There are strong indications that President Muhammadu Buhari has
initiated moves to forestall the escalation of the festering feud between the
All Progressives Congress National Leader, Asiwaju Bola Tinubu, and the
Minister of State for Petroleum Resources, Mr. Ibe Kachikwu.
The PUNCH reliably
gathered on Monday that Buhari believed that Kachikwu’s statement and Tinubu’s
criticisms could tear the party apart.
It was learnt that the President
had therefore cautioned the APC chieftains and members of his cabinet
against taking sides in comments and issues that could divide the party and
derail his government.
A member of the cabinet, who
confided in The PUNCH, said the President was of the view that any
comment by the APC on the propriety or otherwise of Tinubu’s statement would
divide the party and his government.
It was gathered that Buhari had
told the minister that he should concentrate on how to end fuel scarcity before
May, the time Kachikwu had proposed that there would be smooth fuel supply in
the country.
The cabinet member stated, “I am
aware that the President has moved in and cautioned ministers and party
chieftains against divisive statements on the seeming feud between Tinubu and
Kachikwu.
“At this time of the nation’s
history, the President needs all the support of Nigerians. There should not be
any distraction. The minister has been told that his main focus should be how
to end fuel queues.”
Kachikwu had, in an interview
with journalists in Abuja on Wednesday, said fuel queues could not be
eliminated before May, adding that he was not a magician.
But Tinubu had, in a statement
on Saturday, criticised the minister, saying Kachikwu’s position amounted to an
act of insubordination to Nigerians, who voted public office-holders into their
offices.
The National Secretariat of the
APC on Monday kept mute over the controversy generated by Kachikwu on the fuel
situation in the country, which was roundly condemned by Tinubu.
The National Chairman of APC,
Chief John Odigie-Oyegun, and the party’s National Secretary, Mai Mala Buni,
could be reached for comments on Monday.
Calls to their mobile telephones
indicated that they were switched off while responses to text messages sent to
them were still being awaited as of the time of filing this report.
However, a source within the
party said, “The statement by our revered leader is not ambiguous. I honestly
don’t see any ambiguity; he issued the statement and signed it in his personal
capacity.
“He, like every Nigerian, has
every right to speak out when he sees anything going wrong in the polity; you
cannot deny him that right.
“Besides, I understand that the
matter is being handled at the highest level; it is an internal party affair.”
Meanwhile, the Senate has
directed Kachikwu to appear before it on Tuesday (today) to explain the cause
of the embarrassing fuel scarcity across the country.
The Senate Committee on
Petroleum Resources (Downstream) issued the summons after carrying out an
on-the-spot assessment of the fuel situation at major filling stations within
the nation’s capital, Abuja.
Members of the committee were
confronted with long queues of vehicles at many filling stations.
The operators did not
dispense the product to motorists, alleging lack of supply from the Nigerian
National Petroleum Corporation’s depot in Suleja, Niger State.
The Acting Chairman of the
committee, Senator Jibrin Barau, said the petroleum minister must appear before
the panel to explain what led to the scarcity and the way to resolve it.
He said the fuel scarcity had
become pathetic, forcing Senate President Bukola Saraki to call on the
committee to assess the situation and the way to resolve it.
Barau added, “This situation is
very bad and unacceptable, hence, the need for the minister to appear before us
tomorrow (today) and unveil his plan of the way out to us.
“Even if he doesn’t have any
plan yet out of the lingering problem, the Senate President and the entire
members of the committee are more than ready to rub minds with him for that
needed purpose.”
The Senate Minority Whip and a
member of the committee, Senator Philip Aduda, called on the Federal
Government to arrest the situation fast by making fuel available to Nigerians.
Aduda said, “What Nigerians need
is fuel and not blame game. The government should look for petrol and ensure
that it is given to the people.
“This situation is very and
unacceptable. We are Nigerians and it will be bad for us to continue remaining
in queues.
“If the APC leaders like, let
them blame themselves; that is their problem, but the most important thing is
for us to have fuel in the Federal Republic of Nigeria.
“That is what we are looking for
and that is what we want. We want to see all these queues disappear.”
One of our correspondents
observed that petrol marketers at various stations visited, lamented lack
of supply and inadequate supply of petroleum products by the NNPC in recent
times.
Isa Friday, the manager of Oando
Filling station, Zone 4, Abuja, said it had been long the station got supply
from NNPC depot in Suleja.
In a related development, the
official pump price of petrol, otherwise known as Premium Motor Spirit, was
largely upheld in just one state in the month of February 2016 out of the 36
states of the federation and the Federal Capital Territory, the National Bureau
of Statistics has said.
According to the bureau, the
average monthly price paid by consumers for petrol in Edo State was N86.5 per
litre, while in Ogun, the price was close to the official rate as petrol users
paid an average price of N86.53 per litre during the period under review.
The official pump price for
petrol as approved by the Petroleum Products Pricing Regulatory Agency is N86
per litre for petrol stations run by the NNPC, and N86.50 per litre for outlets
managed by other major and independent oil marketers.
The NBS, in its PMS Price Watch
for February 2016, revealed that petrol was sold for as high as N122.88 per
litre during the review period.
A study of the bureau’s report
showed that the average cost for the product in Abia was N112.5 per litre;
Bayelsa, N120.6; Cross River, N116.65; and Yobe, N122.88. The average price of
PMS in February was higher in these states.
States that recorded average
prices that were close to the official pump price included Lagos, N87.03 per
litre; Borno, N87.88; Delta, N87.5; Oyo, N87.21; and Katsina, N87.95.
In its bid to ensure strict
adherence to approved prices, the Department of Petroleum Resources recently
announced the constitution and deployment of special intelligence monitoring
teams nationwide to ensure the prompt delivery of products to designated
filling stations.
“The teams would enforce
government approved price regime and ensure the right quantity and quality of
products are dispensed,” the DPR had said in a statement issued in Abuja.
Also, motorists on Monday
pleaded with the Federal Government to step up efforts in ensuring that fuel
queues disappear.
Motorists, who spoke with one of
our correspondents while waiting to be served petrol in front of some filling
stations in Abuja, wondered why it was becoming difficult for Nigeria to
complete a full year without experiencing severe fuel crisis.
“This is becoming something that
we must experience every year and it’s not good at all for an oil producing
country like Nigeria,” said Onyema Christopher, a motorist, who was in queue at
one of the NNPC’s mega stations on the Kubwa-Zuba Expressway, Abuja.
“The government should please
look for a lasting solution to this problem and let Nigerians, at least, enjoy
one whole year without experiencing fuel scarcity and the problems associated
with it.”
Source:
THE PUNCH
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