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N365 Billion Lost To Oil Theft In July - Politics (2) - Nairaland

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Oil Theft: NNPC To Deploy Drones In Nigeria’s Territorial Waters / FG Slashes Import Licenses To Oil Marketers From 43 To 29 / Why Jonathan Lost To Buhari – Sanusi (2) (3) (4)

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Re: N365 Billion Lost To Oil Theft In July by Nobody: 6:08pm On Aug 26, 2013
Corrupt and clueless (C&C)

1 Like

Re: N365 Billion Lost To Oil Theft In July by alphaconde(m): 6:08pm On Aug 26, 2013
Dr Walter: D clueless retardeen

Am watching u, next time u insult this man again I will arrest u.
Re: N365 Billion Lost To Oil Theft In July by unmask: 6:20pm On Aug 26, 2013
well thats assu's money going down the pipeline....
Re: N365 Billion Lost To Oil Theft In July by mu2sa2: 6:26pm On Aug 26, 2013
When will Gej stop Ijaw boys, girls, men, women and children from this criminality? Is he waiting for 2015? Too late then because he will be joined as accomplice.
Re: N365 Billion Lost To Oil Theft In July by Wsdm: 6:27pm On Aug 26, 2013
Under the watch of this irresponsible drunkard (Jonathan)!
I feel very saddened when after all these nonsense, some people are still planning to vote this man again under ethnoreligious guise.
Re: N365 Billion Lost To Oil Theft In July by amakenny: 6:30pm On Aug 26, 2013
shidof: Jst preparing for 2015 election, no be small money e go take to buy south- west nd North votes nw
So your southwest and northwest can be bought with money? Sorry. But when shall we note how much Nigeria loses to crude gold theft in Northwest's Zamfara state?
Re: N365 Billion Lost To Oil Theft In July by mascot87(m): 6:32pm On Aug 26, 2013
And our dear ASUU I'd requesting for just N100 billion. angry
Re: N365 Billion Lost To Oil Theft In July by Symphony007: 6:32pm On Aug 26, 2013
This is just a tip of the ice. This government has refused to revitalize our existing refineries or build additional once, so that their friend will continue making billions from fuel importation. They make tipid attempts to provide power so that their friends can continue making billions from generator importation, let's not forget that we have'nt heard anything about the billions NNPC failed to return to the federal account. That has been swept under the rug. So much money being wasted,lost,misappopraited and when i call out cheap and substandard projects people say nigeria can't afford it, we should be gratefull for what we have. Lions eating like mice. Plonkers!!

By the way, why is this thread so desserted? If it were one of those mediocre achivement threads, a lot of pillocks would have been here shouting."fresh air"...more like "foul air".

1 Like

Re: N365 Billion Lost To Oil Theft In July by GlorifiedTunde(m): 6:36pm On Aug 26, 2013
That's why there isn't money for ASUU! ShiO!

Bad Governance!!!

I'm sure that many of these leaders are the thieves!

Keep Blaming ASUU o my people, una go tey 4 house!
Re: N365 Billion Lost To Oil Theft In July by Orikinla(m): 6:38pm On Aug 26, 2013
I have spent over four years on Bonny Island in Rivers State and actually went there on the prompting of Shell in 2004 and what I can say here is; the pipeline of illegal trade in stolen crude stretches from the Niger Delta to Abuja.
Watch out for the full story in "Ghosts of the Niger Delta" by a former top executive of Shell, because what the government is telling us is that ghosts are the oil thieves since they have not been able to catch them for decades now and we say we have a Minister who loves displaying colourful adverts on millions of websites, but before her very eyes, 400,000 barrels of crude oil per day are stolen from her region while the President and his First Lady are more concerned about who should be the chairman of the governors forum and who should become the next governor of Rivers State. And we also say we have a Nigerian Navy?
Stealing crude oil takes longer than a full football match and yet the Nigerian Navy has never found the owners of the barges and tankers?
Arresting their errand boys who are soon let go by the orders from above is just an insult on the rest of the citizens of Nigeria.

Tomorrow the same government will claim to have won the presidential election and it is business as usual in Nigeria.

3 Likes

Re: N365 Billion Lost To Oil Theft In July by EPOMA(m): 6:41pm On Aug 26, 2013
Fresh Air. the money is small campared revenue from flights from enugu airport. Stupid nigerians
Re: N365 Billion Lost To Oil Theft In July by Nobody: 6:45pm On Aug 26, 2013
The problem with Nigeria is that we dont even know our problem...It's like a man who is trying to repair his roof, and when he covers one hole, finds out 20 more need to be covered...everybody is pointing hands on the government but every single individual in nigeria has a role to play......ASUU and other pressure group are not helping either, boko haram is trying to prove something....police scam, now oil bunkers......may our problems not lead to our doom!!.
Re: N365 Billion Lost To Oil Theft In July by Nobody: 6:51pm On Aug 26, 2013
Niger Delta Oil stolen by Nigerians. We need to stop Nigerians......LoL
Re: N365 Billion Lost To Oil Theft In July by Horus(m): 6:52pm On Aug 26, 2013

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wEcp2gjp1LI

DOCUMENTARY: BATTLING OIL THEFT IN THE NIGER DELTA

Nigeria loses billions of dollars every year to the dangerous but lucrative oil theft in the Niger Delta region of the country. This documentary chronicles how a group of youths, some of them former militants, are helping to wage a battle against oil thieves in the region. But there is still one thing they want from the government. Find out what in this feature
Re: N365 Billion Lost To Oil Theft In July by Nobody: 6:53pm On Aug 26, 2013
omenka: The level of corruption in this country defies explanation!
It defies gravity!
Re: N365 Billion Lost To Oil Theft In July by Pukkah: 6:56pm On Aug 26, 2013
omenka: The level of corruption in this country defies explanation!

Worse still, I think many Nigerians have given up.

So many mind boggling things happening without the government being moved.

If they're not moved, it's either they are responsible for the heinous events or simply lack the capacity to stem the problems.

Either way, the people lose and the masses suffer.

Already, Nigeria's oil revenue has reportedly dropped by a whopping 42%! That's almost by half shocked shocked shocked Which government sees that and feels at ease?!
https://www.nairaland.com/1409916/nigeria-oil-revenue-drops-42

1 Like

Re: N365 Billion Lost To Oil Theft In July by Pukkah: 7:00pm On Aug 26, 2013
Obiagelli:
i swear if this guy gets the 2015 seat, i am done with this country, if a government that gets an average of 300 billion monthly for the past 4yrs from the RMAFC or what is it called has railway(24 billion ), 4/5 airports ( remodelled) and 6 high ways ( refurbished ) to show for it.

But in spite of this, you see full-grown adults screaming and bleating that those things you mentioned are 'transformational' achievements without any attempt to compare what's on ground with the available funds/funds that have been spent on them.

1 Like

Re: N365 Billion Lost To Oil Theft In July by Nobody: 7:00pm On Aug 26, 2013
Bismark Rewane is just dull, I can't believe he is blaming this volume of theft on illegal refinery owners. Does the man know what 20, 000 barrels look like physically and he is referring to 150, 000 barrels.

Some people became successful by luck and not what they have upstairs.
Re: N365 Billion Lost To Oil Theft In July by Wolef7(m): 7:22pm On Aug 26, 2013
Jonathan stops corruption in fertilizer dustribution.
Now, billions get away from oil corruption and Jonathan is not stopping it?
The maths is simple, ferilizer is not a money spinner for the ASOCRATS (The limited dudes in Aso rock) #butGODdey.
Re: N365 Billion Lost To Oil Theft In July by Wolef7(m): 7:33pm On Aug 26, 2013
Elliotwiz1: The problem with Nigeria is that we dont even know our problem...It's like a man who is trying to repair his roof, and when he covers one hole, finds out 20 more need to be covered...everybody is pointing hands on the government but every single individual in nigeria has a role to play......ASUU and other pressure group are not helping either, boko haram is trying to prove something....police scam, now oil bunkers......may our problems not lead to our doom!!.
Rightly said, but discovering the problem is part of the solution. If the man who wanted to cover one hole and later saw 20 should start from somewhere, in no time, he'll cover all. But here in 9ja,the people @d top are the ones creating more holes on our roof

2 Likes

Re: N365 Billion Lost To Oil Theft In July by Nobody: 7:39pm On Aug 26, 2013
I am from the N-DELTA, and i will agree with anyone anywhere in the world that N-Deltans are the major Oil theft criminals, if you like disagree, na you sabi...I was somewhere one day when two guys started an awkward conversation, it took me only 5mins to understand what their conversation was all about, DPO'S, Army commanders, Police, and others in the N-Delta region/creeks are all involved in this act, mind you, the thieves do settle these security agents...with both cash and what they normally call Black(Crude Oil) in short...if Mr GEJ can increase the security in these areas to combat OIL theft, the situation will reduce by an estimated 70-80 Percent....Jonathan knows so well that oil theft is the major area where people from the N-Delta enriches themselves so he tries to act like he the problem is from the entire Nigeria, so that the people of N-Delta will give him his support in every-way, do you ever imagine why a lot of people from the N-Delta always try to back/support GEJ..? well you must have found out from the above explanation.

1 Like

Re: N365 Billion Lost To Oil Theft In July by Waspy(m): 7:52pm On Aug 26, 2013
Shiit!!!....thats a billion each day for a year, blown away in just a month?...... Can't wait till 2015... Where my franchise at?
Re: N365 Billion Lost To Oil Theft In July by naptu2: 7:52pm On Aug 26, 2013
[size=14pt]Nigeria: Top Politicians, Generals Smile As Oil Theft Cripples Nigeria.[/size]

1 July 2013 , By Temitayo Odunlami, Hamisu Mohammed, Ibraheem Hamza And Victor Edozie, Source: Daily Trust


Oil theft has become a major threat to the Nigerian economy, but those involved in the crime are highly connected personalities and Niger Delta militants who would always find their way in the difficult terrain.

The conspicuous sign at the entrance to the Nigerian Navy Ship (NNS) Pathfinder at Rumuolumeni, Port Harcourt, gives a clear warning to crude oil thieves. 'BE WARNED,' it declares.

Well, it does not seem those engaged in the illegitimate business of stealing crude oil are heeding the warning. Despite constant strikes by the Joint (military) Task Force (JTF), made up mostly of the Nigerian Army and the Navy at illegal refineries in the Niger Delta and sometimes, arrest of suspected vessels and personnel, there has been an upsurge in the lucrative business trade of stealing crude oil. The Federal Government, United States, multinational oil companies, and the JTF in the Niger Delta have lamented the situation.

There is expansive blame game in the futile efforts to arrest the oil theft scourge. Everybody seems to agree on one point though: the federal government itself lacks the political will to stop the unlawful billion-naira business. [b]JTF sources who confided in Sunday Trust in Port Harcourt last week expressed frustration at what they called the non-prosecution of middle-to-top level refining suspects and owners of vessels identified or arrested for conveying stolen crude in the Niger Delta and beyond.

An instructive case was narrated of a red-handed arrest, four years ago, by security operatives at the Atlas Cove, Lagos, of a big-time oil thief described as highly notorious in the illegal bunkering trade, but widely influential in top government corridors. The wealthy businessman, who hails from one of the eastern states, is said to own a petrol station in Ghana and a big computer school in Nigeria. Sources confided in Sunday Trust that the suspect was handed over to the appropriate law enforcement agents for prosecution, only to be released a month later.

Military sources moaned last week to Sunday Trust that prosecution, or rather non-prosecution, of big oil thieves, if arrested at all, has been a major dent in their efforts at confronting the illegal bunkering issue. The regulations guiding the operations of the Nigerian Army and Navy in the Niger Delta mandate the soldiers only to arrest oil thieves after which they will hand them over to either the Nigerian Security and Civil Defence Corps (NSCDC) or the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC), in which the powers to prosecute reside. But as an Information Officer of the JTF saddled with combating the crime told this publication in Port Harcourt last Thursday, not enough prosecution was being done by these law enforcement agencies.

"Apparently, government lacks the political will to take on the big men behind big-volume oil theft, hence, the continued perpetration of the crime," the officer said.[/b]

Theft and sale of Nigerian crude has been on the increase in recent times. Two weeks ago, West and Central African heads of state met in Cameroun to deliberate on maritime criminality which is now said to be worse than the piracy off Somalian waters. Oil theft in the Gulf of Guinea, which includes waters off Nigeria, has risen to proportions commanding world attention. Last year, pirates attacked 966 sailors and stole oil worth between $25 million and $75 million euros (N33 million and N100 million). The stolen oil originates from Nigeria.

There are two legs to the illicit oil theft trade. On the big, international multi-dollar platform are powerful Nigerians who can afford to buy or hire the big vessels used in illegal crude oil bunkering. The untouchable thieves illegally load crude onto their own or hired ships and sail to the waters off Nigeria where the buying foreign merchants from West Africa and Eastern Europe await them. Mostly, in these illegal deals, compromised security agents, at the behest of the highly influential Nigerians involved in the trade, look the other way while the ships sail away.

There are also the daring pirates, now involving many young and middle-aged Nigerians, who operate in the Gulf of Guinea and hijack fuel tankers. But rather than demand for ransom for the crew as was initially done by Niger Delta militants, they now load the hijacked product onto their ships to sell to the ready and lucrative foreign black market on the West Africa coast and in European countries like Russia.

Military sources, who stressed the superb organization and syndicated nature of the business, were mute on names of vessels and top Nigerians involved in the big-ticket racket. They could only say that top Nigerian politicians, retired military generals, some shippers and other businessmen, not only from the Niger Delta as many are wont to believe, but from across the country, are involved in the illicit trade. "It is another aspect of monumental corruption that binds top political leaders, retired army generals and navy admirals, and their business cronies together," a JTF major in the Niger Delta told Sunday Trust. "They operate, as they always do on big issues of corruption, like a cult. Only themselves can undo themselves," he declared.

An earlier Wikileaks cable in 2009 had quoted a youth leader in the Niger Delta, Dimietri Kemedi, of accusing even serving soldiers of complicity in the illegitimate trade. Kemedi was quoted to have said: "The military wants to remain in the Niger Delta because they profit enormously from money charged for escorting illegally bunkered crude and from money extorted in the name of protecting security."

An indication that military men enjoy a huge slice of the illegal crude oil booty emerged in 2003 when law enforcement agents intercepted and impounded the MT African Pride, a 30,000 metric tonne (MT) oil vessel manned by 18 Russians, two Romanians, two Georgians and two Nigerians. MT African Pride, captained by Russian Ikachev Valeriy, had illegally loaded 11,300MT crude cargo when it was intercepted by NNS Nwamba, led by Commanding Officer Joe Aikhomu. The vessel was sailing out of Nigeria to deliver its cargo, estimated at about N5 billion, to waiting buyers when it was intercepted on the Excravos/Forcados (Niger Delta) waters.

The allegation was rife then in informed quarters that the deal was masterminded by the son of a former president. In what would confirm the crime was truly top-wired, the crude cargo in MT African Pride was mysteriously offloaded into another vessel, before the ship itself finally disappeared from the naval base, NNS Beecroft, where it was detained.

Following widespread combination and media blitz that attended the scandal, the Olusegun Obasanjo administration ordered an investigation into the disappearance of the ship. A court martial later tried Rear-Admirals Samuel Kolawole and Francis Agbiti, Flag Officer, Western Command and Chief of Training and Operations, Nigerian Navy Headquarters respectively, for involvement and conspiracy in the ship's disappearance. The special court found them guilty and ordered their dismissal from the Nigerian Navy. But what was not publicly disclosed were the identities of the owner of the vessel and the heavy crude load, and the intrigues and stupendous bribes that went into the disappearance of both ship and load.

The nation is still awaiting the Director-General of the Nigerian Maritime Administration and Safety Agency (NIMASA), Dr. Patrick Akpobolokemi, to make true his promise last month to mention names of the influential Nigerians involved in crude oil theft. He told journalists in Abuja: "There are some big vessels under my custody belonging to organized piracy and crude oil thieves. Very soon, I will release all the big names in the syndicate. Once we do that, people should not come to say it's ethnic cleansing, 2015 or all those kinds of stories. The media should just ask, 'Did you do the piracy or not?" Nigerians may have to wait forever for Akpobolokemi's bombshell.

The JTF has been filling a bit of that information gap, though. Documents available to Sunday Trust revealed that the NNS Pathfinder, Rumuolumeni; together with NNS Thunder, NNS Kyanwa and NNS Burutu, were able to arrest a total of 25 vessels over allegations of illegal bunkering or piracy between October 2011 and March 2013. The arrested vessels included Sir Michael, owned by Mr. Dare Bayo/Mike Amakiri and handed over to the Bayelsa Police Command in March 2102; MT Rock Fish, owned by Davinest Nig. Ltd, carrying 70,000 litres of illegally refined diesel; Godtime, owned by ECOO Energy and Development Techniques Ltd., carrying 100,000 litres of illegally refined diesel and handed over to the EFCC on 14 August 2012; Princess Sophie, also owned by ECOO Energy, arrested with 300,000 litres of illegal diesel and handed over to the EFCC on 14 August 2012; a tugboat (barge) owned by VICO Corporate Ventures, arrested with 150,00 litres of diesel and handed over to the EFCC; and MV ST Vanessa, belonging to Sea Castle Maritime, which was arrested for "loitering without a specific and clear mission" and handed over to the Rivers State Polie Command.

One of the many Nigerians waiting for the NIMASA head to make good his threat is Managing Director and Country Chair, Shell Petroleum Development Corporation of Nigeria (SPDCN), Mr Mutiu Sunmonu. To Sunmonu, the time to expose Nigeria's oil thieves is now. For, as he harped on June 27, 2013, the crime has reached "a crisis situation." Nigeria is calculated to have been losing about $6 billion in the last two years to illegal bunkering and crude oil theft. The oil boss corroborated that the illegal trade is done by "well-financed and highly organized criminal operations, and is a parallel industry with a developed supply chain and growing sophistication." The Senate committee on the upstream sector of the oil industry put a higher figure to it, saying about $28 billion has been lost to oil theft over the past three years.

There is also the other leg of local oil thieves, mostly young men who vandalise pipelines to siphon crude oil which they refine for sale as petrol. Thousands of refineries dot the Niger Delta creeks. The JTF has been having a running battle with the thieves and refiners. But it seems the more refineries the soldiers destroy, the more the oil thieves build. Oil siphon is common along the Trans-Niger pipeline and the Nembe Creek Trunk Line. Both have flow stations leading into the Bonny Terminal.

Building refineries, which has been to the federal government a magical and impossible assignment, seems the pastime of oil thieves in the Niger Delta, the level of sophistication and technology notwithstanding. Sunday Trust gathered the thieves have even devised ways of building underground refineries to evade discovery and destruction by the JTF teams. This year alone, NNS Pathfinder, led by its commander, Commodore D.E. Effedua, collaborating with the Forward Operating Base, Bonny, headed by Captain C.E. Okafor has destroyed more than 50 illegal refineries. In February, the naval teams destroyed four illegal refineries in Karibiama Creek, Abonnema Forest, KM 45 Forest and Adamakiri and Ijawkiri Creeks. Twenty-five persons were arrested in the raids while items that included one speedboat, one 75 HP sppedboat and four pumping machines were recovered.

Between April and June, the naval teams have also destroyed 45 other illegal refineries in Abonema Creek, Ogu/Bolo Creek, Bille Creek, Ele Community, Nbokulo, Bodo/Ship Creek and Red Mud/Bodo Line Creek. Earlier, on March 13, they had arrested four suspects - Sunday Garba, Daship Tanko, Igho Ukiri and Emmanuel Likita - at Bonny.

Last Tuesday, the EFCC arraigned 14 suspects to a Federal High Court, Lagos on a five-count charge bordering on illegal bunkering. This development tends to mock the allegation that arrested oil crime suspects are not being prosecuted as due. "Those making the frivolous claim should mention the big oil thieves that are not being prosecuted," the EFCC spokesman, Wilson Uwujaren, told Sunday Trust via a text message yesterday. And apparently referring to last week's arraignment, Uwujaren referred to critics to visit the Commission's site to see all arraignments for bunkering.

Many Nigerians are still unlikely to agree with him. They will tell Uwujaren that the big fishes in the big illegal bunkering game, those who own the expensive vessels used in international oil theft, are yet to be arraigned.

On its part, the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) and the Ministry of Petroleum Resources have, in the past few days, released figures of the huge resources lost to piracy, both in volume and in value. It is, however, estimated that Nigeria is currently losing some 250,000 barrels of oil per day to oil thieves. Most of these thefts are carried out by the outright sabotage of oil facilities, especially the pipelines and the flow stations from where products are taken for sale. Essentially Nigeria loses between U$6bln to U$12bln per annum.

The NNPC/Shell Petroleum Development Company Joint Venture recently declared a force majeure on Bonny Crude due to persistent crude oil theft, resulting in the shutting in of 150,000bpd. Just across the 97-kilometre Nembe Creek Trunk line, 53 break points were discovered. Also Agip has suspended crude oil production activity in Bayelsa State where 60% of its production of about 90,000 kbpd is stolen.

Given the record for the first quarter of the 2013, the NNPC said daily crude oil production during the period fluctuated between 2.1 and 2.3 million barrels per day (mbpd) compared with the projected estimate of 2.48mbpd in the year's budget.

"Expectedly, this fall between actual production and forecast in first quarter 2013 has resulted in a drop in crude oil revenue of about $1.23 billion (N$191 billion) that should have accrued to the Federation Account," she explained.

"Investigations showed that 53 break points were discovered along the 97km Nembe Creek Trunkline. Repair work is expected to last about six weeks. This will further reduce our April and May monthly average to about 2.2mbpd and further decrease crude oil revenue by about $554.0 million (equivalent to N83 billion) that should have accrued to the Federation Account.

The financial record from the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) has shown a drastic drop of crude oil revenue from N8.878 trillion in 2011 to N8.117 trillion in 2012 signifying a drop of about N761 billion which is largely attributed to the crude oil theft in the Niger Delta.

The CBN record shows that the drop in crude oil revenue began in the third quarter of the 2012 with about N45 billion from the preceding quarter and thereafter dropped by N112.6 billion in the fourth quarter of 2012.

There was huge drop of about N707 billion in the third quarter of 2012 when compared to same period in 2011, while the difference in fourth quarters is about N585 billion respectively.

The International Crisis Group, in a report released earlier this year entitled: "The Gulf of Guinea: The New Danger Zone, revealed that between 2007 and 2011, there were an estimated 150 cases of maritime piracy to the east of the Niger Delta. In most cases, the attackers were equipped with heavy weapons and rocket launchers. According report, most of the attacks were planned in Nigeria or Bakassi by groups that did not have permanent bases in the mangroves, where living conditions can be extremely difficult. Arms were supplied by a network of traffickers with links to groups in the Niger Delta, but also allegedly by accomplices within the security services.

The report said, "In all successful reported attacks pirates stole the ship's cash, stores or crews' belongings. In successful hijack operations, they forced the crew to sail away from the point of attack and stole fuel worth between $2 million and $6 million. Academics and experts believe that, in view of the high rate of similar attacks off Nigeria before and during 2011, pirate attacks off Benin are most likely masterminded and executed principally by Nigerians. They have the necessary intelligence network, boats, firepower and technical know-how to execute such hijacks and sell stolen fuel. That pirates made telephone calls to Nigerian numbers from ships hijacked off Benin supports this theory."

The group reported further that "The rise in maritime crime in the Gulf of Guinea is mainly due to the poverty of the great majority of the population alongside a wealthy elite. There is a lack of transparency about what happens to the profits from the oil industry and other resources, which are monopolised by the ruling elites and foreign private companies. The inequitable distribution of wealth means that economic disparities are blatant.

"However, an increase in economic activity along the coast accompanied by poor governance gave impetus to the criminalization of the Gulf of Guinea's economy. As a result, smuggling networks became more sophisticated and started to deal arms, illegal oil dealers started to attack ships, former delinquents became armed activists in the pay of gangs and fishermen abandoned their trade to become pirates.

The report stated clearly that "Nigeria's navy and maritime administration agencies are facing serious problems of capacity and corruption. A lack of government investment has left them both undermanned and under-equipped. In 2005, high-ranking navy commanders were dismissed for involvement in oil theft and illegal trading. In October 2009, a former chair of the Nigerian Ports Authority and other managers were convicted on charges related to contract splitting and abuse.

Referring to the failure of the Global West Vessel Specialist Nigeria, owned by a former militant who got a 10-year-old security contract to the tune of $103.4 million, the report added that, "ship owners complain that, eight times out of ten, their distress calls go unanswered. American coastguards visiting Nigeria to check compliance with the International Ship and Port Facility Security (ISPS) code found inadequate security, which accounted for the high crime rate in ports.

"Such weak maritime governance has allowed armed robbery at sea and acts of piracy to grow steadily in tandem with economic activity at sea. The involvement of INTERPOL will assist in reducing piracy."

http://m.allafrica.com/stories/201307011519.html/

1 Like

Re: N365 Billion Lost To Oil Theft In July by lifestyle1(m): 8:04pm On Aug 26, 2013
undecided

Re: N365 Billion Lost To Oil Theft In July by sylve11: 8:22pm On Aug 26, 2013
cool
Re: N365 Billion Lost To Oil Theft In July by godman01(m): 8:30pm On Aug 26, 2013
Is this a new news?
Re: N365 Billion Lost To Oil Theft In July by Btruth: 10:35pm On Aug 26, 2013
Truly, when the Bible says that "the love of money is the root of all evil", it means that God has seen inside/out the heart of a corrupt people (leaders).

Upon all this stolen monies, what happiness have this people got? Nothing! Absolutely nothing! They possess all the money & yet they are still poor. They have all the things money could buy, and yet they not happy. They are men in high places, and yet they are still be tormented by the devil.

The evil that men do will surely live after them. But one thing is certain, no matter how much wealth they acquire, this people that is putting this country in problem will never know peace. The people that are always squandering the wealth of this nation will not be stable in life, in health, in their family and in their soul. They will have all those wealth, but will not enjoy it.

Imagine so much money that is been wasted every month in Nigeria, because we have a dull President with set of idiots ruling with him. How much has he achieved? N365b, just for the month of July.

Let them continue oooo, I know one day, God in His infinity mercy will come to the aid of this country. To be honest, I don't really know what next we can do. But, it is certain that one day, monkey go go market, and he know go return. Death is waiting for all of us someday.....make the government & their vandals they continue robbing the land. God is watching us!

Re: N365 Billion Lost To Oil Theft In July by Btruth: 10:37pm On Aug 26, 2013
Truly, when the Bible says that "the love of money is the root of all evil", it means that God has seen inside/out the heart of a corrupt people (leaders).

Upon all this stolen monies, what happiness have this people got? Nothing! Absolutely nothing! They possess all the money & yet they are still poor. They have all the things money could buy, and yet they are not happy. They are men in high places, and yet they are still been tormented by the devil.

The evil that men do will surely live after them. But one thing is certain, no matter how much wealth they acquire, this people that is putting this country in problem will never know peace. The people that are always squandering the wealth of this nation will not be stable in life, in health, in their family and in their soul. They will have all those wealth, but will not enjoy it.

Imagine so much money that is been wasted every month in Nigeria, because we have a dull President with set of idiots ruling with him. How much has he achieved? N365b, just for the month of July.

Let them continue oooo, I know one day, God in His infinity mercy will come to the aid of this country. To be honest, I don't really know what next we can do. But, it is certain that one day, monkey go go market, and he know go return. Death is waiting for all of us someday.....make the government & their vandals they continue robbing the land. God is watching us!

Re: N365 Billion Lost To Oil Theft In July by mrvictor: 11:23pm On Aug 26, 2013
The problem of Nigeria is not that of oil thieves but that of political thieves - stealing funds that are meant for the development of the country and no one probes.
Re: N365 Billion Lost To Oil Theft In July by shidof(m): 11:46pm On Aug 26, 2013
amakenny: So your southwest and northwest can be bought with money? Sorry. But when shall we note how much Nigeria loses to crude gold theft in Northwest's Zamfara state?
wats this one saying, u must be among d thieves for getting d audacity to defend a fellow thief
Re: N365 Billion Lost To Oil Theft In July by ono(m): 12:40am On Aug 27, 2013
I never knew things have gotten so bad like this. Ha! Who will help save us?
Re: N365 Billion Lost To Oil Theft In July by citizenisb: 2:22am On Aug 27, 2013
Obama had hoped this understanding would also pave the way to direct dialogue on the nuclear issue with the new Iranian president Hasan Rouhani.

He found cause for optimism in Tehran’s consent to receive Jeffrey Feltman, UN Deputy Secretary, Monday, Aug. 25, although in his former capacity as US Undersecretary of State and US ambassador to Damascus, Feltman was viewed as an adversary of Iran, Syria and Hizballah.

Feltman arrived suddenly in Tehran Monday and was received by Foreign Minister Javad Zarif without delay.The other intermediary was Sultan Qaboos of Oman, who arrived in Tehran Monday for a visit with Iran’s Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei.

He too made no headway in his attempt to persuade his host that the US was amenable to a last-minute understanding on Syria for holding back an attack.

Khamenei responded with a cold threat: If the Americans attack Syria, “the entire Middle East will suffer from burns,” he said.

This response was the signal for orders to American military assets in the Mediterranean and Persian Gulf to go on a state of high preparedness Monday night, debkafile’s military sources report.

Iran, Russia and Syria deployed their forces in readiness for a US-led attack on Syria. Syrian units were ordered to leave their bases and spread out across the country’s broad open areas.

The ten military chiefs meeting in Amman focused on coordination of the joint operation against Syria which is expected to begin very shortly.
Participating in the meeting chaired by US chief of staff Gen. Martin Dempsey were the top commanders of Jordan, Saudi Arabia, Qatar, Turkey, Britain, France, Germany, Italy and Canada.

The powerful message coming from US Secretary of State John Kerry and the White House spokesman Jay Carney Monday night indicated that the Obama administration was not about to back off its promise of consequences for those responsible for using chemical weapons against civilians and “shocking the world’s conscience.”

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