwill who can help to put an end to the current madness, to intervene while we still have a nation called Nigeria. As Bishop Kukah said on Monday, time indeed is running out for our country.

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  • I appreciate the article on the Lawangate (or Faroukgate) but I am surprised that the Nigerian media is apparently treading softly on the matter. The news is gradually fizzling out and by next week its likely that nothing will heard about it. Sting operation or not, a Hon member collected money from someone whose company(ies) the committee of which he is the heading is probing. In other climes, that Hon member should have resigned honourably. Unfortunately because the member is Mr Integrity and the person whose company(ies) is one of the oil barons then we talk of conspiracy and setup. Let the member address a press conference and tell us what happened and let it be publicly broadcasted.
    In conclusion, as a Christian, I will like to end with a quote from the bible Matt 7: 3 - 5
    And why beholdest thou the mote that is in thy brother's eye, but considerest not the beam that is in thine own eye? Or how wilt thou say to thy brother, Let me pull out the mote out of thine eye; and, behold, a beam is in thine own eye? Thou hypocrite, first cast out the beam out of thine own eye; and then shalt thou see clearly to cast out the mote out of thy brother's eye.

    From: TUNDE ALAO

    Posted: 11 months ago

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  • To insist on implimenting the now tainted report is to live in denial of the glaring fact that the names of innocents have been listed because they refuse to give bribe. And whether the sting operation was a set up or not, it is better to fight the corruption in it, than to worry about Mr. Otedola's motive. The most logical thing to do is for the house to set up another committee to do the job.

    From: Steve Lukpata

    Posted: 11 months ago

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  • Our leaders should seat up and tell themselves nothing but d truth.This country of our NIGERIA was a very big mistake by the colonial masters for their economic gains.The reality is now here with us.
    If we can not go apart for now,we can regionalize the governing system for now.

    From: isa amede

    Posted: 11 months ago

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  • I don't understand why you said the House should not have re-listed Zenon. If it's true that Lawan was bribed to remove the name from the list and he actually applied and got the name deleted after collecting the Dollars, what then is wrong with the position of the house? I think we should be patriotic in analyzing and seeking an end to this issue of corruption in Nigeria.

    From: Ismaila

    Posted: 11 months ago

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  • Nice article and devoid of the usual my brother and my sister...............

    From: Commonman

    Posted: 11 months ago

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  • Mr Segun, i hope you read this since you have connections in high places. Can the link between boko haram and their approach not be cut? What i mean is mopping materials like empty tins from circulation either as a corporate social responsibility by producers or with cash incentives. Would it also be a herculean task to phase out sale of products with packaging likely to be used for IEDs? Have we become incapable of thinking ahead of them? Govt's top down approach is certainly not working and it seems they are incapable of devising new strategies. What of grassroot propaganda.........unfortunately it is more like "let them kill themselves" we hear or so called conspiracy theories.

    From: Concerned citizen

    Posted: 11 months ago

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  • What we need in Nigeria now is just a very few mad but patriotic Nigerians that will come from no where and kill, yes KILL many of our leaders, journalists, civil servants and some of you reading this from the last 30 years up to this very moment. Nothing short of that can save this sinking ship.

    From: Nigeria is Dead

    Posted: 11 months ago

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  • it will be injustice if Otedollar himseif is brought to face the law/

    From: adefioye

    Posted: 11 months ago

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  • Ismaila you are either lacking in understanding or your problem s sentiment. You must understand the story of Otedola/Lawan. or by the way, do you know what is called marked money. It is used in America, South Africa etc to catch corrupt official. When you report to security agent that a government agent is asking for bribe in most cases, you will be given marked currency to play along with the criminal. In many cases, the collector will be arrested soon after he collects the cash. If that had happened n Nigeria case, police will not be talking of recovering the said money.

    From: Cole Man

    Posted: 11 months ago

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  • Steve.... your comment is the best that i have seen since bribe mess began. Thank you

    From: Cole Man

    Posted: 11 months ago

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  • WHERE IS PST TUNDE BAKARE AND CO. PLS NOW IS THE BEST TIME TO CALL NIGERIANS TO PROTEST & MAY BE IT WLL TRANSIT TO REV...

    From: TJ

    Posted: 11 months ago

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  • Our members of senate or House of representative may be stripped the title ‘honorable’ up to such a time, they would have earned enough credibility that are honorable. And then the title will be meaningful and worthwhile.

    From: Taiwo Ajose

    Posted: 11 months ago

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  • I agree with you totally Segun on the kaduna Sunday bombing issue. It is a game plan calculated to draw Christians fight against Moslems. This the Federal Government, State Government Religious Leaders and various Community Leaders must out and condemn and talk to their followers to exercise restrain. We must be seen to be fighting a common enemy Boko Haram. To this end, l want to see a situation where Christians would troop out on Friday to Mosques in their vicinity to protect Moslems as they say the Jumat prayers. I also expect Moslems to do same for Christians on Sunday. We must begin to sow seeds of love and oneness among ourselves.

    From: Charles

    Posted: 11 months ago

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  • Segun, You just x-rayed the truth & nothing but the truth. It is actually 'Sting Operation' authored by Femi Otedola, not 'Sting Operation' authored by the SSS. I hope with this piece, Nigerians will stop looking at things superficially & read deeper meanings to actions taken by our polity. I weep for this jungle country called Nigeria.

    From: George Ikuba

    Posted: 11 months ago

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  • Here lies the Nigerian complicity in a very familiar situation. A case of corruption had been evidenced, with video and a 'give and take' admission by both parties involved and we are still talking about this in the media. I don't care about who is involved and what motives they have. A case of corruption has been alleged and admitted. Chikena!!!. Make the current laws work. Arrest the citizen that was alleged to have violated the law (which should have been done 2 months ago), set preliminary court hearings or conditions for bail, let the wheel of justice move.

    But no. Everyone is now cynical. Enforcement agencies are seeking to recoup $$ as 'further evidence'. Journalists wouldn't speak truth to power because the grass don't want to suffer when elephants fight. Nigerians are now 'very' wary of Mr. Otedola's motives as a whistle blower. Law makers are suddenly interested in a phantom Ogre trying to diminish their influence in the politisphere. What a society we have become!!!

    So what's to become of a certain Custom Agent Theophilus (hypothetical) that wants to blow the whistle on BBB Imports (hypothetical) because he has evidence of fraudulent fuel import receipts? Would he dare go that route knowing even the 'mighty' Mr. Otedola was muddied up in a whistle blowing case. Would he really dare go that route with a family to support, knowing he's got no protection under the law??? Are we expecting the Nigerian citizenry to take up their responsibility in the society if we are to be cynical of Mr. Otedola's case. Really??? Is the rule of law dead??? Now, who fits the Nigerian definition of a 'patriot'??? This is a very disturbing affair.

    From: Femo Scorpion

    Posted: 11 months ago

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  • This is a classical example of how the Nigerian Press contribute to the rot in our system by trvialising serious issues of corruption whenever the characters invloved is their man. What has the security agency done wrong in this case and what has even Otedola done wrong in this matter given his story and the facts on the ground. Was Farouk in the first instance supposed to go to Otedola's house for whatever reason at the time he was conducting a probe in which Otedola was a "suspect". Why did he choose to go alone driving himself unaccompanied during unholy hours. Furthermore, he has now accepted receiving $500,000 from Otedola, which he initialled denied several times. Jangaba,the man he initially claimed he gave the money to has totally denied. So where is the hiding place for Lawan now? Rather than addressing this issue, you are now telling us that the Police were only trying to help Otedola recover his dollars. What a shameful write up and shameful attempt to help your friend Mr. Intergrity divert attention from his shameful deeds? If Otedola did not record all that transpired, who would have believed his story against that of your "Mr. Intergrity" since he Lawan is one of those people who can do no wrong while Otedola is one of those people who must always do wrong. You jounalists need to repent and stop confusing your readers. Now, going to the report you are so much celebrating. We were told that N1.17 trillion was lost and of this, NNPC (government) was to refund N750billion and PPRA (another government agency) was to refund N312billion. Was anybody''s name in NNPC or PPRA mentioned in the report.This is the report we are all celebrating as thorough since Lawan and his group were clever enought to have mention trillion as missing oil money. Who is deceiving who?. I thought the report would have established (1) Howe much was paid as subsidy within the period under review (2) Who (names of companies or individuals) that the money was paid to indicating who got how much (3) What quantity of fuels these companies or individuals failed to bring to the country compared to the money they received (4) What is the amount (if any) for the fuel not brought in to the Country(with evidence) by those that received these payments. This would have been a straight forward report. Rather we are being told that NNPC and PPRA should refund almost N1.1trillion. This is more than 95% of the so called N.17trillion in the report. Which Marketers then collected these money. Are NNPC and PPRA marketers. From which account will NNPC and PPRA get the money to refund. Do they have private accounts other than the government accounts. One cannot rule out the possibility that Lawan and his group gave such a shoddy report because money must have exchanged hands with several marketrs or even officials of NNPC and PPRA and we are now trying to triviliase the efforts of the only man wo had the guts to say no to their blackmail and also had enough sense to catch his blackmailers in such a way that they will not be able to deny their acts of betrayall and wickedness.

    From: SHINA

    Posted: 11 months ago

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  • funny to hear that a little boy who stole told his mother that he knew where to end up if he continues stealing, at the national assembly

    From: stella agwu bond

    Posted: 11 months ago

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  • Femo I agree with you wholeheartedly. One thing we know in Nigeria is that things never work the way they ought to and as they work everywhere else. And the reason we try to complicate simple things is that in doing so, we circumvent due process because we are never really interested in the truth. Your average Nigerian has not faith or hope in any arm of government or law enforcement and even scarier, most NIgerians know that if they ever got to office, they maybe no different to the criminal elements we have governing us. After all, our government, legislature, judiciary and law enforcement agencies who have been cancered by corruption are not foreigners, they are Nigerians. We have become so hopeless about Nigeria that we all fall into three categories; the skilled and talented flee the country for pastures anew. As religion is the opium of the masses, others immerse themselves in the God industry and the rest do the 'if you cannot beat them join them'. This is why my conclusion is exactly the same as yours. Nigeria is now a 'very disturbing affair'

    From: Michael Kadiri

    Posted: 11 months ago

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  • i want to agree with femo scorpion as this is a clear case. otedola accused lawan of collecting bribe, lawan claimed that he did not collect bribe and that the vidoe was 'doctored'. lawan, for whatever reason and i am sure, without legal counsel, admitted he collected the bribe. all police needed to establish was how many did he share it with. there was no need asking him to produce the bribe money. they ought to have prosecuted him using only otedola as a prosecution witness. even if he changes his story in court, which he will certainly do being a typical niga politician, the judge would likely believe his earlier story that hsa been corroborated by otedola. tying the credibility of the probe report to the integrity of lawan makes no sense to me. any fool could chair that committee and still come out with the same report. the report was just a summation of the public hearing. every nigerian that watched the dance of shame of the NNPC with their conflicting figures, oil marketers with blatant lies and Min of Fin and CBN with their holier than thou attidudecould not have agreed less with the report. that lawan is expectedly an opportunist and a thief should not stop jonathan from implementing the findings in the report unless he is irredeemably calous. otedola's integrity or motive, in my opinion, does not come into play. he is not the accused. we should call a spade a spade. lawan collected bribe in the course of duty and should be punished. shikena!

    From: niyi abe

    Posted: 11 months ago

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  • on kaduna bombing, i dont subscribe to reprisal attack on two grounds. the first is that reprisal attack on innocent moslems will make us look as bad as these mad people. the second is that it is contrary to the tenets of our faith. there is no christian that can justify reprisla attacke by any stretch of interpretation of our holy book. our leaders, however, should be circumspect in condemning those that carried out reprisal attack on sunday. it takes a great faith for someone who has lost all he had (children and wife) to understand that an eye for an eye would make the whole world go blind. as yoruba would say, a man with only one suitcase does not bother if there is war as he has no property he would be worried of. may God help our country that is effectively on an auto pilot as our president has chosen to abandon us (at this critical time) for the pleasure of smaba girls (mulatos) in Brazil!

    From: niyi abe

    Posted: 11 months ago

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  • A friend said the other day that Nigeria's problems are bigger than anyone and that we can always discuss them and go to sleep only resume the next day while the problems remain.
    .

    From: nwatah.com

    Posted: 11 months ago

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  • everything changes in the Nigerian context, we just have this capacity to complicate the simplest of things because there are no standards and where there are, we are so dishonest we cant keep to them.

    From: Ayo

    Posted: 11 months ago

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  • For some of that comment concerning Boko Haram bomb blast in Kaduna, you seems to have lost your sense of history in relations to Religious and ethnic violence. However, a common fight against B.H., as one suggested, Boko h, are they spirits. No! They are muslims mind you. So be mindful of your opinions.

    From: Hyginus U.

    Posted: 11 months ago

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  • Nice write up. But do not get confused with the word "sting" because its goal is not about offering, receiving and eventual recovery of the marked specie, rather its about executing the request of the giver this time. And that goal was removing the indictment previously placed on Femi Otedola's interest which the Reps horridly replaced when the bubble burst. That alone shown that Farouk the crook did not act alone. He was just a fall guy. The sting operation served its intended purpose, period.

    From: Oyibo Mathew

    Posted: 11 months ago

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