Northern Nigerian Breaking News

GOCOP Confab: Alleged expenditure of $16b delayed Nigeria’s power sector reforms-Liyel Imoke

A former minister of power, who later served as governor of Cross River State, Senator Liyel Imoke, on Thursday, in Lokoja, stated that the alleged “expenditure” of $16 billion on the power sector by the Olusegun Obasanjo administration never happened.

Imoke, who was also Chairman of the Power Sector Technical Board under the Obasanjo administration, stated this as a matter of fact in his keynote address at the 8th Annual Conference of the Guild of Corporate Online Publishers (GOCOP), themed: “Nigeria: Tackling insecurity, power deficit, and transitioning to digital economy.”

Admitting that the National Electric Power Authority (NEPA), as it then was, was a monopoly, he said that electricity distribution was also a monopoly even as the execution of so many programs faced various challenges.

He referred to the undue delay in implementation of the power sector reforms, which resulted from the probe of the claim of a phantom expenditure of $16 billion on the sector under the administration.

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PROMISES-DELIVERED

According to him: “The power sector probe took about two years.  The delay led to huge cost overruns; doubling the costs of various contracts awarded during my tenure.  Several of these projects were delayed in completion.  As we speak, we still have several ongoing IPP projects.”

He said that at the end of the probe, they found out that there was no missing $16b, but lamented that the alleged expenditure of the phantom $16b had been used as a political tool to criticize “those of us in government.”

Imoke fingered inadequate information as the trigger for the allegation, pointing out that, for instance, on his watch as Minister of Power, the actual spending was between $2b and $3b, much of which went to the original electric manufacturer.

KANO ACRESAL PROJECT

The former power minister said that insecurity, power deficit, and the slowness in Nigeria’s transition to a full digital economy were challenges impeding national growth and development.

According to him: “These are challenges that impede our growth as a nation.  They make us less globally competitive.  If you look at electricity insecurity and digital economy and if we tackle these, we will be on our way to economic growth.”

He said to unlock Nigeria’s potential, the administration must tackle insecurity, noting that there had been insurgency and the emergence of Boko Haram, which split into ISWAP.

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“We have experienced banditry, kidnapping, armed killings, mass kidnapping, and illegal mining. These days, we can’t go to a gathering of this magnitude without seeing someone who had been kidnapped before. This is one of our new realities,” he stated.

He identified ethnic tension as a contributory cause of communal violence, adding that grievances in the Niger Delta caused a lot of insecurity in the region in the 2000s.

Imoke spoke about organized private crimes in the Gulf of Guinea, which created  insecurity in the area and separatist marginalization in the southeast region, leading to agitation 

He stated that, for instance, between 2009 and 2020, insurgency by Boko Haram alone resulted in over 40,000 deaths.

Imoke listed poverty, high unemployment rate, which was in 1999 put at six per cent, in 2022 put at 22 per cent but which as of today is approaching 40 per cent, weak governance and corruption as well as climate change, as some of the factors that contribute to insecurity in the country.

He also listed the proliferation of small arms and violent crimes across the country as a sore thumb, lamenting that there were more arms with some non-state actors put in their hands by desperate politicians and which at the end of elections, were not retrieved from them and on which they now depended to survive.

Saying that hope was not lost, Imoke declared that successive administrations had succeeded in degrading Boko Haram and recovering territories in the Northeast hitherto seized by the group.

According to him, “The military was able to degrade the group and reclaim the areas in the Northeast around Maiduguri.”

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He listed other successes as the decrease in Boko Haram insurgency and deaths by 23 per cent according to the global terrorism index, adding that “there is also reduction of militancy in the Niger Delta as there is no more MEND in the region.”

He continued: “Oil production has significantly rebounded until recently because, during the era of MEND, oil production dropped below 1.5 m barrels per day.

“An anti-piracy measure was launched through NIMASA and international collaborators to reduce piracy in the Gulf of Guinea. Piracy decreased by 58 per cent between 2020 and 2021 in the Gulf of Guinea.

“In the Southeast, the arrest of Nnamdi Kanu is an achievement in the region…The Nigerian government has increased its surveillance measures; its counter-insurgency operation has been used in combating terrorism.  We now have drone technology and others to attack security issues across the board. The persistent Boko Haram issue has been watered down, but there is a humanitarian issue. About 2.7m people have been affected. The UN said that 350,000 people have died as a result of insurgency.”

He, however, noted that the Herder-farmers’ conflict was still ongoing, pointing out that over 2,600 people were reportedly killed in 2021 alone.

 

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