The
Federal Government on Monday said payment of subsidy on local
consumption of petroleum products was not working because it was subject
to abuses.
“The system (fuel subsidy) will not work because
there is so much room for abuse. Whereever you go outside Lagos and
Abuja, fuel is hardly sold for N97 per litre. Civil society
organisations are not speaking against this. They only attack the
government. Government cannot be at all filling stations,” Minister of
Information, Mr. Labaran Maku, said in Abuja.
The declaration came barely hours after media reports
of a suit in which a chieftain of the Peoples Democratic Party in
Anambra State, Chief Stanley Okeke, is asking a Federal High Court to
compel President Goodluck to totally withdraw subsidy on fuel.
Reacting to the Okeke suit, key figures in the civil society on Sunday, as reported by The PUNCH on Monday, described the court action as dubious and diversionary.
The government in January 2012 had a tough time
repelling mass unrest coordinated by civil groups in protest against the
wholesale removal of subsidy and the consequent jump in the per litre
pump price of petrol from N65 to N141.
The government, following a two-week paralysis of the
system, later retreated and fixed the price at N97 under a regime of
partial subsidy removal.
But Maku, who spoke while briefing the media on the
achievements of the Federal Government for 2012, said petrol could
hardly be bought at the control price of N97 per litre outside Lagos and
the Federal Capital Territory.
The minister said civil society organisations needed
to rise up against exploitation by dealers in petroleum products,
arguing that the government could not be at every filling station across
the country. He said the people needed to ask questions on why they
cannot buy fuel at the control price.
Despite the abuses in the system, Maku said the
government would retain the subsidy regime because that was what the
people wanted.
He said, “Government has paid subsidy for every litre
of fuel sold in this country but dealers are selling above the
regulated price. We have not deregulated fuel pump prices. For every
price above N97 per litre, Nigerians are paying twice.
“People are profiteering from the system and it is
wrong. Nigerians should have mercy on Nigerians. We are retaining the
subsidy because that is what people want now.”
Okeke in his suit is asking the court to stop
Jonathan from further payment of subsidy because the process is fraught
with abuses.
The only way to stop abuse of the fuel subsidy scheme
is the removal of the policy by the Federal Government, according to
the plaintiff in a 27-paragraph affidavit deposed in support of the
suit.
But while the spokesman for the Save Nigeria Group,
Yinka Odumakin, said the suit was a grand plot to deceive Nigerians,
human rights activist and Senior Advocate of Nigeria, Mr. Femi Falana,
vowed that civil society organisations would oppose Okeke and what the
suit represented “vehemently”.
A political activist and elder statesman, Dr. Tunji Braithwaite, also described the suit as a “dubious diversion.”
Meanwhile, the Nigeria Labour Congress in its review
of the state of the nation in 2012 said the year was “a year of
unparalleled impunity” and that fuel subsidy thieves must go to jail.
The NLC, in a New Year message by its National
President, Abdulwahed Omar, said the country was characterised by
incessant job losses and unemployment, insecurity and corruption. It
said that massive poverty in the country failed to tally with the growth
rate claimed by the Federal Government.
Omar said, “Government will be unfair to the Nigerian
people if it fails to expeditiously prosecute those who have stolen so
much, and caused so much trauma and death to the people.
“We hold the view that no one is above the law in any
decent society and if our government is committed to the enthronement
of good governance and a corrupt-free society, they must get the named
beneficiaries of the oil subsidy scam to not only refund all the money
they have stolen, but also serve appropriate jail terms.”
The NLC said that revelations at various probes into
the downstream sector of the oil industry showed unprecedented and
horrendous corruption.
According to the union, the probes revealed “the
rabid obsession of the ruling class to make the economy dependent on
imported petroleum products was for the purpose of enriching themselves
to the detriment of the Nigerian people.”
The NLC commended what it described as the heroic protests of workers and the Nigerian people against fuel subsidy.
It also commended members of National Assembly, particularly the House of Representatives for their positive interventions.
The union lamented the high rate of poverty in the country, adding that increasing number of families had become impoverished.
The NLC said, “Given the disturbing trend in the
economy and governance in the past year, which was characterised by
incessant job losses and unemployment, insecurity, and corruption, as
well as unparalleled impunity, the sustenance of good governance would
require re-srategising and more commitment to a peoples-focused and
oriented policy thrust in the interest of the Nigerian poor.”
Culled: Punchng
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