Properties › Re: Pictures Of KWAM-1's Jaw Dropping Mansion Worth Over N300 Million by RickyRoss1(m): 8:06am On Nov 08, 2012 |
amiskurie: Man u are a fcked smh.u are telling me brenda or the late lucky dube is making as much as N18million per week cos K1 is,for performances alone. Poor soul, look at the way you are ranting over another mans wealth as if you were paid for online campaign? Even if he makes 20 billion Naira per week how does that make you a better person? And that's enough reason to be calling me names? Seems you haven't seen mansion in your life? Which village are you from? Is this your first time of seeing Lekki? Anyway like I have said before, K1 cannot be richer than Lucky Dube. The 18million naira per week you are talking about is about 100k USD, and yes lucky Dube will make more than that per week. Currently P Square are paid 100k USD per show, and not per week. K1 is not richest in Nigeria to start with. Check list of Nigerias richest musicians there is no mention of K1, so your online ranting and propaganda cannot take you anywhere ( http://naijagists.com/richest-nigerian-musicians-in-2012-p-square-no-1-spot/). I can go to late Oliver De Coque village and pull pics of his mansion/country home and claim he is the richest musician in the world. Say what you know fool. In no particular order, these are the top 3 richest musicians in Nigeria... P Square, Dbanj, Tu Face etc... |
Politics › Re: Nigerians Will Ask Jonathan To Re-contest In 2015!! by RickyRoss1(m): 7:34am On Nov 08, 2012 |
GEJ is trying no doubt...
Most things you mentioned he did for the east were started by his predecessors.
For Example, GEJ did not give us Owerri-Onitsha road, that's a BIG LIE. That road took over 4 years to complete, and GEJ has been president for less than 2 years. Same as Onitsha port. Even the Onitsha port last time i passed there I didn't see any ship. That thing is not a port, it is a warehouse. Why cant they give us a standard port as obtains in Lagos and Port Harcourt?
I will start praising GEJ if he can give us a refinery and Standard International Airport. Other than that he hasn't done anything spectacular for Igboland. |
Properties › Re: Pictures Of KWAM-1's Jaw Dropping Mansion Worth Over N300 Million by RickyRoss1(m): 12:23am On Nov 08, 2012 |
God is good, all the time. This man has taste I swear. I LOVE and appreciate good thing.
I didn't know Kwam 1 is this rich. Is he richer than Shina Peters? I thought Shina Peters is more popular? So does it mean he is richer than Fela as well?
How did Kwam1 become the richest musician in Africa? The way we Nigerians run our mouth is terrible.
Judging by popularity and album sales, people like Lucky Dube and Brenda both from RSA should be richest musicians in Africa coz they have numerous hit songs and are known worldwide.
Unless Kwam 1 is a senior drug baron or he has other businesses we don't know about. Otherwise he is no way near the top 10 richest musicians in Africa. But if indeed he is the richest African musician I am very happy for him. I hope and pray our musicians will be making as much as 50 million US Dollars per year like Lil Wayne, Rick Ross and other American musicians... |
Politics › Re: Breaking News----tension In The U.s As Romney Rejects Election Results by RickyRoss1(m): 5:11pm On Nov 07, 2012 |
*Ileke-IdI: One thing I truly despise on NL is the access of internet by jobless ediots like the original poster. You sound very angry and frustrated all the time. Are you sure you are a woman? Are you not tired of being alone? When are you gonna get married? Your mates are married with children. In America, animals like you are called PSYCHEDELIC BIITCCHES and they mostly live in cage. |
Romance › Re: What Would Make You Divorce Your Spouse? by RickyRoss1(m): 5:07pm On Nov 07, 2012 |
As a disciplined and no nonsense man, I will sack my wife is she sleep with another man, especially someone I know...
I can forgive nagging etc, but once you stoop so low as to fuckkk another man it means y0u are tired of staying in my house and I will deal with u mercilessly before keeping u where u belong. If your wife cheats and you forgive her you are not man enough, and she would do it over and over again because afterall you forgave her the other time... |
Crime › Re: Three Arrested For Lynching Suspected Robbers In Lagos by RickyRoss1(m): 4:57pm On Nov 07, 2012 |
Okija_juju: Similarities between this story and Aluu..
1. The area had been terrorized by criminals for a long time..
2. There was a police station in the neighborhood that didn't respond on time.. I support jungle justice bc its suitable for the Nigerian situation. What is the police going to do after we hand the criminals over to them? If you catch a thief you better deal with him mercilessly before police arrives, bc once they get to the police station their contacts/chairmen will release them the next day and the criminals will go back to the street to commit more atrocities. The Nigerian police is not my friend, after-all, they are part of the armed robbery gang, they also supply them with arms. THE NIGERIAN POLICE ARE TOO CORRUPT TO BE MY FRIEND. I KNOW THERE ARE STILL VERY GOOD POLICE MEN OUT THERE BUT THEY ARE VERY FEW. |
Nairaland General › Re: Four Storey Mall Collapses In Accra, Ghana. by RickyRoss1(m): 4:48pm On Nov 07, 2012 |
This Melcom shop is at NEOPLAN STATION, Achimota, just Opposite our Zenith bank building. This particular building is less than 1 year old, how or why did it collapse. I saw it on TV now and the rescue workers seems hopeless and helpless. They have no machines or anything. It took several hours for excavator to arrive.
The youths are doing most of the work, while the police and soldiers are standing behind with their arms cracking jokes, honestly they have no pity for the victims.
By the way, what are they doing with all those guns? Did they come for war or rescue operation? If rescue operation why are they not rescuing people?
Finally, those Indians that own Melcom shop should be prosecuted. They are notorious for selling substandard goods. Anything you buy from melcom will spoil within few weeks or months. Over 90% of their items are substandard products from India & China. I suspect they used poor quality materials to build this shop. |
Politics › Re: Breaking News----tension In The U.s As Romney Rejects Election Results by RickyRoss1(m): 1:10pm On Nov 07, 2012 |
Latest reports has it that both Tupac and Osama Bin Laden were arrested about 2 hours ago for wrongful possession of BALLISTIC MISSILES.
I learnt GEJ is making plans to repatriate all Nigerians in USA. May God save us- Amen... |
Celebrities › Re: The Most Beautiful Girl In The World by RickyRoss1(m): 1:07pm On Nov 07, 2012 |
Can someone pls give me Tyra Banks phone number. That girl is damn pretty, cool headed and beautiful. Her booobbs and puci shape na die. Abeg nor tell my wife, but i gat to appreciate good tin nah. |
Politics › Re: Akpabio And Amaechi Controversial New Jets by RickyRoss1(m): 11:45am On Nov 07, 2012 |
Akpabio is not a bad governor per say, he has performed considerably according to Nigerian standards.. However, no State governor in Nigeria deserves any private jet for any reason whatsoever. You can buy private jets if there is no poverty in your state. As long as most people in your state are poor, tell me what you need a private jet for  |
Politics › Re: Akpabio And Amaechi Controversial New Jets by RickyRoss1(m): 11:35am On Nov 07, 2012 |
No State governor in Nigeria deserves any private jet for any reason whatsoever.
However, Akpabio is not a bad governor and he has performed well according to Nigerian standard |
Adverts › Re: Good News For Ghanaians by RickyRoss1(m): 7:44am On Nov 07, 2012 |
oluseye66: Good new for Ghanaians. Has anybody seen the new ''cedisland.com'' this is really interesting.... It looks very new......... Cool. Is that your website? Other forums in Ghana has been overrun by spammers/virus. Hope you have enough protection for this one Good luck |
Politics › Re: . by RickyRoss1(m): 7:33am On Nov 07, 2012 |
musiwa7: Abagworo, Some Of That Picture Of tall Building Is Yorubaland By Musiwa, if you look at the picture careful. you know thaat is yorubaland.. These uncivilized dirty pigs from oduduwa asss are really annoying. In what way is the pic Yoruba land? How come other pics are not yorobboer land? Pls crawl back to the hole where you came from. By the way, its already 7am. So where did you shiiit today? In the bush or nylon bags as usual? ok then, just remember to wipe ur ass and let dem dogs have your shiit for breakfast. Ugliest, Fattest cum dirtiest tribe in Nigeria by miles.. |
Politics › Re: Why Does Southeast Have Most Tall Residential Buildings? by RickyRoss1(m): 7:33am On Nov 07, 2012 |
musiwa7: 2 of the 4 pictures in front page are yorubaland.. the reason is it show information about yorubaland..
this is yorubaland These uncivilized dirty pigs from oduduwa asss are really annoying. In what way is the pic Yoruba land? How come other pics are not yorobboer land? Pls crawl back to the hole where you came from. By the way, its already 7am. So where did you shiiit today? In the bush or nylon bags as usual? ok then, just remember to wipe ur ass and let dem dogs have your shiit for breakfast. Ugliest, Fattest cum dirtiest tribe in Nigeria by miles.. |
Celebrities › Re: Wizkid Insults Tonto Dikeh! by RickyRoss1(m): 7:25am On Nov 07, 2012 |
Laila Ikeji: I don dey find trouble o.
But read Wizkid's tweet for yourself.
And we all (rolling my eyes) know Tonto is the official #Poko chiq on Twitter that z's her s's.
The 'succezz' Wizkid so madly hates can be found in Tonto Dikeh's bio
http://www.lailaikeji.com/2012/11/wizkid-insults-tonto-dikeh.html Wizkid sounds very dumb and retarded himself. Pot calling kettle black. |
Romance › Re: My Girlfriend Said Am Too Poor-money Ritual As Solution? by RickyRoss1(m): 7:22am On Nov 07, 2012 |
Sodiq33: Plz,i nid ur advice,am a 21year old boy....my gal4wnd(25) said am 2 poor for her likin dat i shld go out nd luk hw my mate re makin it in a big way,she gave me 6mth ultimatum 2 get rich or she wil leave me bt i luv her so much dat i cnt afford 2 luz her 4 nw,so am thnkin 2 engage in money ritual 4 her sake,hw shld i go abt it? GO AND KILL YOUR FATHER, THAT IS IF YOU HAVE ANY FATHER.. I MEAN IT, GO AHEAD AND DO MONEY RITUAL, THEN COME BACK AND TELL US HOW FAR. PLS REMEMBER TO TAKE PICS/VIDEO WHILE PERFORMING THE RITUAL. YOU SOUND SO DUMB THAT I DONT KNOW WHAT TO DO WITH ANIMALS LIKE YOU.. BACK IN THE 19TH CENTURY YOUR PARENTS WOULD HAVE SOLD YOU INTO SLAVERY AND USE THE MONEY FOR SOMETHING BETTER. |
Politics › Re: Fashola: Stay In Your Village If You Cant Obey Our Traffic Law by RickyRoss1(m): 7:14am On Nov 07, 2012 |
THE WARNING IS A GOOD THING, AND IT IS MEANT FOR THESE PRIMITIVE YORROBBER PEOPLE THAT SHIITT IN NYLON BAGS IN THIS 21ST CENTURY.
ITS A KNOWN FACT ALL OVER THE WORLD YORROBBER IS THE DIRTIEST TRIBE IN NIGERIA BY FAR |
Romance › Re: Help: I'm In A Long Distance Relationship With A Nigerian Man by RickyRoss1(m): 10:20pm On Nov 06, 2012 |
If you dont trust this guy pls leave him alone.
1. You do not trust him 100% bc hes a Nigeria, yet you cannot leave him alone bc no white guy will fucckk u the way he does. IF YOU TRUST HIM 100% THERE WONT BE ANY NEED FOR YOU TO COME HERE AND MAKE THIS POST?
2. If he is yet to get his papers most of your friends and family will assume he is using you to get papers. There are just too many dumb assumptions from you people. The best thing is to use and dump your sorry assesss. I repeat, MOST white gals are no good to a blackman, just use and dump at random...
Are you too dumbb to ask why a man had to go to Canada to export cars to Nigeria? I repeat, since you don't trust this guy why not just leave him alone? Did you think by coming to nairaland you would get more confidence or trust? If you are honest and concerned as you claim you should have talked to some of his friends since you said you do travel with them. If you cannot get solid answers from his friends what makes you think you will get it here?
Finally, every man has every right to hide some certain things from a girl friend. I am happily married but not everything I tell my wife. A woman will always be a woman. I don't have to tell my wife every time i pay school fees for some relatives, she may not like it. I don't have to tell my wife how many bank accounts I have. I don't have to tell anyone every time i cough. So yes if this guy is hiding some things from you he has every right, you are not married to him in the first place. |
Politics › Re: Abacha A Dictator?: Think Again by RickyRoss1(m): 9:00pm On Nov 06, 2012 |
GenBuhari: Actually Abacha never stole. I have uncovered evidence that hows that money returned to Nigeria did not belong to Abacha and even as we speak the so called Abacha loot cannot be located. Is that why you resurrected an outdated thread? Sorry, you are more stuppiidd than I thought. |
Politics › Re: Do You Really Think Umaru Yar'adua Would Have Been A Better President Than GEJ? by RickyRoss1(m): 8:57pm On Nov 06, 2012 |
Anyi.: I am totally undecided on this issue. Ideas anyone? Yaradua was cluless as hell. He was busy cancelling almost all of OBJ's projects including the railway projects etc. Created useless 7 point agenda without achieving 1. GEJ is doing well in power, agric, infrastructure etc. |
Christianity Etc › Re: Illuminati Registration Site by RickyRoss1(m): 8:55pm On Nov 06, 2012 |
senator.o: The church of Satan is an organization dedicated to the acceptance of the carnal self, as articulated in the satanic bible, written in 1969 by Anton Szandor Lavey.
We don't kill, we help to create wealth, we also believe in the existence of almighty God. We invite you to join us. We welcome new ideas and value enthusiasm from members and volunteers, new and old people to help them and help their standard of living. We don’t destroy souls, rather we aid people to actualize and accomplish their mission here on earth. log onto. (www.churchofsatankingdom.yolasite.com). and click at registration form to register to be a full member.
You are highly welcome...
N.B - we are going to make another history today in the whole world.one of us is going to rule the most power country on earth.[OBAMA]JOIN US AND ENJOY FAME,WEALTH AND POWER Mugu nor dey here, go your village and get all members of your family registered first. You cant even afford to register your website, u using free site and still claim you create wealth? What wealth are you creating? Your sole aim is to steal from gullible fooools |
Politics › Re: Governor Uduaghan Opens Deworming Programme For Children(pictures) by RickyRoss1(m): 7:34pm On Nov 06, 2012 |
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Celebrities › Re: Who Is The Most Handsome African Actor? by RickyRoss1(m): 3:33pm On Nov 06, 2012 |
fatdon2: *Van Victer *Ramsey Nouah
*Joseph Banjamin *John Dumelo *Jim Iyke
*Majid Michel For me it is Ramsey Nouah, Desmond Elliot, Emeka Ike, Nonso Diobi, Mike Ezuruonye and Jim Iyke from 9ja. Then Chris Ator /John Dumelo from Ghana. |
Celebrities › Re: Pastor Adeboye At Bimbo Odukoya Daughter's Wedding (Picture) by RickyRoss1(m): 12:08pm On Nov 06, 2012 |
Lanreclassic: Tolu Odukoya and Olumide Ijogun, the lovely couple who met themselves during their secondary school days, where joined together as husband and wife on Saturday 3rd November 2012.Pastor Adeboye of RCCG was one of the important personalities who grace the occassion. The wedding reception was later held at the Haven Events Centre in GRA Ikeja, Lagos. Wishing them a happy married life!
Mummy must be smiling somewhere in Heaven right now!!!....more pictures at the wedding from SOURCE
http://www.lanreclassic.com/2012/11/photos-pastor-adeboye-at-bimbo-odukoya.html#more They seems to be very happy. Marriage is a good thing, I wish them the best of luck in all their endeavors... |
Romance › Re: Sighs When Relative And Friends Know My Fiancee Is A Yoruba Girl by RickyRoss1(m): 11:11am On Nov 06, 2012 |
pro01: Umuwanyi ndi ofe mmanu na adi dètí (ha daasu panti fa na bresia fa), tupu o bunye gi öya puru iche iche; and fa na agba niilo too much. E nuo yä, enyi gi nile wèré ike ina ala otü ya sef. Hmm, unu ga egbu mmadu |
Politics › Re: All Those Glorious Years We Spent In Nigeria by RickyRoss1(op): 9:52am On Nov 06, 2012 |
I wanted to add. It seems most African countries whenever they see some level of improvement in their economy they tend to get carried away and start Xenophobia? Take Ghana Vs Nigeria for instance. Ghana was the first to massively deport Nigerians during the Busia regime. I was told by then Ghana had things going for them. Lo and behold, after they deported Nigerians their economy crashed.
Nigeria made the same mistake. While the economy was waxing very strong we got carried away and deported Millions of Ghanaians, after which our economy crashed.
Ghana is trying to make the same mistake again. Its common knowledge they have been planning to deport Nigerians again just that they are yet to officially execute it. 2 years ago they started by mandating all Nigerians to get Alien card or whatever, their plan was if you are caught by immigration without this card you will be deported straight away. I was in Ghana then and I didn't bother to do it cos i don't live there permanently.
Take Uganda as another good example. Their economy was very strong when the Indians were there. But after they deported all Indians and took their properties Uganda became a laughing stock, though the present government is doing very well.
I pray Nigeria gets back to her feet sooner rather than later... |
Politics › Re: All Those Glorious Years We Spent In Nigeria by RickyRoss1(op): 9:40am On Nov 06, 2012 |
Reyginus: Wow! This is awesome I tell you. Nice write. The guy make sense die. He said things they way it is. |
Politics › All Those Glorious Years We Spent In Nigeria by RickyRoss1(op): 9:03am On Nov 06, 2012 |
(This article is dedicated to all those Ghanaians who went to Nigeria in search of a better life between 1978 and the second “Ghana Must Go” in 1985. You saw the very best of Nigeria and no matter what happened to you then, or later, you will never forget your time in that country!) Some people say it was the “constro” boys who went first and came back home with the good news. Others say it was the trained teachers (Cert A holders) who went first, started teaching in secondary schools there and came back on holidays and took along their brothers and friends who are graduates. Still others maintain that Ghanaians had been travelling to Nigeria since goodness knows when. There were vehicles that made the long journey from Kumasi or Accra to Lagos. Long before our independence, Anlo fishermen and traders piled themselves into trucks setting forth from Keta into the wilds of Nigeria. The journey took the whole day. Nigeria was far away, very far away indeed. No matter where the truth lies, one thing is certain. The great movement of Ghanaians to Nigeria in search of a better life would not happen until after 1975. Prior to that, nobody left Ghana to settle in Nigeria because Ghana was not good enough for him. There have always been ties between individual Ghanaians and Nigerians with inter-marriages meaning some Ghanaians moved to settle in Nigeria. But nobody left Ghana to escape economic hardships. Not until the mid-70s. The largest chunk of the economic migrants from Ghana to Nigeria made their moves between 1978 and 1981 or thereabouts. By 1982, Lagos was full of Ghanaians from all walks of life. They ranged from university lecturers (and students), medical officers, political refugees, through secondary school teachers to our boys working on construction sites and our girls selling bread in the “go slow” on the highway leading out of Lagos to Abeokuta. They rushed to the slow moving vehicles peddling what they called “Ghana bread”. (Some of the Yoruba didn’t like this bread complaining that there was too much sugar in it. Yes, much of Ghanaian bread contains too much sugar. If there is not too much sugar, then there is too much salt!) Some of our girls chose the easy way out and betook themselves to the houses of ill-repute where they plied their damnable trade. By the 70s, the journey now took only a few hours from Accra to Lagos. If you liked, you made the “short-short” one by taking a vehicle to Aflao, crossing the border on foot, taking a taxi to the station near Asigame (Grand Marché) in Lomé, where you took one of the Peugeot “caravans” straight to the Badagry border where another vehicle took you into Lagos. You could also take a vehicle from Cotonou and make it to the old port of Porto Novo (Xogbonu) and enter Nigeria at Idiroko which was the border crossing before the huge Badagry border was rebuilt as the main entry point. The Idiroko to Lagos road was still called the “Old Ghana Road” when we were there. For the Ghanaian making the journey by road to Lagos for the first time, it was a real experience. Once you cleared the Badagry border and was on your way on the dual carriage to Lagos, you knew you were somewhere far away from Accra. Lagos looked big to you. Much of it was like a huge construction site. This was the time when foreign companies like Julius Berger were building flyovers, overhead bridges, and motorways all over the place. Even though Ghanaians could be found in every state, most of them were in the Yoruba speaking states which are geographically nearest to Ghana. The Yoruba are the single largest of Nigeria’s more than 250 ethnic groups. There are far more Yoruba than there are Ghanaians of all tribes worldwide! Most of the Nigerians who lived among us in Ghana before the Aliens Compliance Order (ACO) were Yoruba. They were the ones we called “Alatafuo” or “Anago” and when we went to them, they also called us “omo Ghana” (no offence meant, none was taken either). So the Ghanaian connection with the Yoruba, in particular, is a long one. Some versions of Ewe history even trace the origins of the Ewe to a place called Ketu in Yorubaland. In the early 80s, in places like Ogbomosho, Ejigbo, Osogbo, Ilesha, one could still meet those Yoruba who had lived in Ghana before ACO and who still spoke fluent Twi, Fante, Ewe or Ga. They were proud to display their knowledge of these languages, having quite left the bitterness of the “munko munko” (ACO) behind them. The years around 1980 marked the most dizzying heights of Nigeria’s oil-fired economy. The oil money was flowing through everybody’s fingers and some of us were there to partake of the goodies. They accepted us so long as there was something for everybody. Every Ghanaian who went there got some kind of job. Teachers were in high demand. It was very easy for the Ghanaian teacher to fit into the Nigerian classroom. Because WAEC gave us all the same GCE syllabus, Ghanaian teachers found themselves teaching exactly the same things they were teaching in Ghana. Maths, Science and English teachers were especially in high demand. The greatest need for teachers was in the states controlled by the UPN which were implementing free education – the type Akufo-Addo is promising us. The UPN was then led by Chief Obafemi Awolowo, the revered Yoruba leader. (I have, sometimes, wondered if there is some resemblance between him and Akufo-Addo that goes beyond their old style round metal-rimmed glasses.) Secondary schools were built in all towns and villages and students went straight from primary school to these schools without any exams. It was not that there were no Nigerians who could teach their children. The economy was so good that Nigerian university graduates looked down on the teaching job. They easily got higher paying jobs in industry or obtained generous state or federal government scholarships to pursue advanced studies in foreign universities. Ghanaians readily took their places and acquitted themselves well. Indeed, there will come a time, (if that time has not even passed) when a crop of prominent Nigerians can proudly say that some of their best teachers in secondary school were Ghanaians. They will be referring to that time, around the 80s, when so many Ghanaians taught so many Nigerians. Everything was very cheap in this country. What we had then called “essential commodities” in Ghana were anything but essential in Agege (the name of the Lagos suburb that, in Ghana, became used for the entire country). Blue Band Margarine, which had ceased to exist in Ghana, was available at every roadside seller’s. Beer was one naira for the premier brands of Star and Gulder – brands that we had known from Ghana. The big bottle of Guinness, Odekun, (which was unavailable in Ghana) went for 1.30 naira and the little bottle (kekere) made you poorer by a mere 70 kobo. Semovita cost 80 kobo a kilo. We did not even have Semovita in Ghana then. Sardines and Geisha (which Nigerians looked down upon but were favourite items in Ghana, the lack of which can cause governments to be overthrown) were all over the place selling cheaply. During the Christmas season, imports were increased bringing down the prices of items across the board. In Ghana price increases were particularly notable during the Christmas season. Those Ghanaians who went to Nigeria before 1980 saw the very best of the country, economically. In some states, graduate teachers were given car loans in cash! You took your 3,000 naira, went to a car dealer and drove away with your brand new locally assembled VW “beetul”. It cost you less than 3,000 naira so you had something left over to buy petrol and drinks to celebrate your first new car with your friends – to “wash” the car, as it were. In the early 80s, a graduate teacher’s monthly pay of 360 naira was enough to buy you a return ticket to the UK. That was before the Thatcher government brought in visa requirements for Ghanaians and Nigerians. Those Ghanaians daring enough went on holidays in Britain. The naira was equivalent to the pound and fetched you more than a dollar! This was also the time Ghanaians would tell jokes about the newcomer who went to the wayside chop bar and asked for 50 kobo rice and 50 kobo meat and the seller woman looked at him with surprise. He insisted on his order and when he was served, there was no way he could eat it all. He thought the naira was like the cedi he had left behind in Ghana. At the beginning of each academic year, the now defunct West Africa Magazine published long lists of Nigerian scholarship winners who would be going to universities in Europe and North America to study obscure subjects in the sciences and technology. It was as if the states were competing with each other to see which of them could send the greatest numbers of their citizens on scholarships abroad. We looked at these lists with a tinge of envy. Our country could not afford to give us similar privileges. The daily newspapers were bumpy affairs of 48-60 pages at a time when our flagship national daily, Daily Graphic, was still running 16 pages in tiny print. There were even broadsheets, something we had never seen in Ghana before. A few of the numerous newspapers really had quality stuff. The newly established Lagos Guardian attracted articles from some of the country’s greatest brains – Wolé Soyinka, Niyi Osundare, Kole Omotoso, Chinweinzu. Then came the newsmagazine, Newswatch, modelled on Time Magazine and better than anything we ever had in Ghana. On its staff were some of the country’s best journalists including Dele Giwa who was murdered by a mail bomb during Babangida’s reign of terror. There were several television and radio stations at a time when Ghana still had only one television channel and one national broadcaster and we had never heard of FM broadcasting. Naija movies were not available then. The Ghanaian immigrant felt completely at home. Ghana was not too far away and you could visit home for the weekend. We settled. We started enjoying the food, the beer, the women and the music. Oh, the music, especially Yoruba music. Because of Juju music’s roots in highlife, it was easy for Ghanaians to take on and like that music. Moreover, some of us still remembered the time when the Yoruba lived among us in Ghana and played lots of the music of the accordion playing I. K. Dairo. They may have played the music of Haruna Ishola too. The 80s marked the heights of the careers of King Sunny Adé with his velvety voice (Gboromiro; Synchrooo ... synchro system) and “Shief” Commander Ebenezer Obey and his evergreen, forever and forever wedding song: Eto gbeyawo laye t’Oba Oluwa mi file le, pelu aseni... (What God has joined togedaa let no man put asondaaa...). Fuji, Apala and Sakara music are more difficult for Ghanaians to absorb. They are more traditionally based with Islamic roots. But if you live in a place where you hear a certain music type being played over and over again, and see the people cooing over it, you cannot help but get infected yourself. That is why many of us will never forget names like the late Alhaji Sikuru Ayindé Barrister, Kollington Ayinla, or Mama Salawa Abeni. Today, Fuji music has morphed into the Yoruba variant of hip-hop. But for those of us who were there in the early 80s, it is the music of Sunny Adé (is there any musician who has sung his way into the hearts of the Yoruba more than this man who has so many wonderful tracks you won’t know which ones to choose as your favourites?) and Ebenezer Obey (who is now into gospel music having also fallen victim to the excessive religiosity that is now afflicting many parts of Africa) that we have continued to enjoy long after we left the country even if we do not understand all the mgbati mgbati. Then things started getting bad. Many of us saw the signs very early because we had seen similar signs in Ghana. Contracts were not being renewed. It was becoming more difficult to get jobs. Prices were going up. Some construction works were being terminated midway. Remittances through the banks were becoming more difficult to get as the black market rates of the naira started running away from the official rates. They did not sack us from their country. We had survived “Ghana Must Go” 1 and 2. We left on our own when they relieved us of our teaching jobs. Many were too old to brave the journey to another part of the world. They returned to Ghana and went back to the teaching service or whatever else they were doing before the Agege craze. Many of the young ones came back to Ghana only to re-saddle and set forth again. Some of the “constro” boys, ever the most daring, took the desert road to Gaddafi’s Libya. Some of them lost their lives on the way. Some of us came to Europe. Others went to North America. There were those who made it to other African countries like South Africa, Botswana, Zambia, or any country willing to accept them. Anywhere else was better than the difficult days of Rawlings’ military Ghana. Today, it is said that more than half of Nigeria’s 160 million people live on less than two dollars a day. The naira is now 150 to a dollar. The largest note is 1,000 naira (equivalent to 12 ghc). A proposal to print 5,000 naira bills was dropped. Another to re-denominate the naira was also discarded. A bottle of Guinness is around 300 naira and Semovita is 250 (na kekere bi dat o). The molue conductors at Oshodi are no longer shouting: “Enter with your ten ten kobo – 50 kobo one naira no change”. That belongs to a time in the distant past. The trip now costs 100 naira. Nigerians are finding it difficult to exist on their monthly salaries. Many have voted with their feet and for some, even Ghana is better to live in. To be sure, though the Nigerian economy may not be riding the giddy Olympian heights of the late 70s, it has never descended into the gutters that the Ghanaian economy found itself in the same period. But the best is over and many Nigerians will give an arm to have the seventies and early eighties back. Yes, there are Nigerians who are crooks, cheats, bandits, religious fanatics and what have you. But the fact is that MOST ordinary Nigerians are honest, peace loving, God-fearing, resourceful and friendly people. You have to live in the country to see these ones whom we do not hear much about. You can also ask the thousands of Ghanaians still living there. And, oh, the country itself is, actually, really beautiful. For many of us, since Nigeria was our first foray outside our native land, the country remains special to us. We still have fond memories of our time there. I have not been back there since I left 26 years ago. I very much want to visit and walk the old paths again. What a wistful experience that will be! Kofi Amenyo (kofi.amenyo@yahoo.com) Source: http://www.ghanaweb.com/GhanaHomePage/NewsArchive/artikel.php?ID=255477&comment=0#com |
NYSC › Re: A thread for corpers posted to Imo by RickyRoss1(m): 8:07am On Nov 06, 2012 |
eklassical: im presently serving in imo state,the experience here in my p.p.a has been overwhelming, 2many ibo girls ready 2get down with you,even students.
Anyways, if u were posted 2 imo,holla. . .and i would give u any assistance u might require getting down 2d camp,how u easily blend in,etc. . . . It seems you are in Imo primarily to phuck around? You seems so happy and satisfied having phucked an Igbo girl for the first time? Which planet did you come from? I cant believe you wasted several years in the university for nothing. After graduating with 3rd class lower, tomorrow you will be the first to come to Nairaland and start ranting about looking for job for 30 years without success. We know Nigeria/Africa is hard, but the serious graduates with good grades are hot commodities within and outside Nigeria. It is already too late for you. Keep phucking whoreess, by the time you contract HIV tomorrow you start blaming enemies in the village. I don't wish you evil at all, rather I wish you well and I just want you to be serious and forget women for now. By the time you get good job tomorrow you will get tired of women. |
Autos › Re: I Can Supply Used Korean Automobiles by RickyRoss1(m): 7:46am On Nov 06, 2012 |
BEWARE OF FRAUD: Do not send money to someone you have never met before, especially a new member who claims to be in Korea.
If you are not greedy you cant be a victim of 419 scam. If you must use this route pls apply wisdom and be cautious.
Don't send money anywhere unless you see the car physically. Or unless they have agency in Nigeria where you can always have unrestricted access to. Even if you must send money dont pay more than 40% of the bargained price till you receive/check the car with a mechanic.
Now this is only a honest warning. It does not mean the poster is a scammer, and neither does it mean otherwise. |
Business › Re: 10 Nigerian Multi-millionaires Never Heard Of........ by RickyRoss1(m): 7:38am On Nov 06, 2012 |
acidtalk: This Forbe's people certainly don't hear word. What is my name doing on that list? I thought I told them I want my utmost privacy. Hahahaha, Nwanne take legal action immediately... |
Business › Re: Ifeanyi Ubah's Response To Allegations Against Him by RickyRoss1(m): 7:36am On Nov 06, 2012 |
callydon: Our company under the visionary leadership of Dr. Patrick Ifeanyi Ubah has consistently invested massively in the downstream sector of the economy. From our humble beginning as oil traders, we have grown to become one of the biggest petroleum depot owners, oil transporters and jetty operators, with a vision of building a refinery for which land has been acquired. After the commissioning of our first oil depot in 2007, we went on to develop depots 2 and 3 in 2009. Depots 1, 2 and 3 have a total of 28 loading arms capable of loading 56 millions litres (fifty trucks) every one hour and 1,120 (one thousand, one hundred and twenty) trucks in a day. The depots have an installed storage capacity of 190million litres and loading capacity of about 36million litres load-out every day. We remain the only depot operator with such loading capability in Nigeria. We are also the only company in the downstream sector with a truck park facility capable of accommodating 1,100 (one thousand, one hundred) trucks in Lagos. Our truck park takes care of over 40% of petroleum tankers that come into Lagos to lift petroleum products on a daily basis. This helps in reducing tanker traffic congestion in Lagos roads especially around the various depots in Apapa. (published on elombah.com)
We commenced our jetty development in 2008 such that today we are the only company in the downstream sector with the capability of berthing and discharging products from four vessels simultaneously. In order to construct these four jetties we dredged the water in and around our depots at a huge cost of over N4billion, excluding payments for licences, permits, rates etc. We own one of the biggest fleet of marine tugs and barges in the downstream of the Nigerian economy.
We did all these to help grow the nation’s economy as well as provide employment, without any form of financial support or incentive from any tier of government. It is worthy of note that the development of these depots and jetties contribute about 35% of daily petroleum distribution in Nigeria today. Our customers can attest to this. To make certain that petroleum products are constantly made available to Nigerians, we operate for 24 hours every day of the week, even on public holidays. We do this to ensure that we bridge the gap in petroleum products distribution nationwide and ensuring the elimination of fuel scarcity. It was therefore in appreciation of these giant strides that Prof Pat Utomi had this to say about Ifeanyi Ubah, “To come out of the big challenge to downstream oil marketing in times of severe uncertainty, which has crippled many players in the sector, in such a strong competitive position as to be a market leader, with assets, in several areas that far outstrip much older competitors, both multi-national and indigenous, is a remarkable feat. To do so before one’s 40th birthday is to bring new meaning to accomplishment”.
In supporting the efforts of the Federal Government/NNPC towards eliminating fuel scarcity we also bought a fleet of over 400 trucks, which is the biggest in the NNPC distribution network. All these we achieved at a great cost. Most of the monies for these massive expansions were borrowed from banks at huge interest rates. All our facilities were built without our participating in the Petroleum Subsidy Scheme from 2006 - 2009. Notwithstanding, the cost of these borrowing, we carried on because of our faith in Nigeria and because of our belief that in the absence of steady power supply, a steady supply of petroleum products will not only help grow our economy but will also alleviate the suffering of our people.
Our current travails started with a petition dated September 25, 2012 by the Presidential Committee on the Verification and Reconciliation of Fuel Subsidy Payments (PC) chaired by Aig-Imoukhuede, requested for assistance from the Special Fraud Unit of the Police to investigate subsidy claims by Capital Oil & Gas Industries Limited (our company). The PC claimed that it was carrying out a 100% verification of Shore Tank Certificates and Sales Proceeds for all 2011 Premium Motor Spirit (PMS) imports under the PSF Scheme. The Committee further claimed that it engaged the services of auditors from M/s Ernst & Young to conduct a field examination of oil marketing and trading companies using an approved audit framework. It then went on to list several transactions by our company which it alleged ’appear to have irregularities’. This response is intended to show that the allegations are spurious and merely intended to pull us down in order to achieve Aig-Imoukhuede’s dream of aiding his company - Access Bank - to frustrate our business activities and take over our company.
To show that the whole thing is an ’arrangee’ by the Committee, especially Aig-Imoukhuede on Tuesday October 9, 2012 our Managing Director Dr. Patrick Ifeanyi Ubah honoured an invitation by the Special Fraud Unit of the Nigerian Police Force and ended up being detained till Friday 19 October, 2012. At no time was he declared wanted nor did the police request for his presence and he failed to show up. Various media have since been awash with all forms of unfounded allegations. The smear campaign was so bad that the company was immediately labeled an ’oil thief’ as well as accused of embezzling funds the equivalent of the allocation of eleven states. How sad. We have decided to use this medium to place before the discerning public our side of the story to avoid our silence being taken as an admission of the malicious and spurious allegations intended to destroy our hard-earned reputation. To keep silent will amount to committing corporate suicide. We have chosen to speak out so that our side of the story will be heard, lest our silence be misconceived.
The Aig-Imoukhuede Panel also accused the company of collecting subsidy payments for which proof of mother-vessels were not found in locations claimed at the time of trans-shipment. The Committee made this allegation even though all the relevant documents regarding the importation of the cargoes, including mother and daughter vessels’ documents and the bill of lading were made available to the Committee. We also provided the Committee with the evidence of opening of Form “M”, duly approved by the government appointed agent-COTECNA, establishment of letters of credit by our banker, Access Bank, appointment of an Inspection agent by Access Bank to monitor all operations from loading of the product from the mother vessel to the discharge at the jetty and also the monitoring of the truck-out from the depot. It should be noted out at this point that our bank, Access Bank which performed all the functions as well as financed over 70% of our importation. Aig-Imoukhuede is also the Managing Director and major shareholder of Access Bank. He also has vast interests in many companies that have benefited from the petroleum subsidy scheme. Such companies are also among our very strong competitors.
We intend to react to the allegations against us especially in the light of the auditors’ report which the Committee is presently hinging on to refuse to verify our transactions. These issues form the substance of the petition. We want to use this medium to address them especially in the light of the spurious conclusions contained therein. For ease of reference and presentation we shall adopt the same presentation style of the auditors (M/s Ernst & Young), of putting the transactions in batches as according to them the transactions in the same batch have the same findings.
(A) Transaction 1
Ref. CAP/1433/CAP/PMS/22/11/10
Subsidy; #1,102,732, 121.26
(B) Transaction 2
Ref; CAP/1434CAP/PMS/29/11/10
Subsidy; #803,880,711.89
(C) Transaction 3
Ref: CAP/1460/CAP/PMS/17/12/10
Subsidy: #1,303,164,254.80
(D) Transaction 4
Ref: CAP/1468/CAP/PMS/24/12/10
Subsidy: #1,503,237,849. 30
Before commenting on the Committee’s finding in respect of these transactions, we must quickly point out that these transactions are outside the scope of the powers of the Committee. For the avoidance of doubt the terms of reference of the Committee as clearly set out in Volume 1, of its Report dated sometime in June, 2012 are as follows:
1.To authenticate the backlog of outstanding payments of subsidy payments to marketers in 2011.
2.Verify the legitimacy of backlog of claims already submitted by marketers for 2011.
3.Review any other pertinent issues that may arise from the exercise.
From the foregoing it is clear that the committee acted ultra vires (beyond the scope of its authority) in purportedly embarking on the authentication of subsidy payments made to us for 2010. The Committee was never authorised to verify 2010 transactions. The authentication/ investigation of the 2010 transactions cannot by any stretch of imagination be deemed to be a ’review of any other pertinent issues that may arise from the exercise’. The ultra vires acts of the Committee in embarking on the unauthorized authentication of the said transactions, we will show later in this article that this is part of a ploy by some persons in the Committee to vilify our company at all cost.
The auditors found that the DPR and NPA have records showing the ACTUAL arrival of the various vessels in Nigerian territorial waters. The auditors also found that the company discharged the PMS as well as provided all documents relating to the discharge of PMS. In other words the auditors confirmed/verified that the company discharged the PMS imported in respect of Transactions 1, 2, 3 and 4 (Batch 1of 5). The auditors also confirmed that the DPR Certificates of Quantity verified the quantity of PMS imported. The auditors were further able to reconcile the physical evidence of sales invoices with the soft copies provided by the company. In summary the auditors confirmed the actual arrival of the vessel, the discharge of the PMS and the reconciliation of the physical evidence of sale of the imported PMS.
The auditors also traced the PMS to the loading truck record based on destination and customer. The auditors claimed however that the destination for about 3% of the trucking was not provided. The auditors claimed that they were not able to reconcile about 30% of sales proceeds to the bank statements provided by the company. The auditors rounded off by claiming that they could not conclude on the shipments because 2010 data was not received from the outstanding agencies (NIMASA and NAVY). How ridiculous.
The auditors’ conclusion in many respect therefore vindicated us as regards the falsehood which the public has been fed that the company was among those who collected subsidy payments without importing any PMS. The vindication is so extensive that it goes as far as confirming that at least 97% of the imported PMS was also trucked to and delivered in many destinations in the country. Surely it accords with commonsense that if you imported nothing, nothing could be sold and or delivered!
This is where the auditors’ report suddenly took a wrong turn. Having confirmed that the PMS was variously discharged, sold, loaded and trucked, does it not amount to standing logic on its head for these auditors to claim that because they are yet to get outstanding data from the NAVY and NIMASA, they cannot verify these transactions. These are the same auditors who had earlier stated that these importations were independently verified by the documents from the DPR. The auditors finally stated that they have written to the NAVY and NIMASA to avail them with these documents. It was therefore based on these findings that the PC referred the matter to the SFU for investigation. How sad! What more do they want?. Must they go to even ridiculous lengths to embarrass us, deprive us of payments due to us and damage our business? It appears the auditors set out to do their master’s bidding from this point.
The Presidential Committee (PC) decided that these transactions were suspicious and therefore MUST be investigated based on the shoddy work by the auditors. The auditors having verified that from the ’bank statements provided’ by the company, claimed that they could not reconcile about 30% of the sale proceeds as they claimed that their search could not locate the sales proceeds in the ’bank statements provided’. Why didn’t the auditors and or the Committee invite us to provide additional documents i.e. if one is to believe that we promised to bring additional documents but never did. It never happened that way. In any case why were other companies invited and are still being invited to clarify issues and or to supply additional documents but we were not? Why did they rush to the police without giving a fair hearing? We leave this to Nigerians to judge!
How sad. How does one explain that the auditors having confirmed that these vessels arrived in Nigeria, that the quantity was ’independently verified by the DPR, PPPRA and other agencies, PMS was discharged, sold, trucked and large percent of the sales proceeds reconciled, suddenly becomes helpless when it comes to verifying the transactions. The auditors suddenly declined to verify these transactions by claiming that they MUST get a confirmation of the vessels’ arrival from the NAVY and or NIMASA. How convenient!!
The ’adverse’ report by the auditors was all that the Committee was waiting for to move in for the kill. It suddenly called in the SFU to investigate. Couldn’t the PC (the Committee) have awaited the reply from the NAVY and NIMASA before taking further steps in the matter?. In any case, will any negative response from the NAVY and NIMASA supercede the various findings by the auditors showing importation, actual arrival of the vessels, discharge and sale?. Since when did actual arrival of a vessel in Nigeria become speculative and not real?. In any case no vessel can arrive in Nigerian territorial waters if the Navy did not authorise the arrival. We did in fact furnish the auditors with proof of these.
We must not lose sight of the essence of the probe. The probe became necessary as a result of the wide-spread allegations that many oil marketers claimed payment under the Subsidy Scheme without importing PMS at all. We must therefore keep this in mind at all times. Thus the probe as far as it concerned us should be geared towards proving this and not trying to find any and every reason under the sun to demonize us. To show the desperation in ’trying to get us at all cost’, the Committee focused on the above transactions which do not fall within the range of the transactions it was authorised to investigate. Does it make sense that the vessels ACTUALLY arrived in Nigeria, discharged PMS, sold and delivered the PMS, received sales proceeds and then the company is still found not to have imported PMS? Nothing can be more ridiculous! The decision to refer the transactions to the SFU for investigations no doubt lends credence to our earlier assertions that the Committee is merely out to witch-hunt us, destroy our business and take over the same.
(E) TRANSACTION 10
Ref: CAP/1778/CAP/PMS/07/06/11
Subsidy; #2,490,576,987.15
(F) TRANSACTION 16
Ref: CAP/1976/CAP/PMS/14/08/11
SUBSIDY: #984,440,711.38
(G) TRANSACTION 17
Ref: CAP/1996/CAP/PMS/03/09/11
SUBSIDY: #1,480,440,043.58
(H) TRANSACTION 26
Ref: CAP/2274/CAP/PMS/30/12/11
SUBSIDY: #2,110,438,332.44
The auditors found from information they obtained from governmental agencies (DPR, NAVY, NPA and NIMASA) that there is evidence from these agencies showing the vessels mentioned in respect of the transactions 10, 16 & 17 actually arrived in Nigerian territorial waters. Same is also true of transactions 17 and except that the auditors claimed that the NAVY does not have any evidence that the vessels in respect of transaction 17 and 26 arrived in Nigerian territorial waters, while NPA records do not show the arrival of the vessel in respect of Transaction 26 even though NIMASA records contains same. They however claimed that the daughter vessels’ bills of laden provided by the company did not show details of letters of credit and Form M for the respective transactions. Indeed!! These transactions were financed by Access Bank. The auditors may need to be educated that it is impossible for any vessel to arrive in Nigeria without clearance by the NAVY. Therefore if the vessel ACTUALLY arrived the NAVY must have cleared it to berth in the territorial waters of Nigeria.
The auditors also found that all the records provided by us with regard to discharge of PMS in respect of the transactions matched the documents obtained from the relevant agencies which authenticated the company’s records. They however claimed that the independent auditor did not authenticate Transaction 10. The independent auditor however authenticated Transactions 16, 17 and 26 yet the auditors refused to verify them. We can all see how the goal post kept changing. There must be an absurd reason at every point so that our transactions will not be verified and/or authenticated. What manner of auditors are these?. Of-course any act or omission by any person or government must be blamed on us.
Just as happened with the transactions in BATCH 1 of 5, the auditors claimed that from the ’bank statements provided’ by the company, they could not reconcile about 30% of the sale proceeds as they claimed that their search could not locate the sales proceeds in the ’bank statements provided’. Invariably the auditors verified 70% of the sale of the PMS from the ’bank statements provided’ by the company, BUT claimed that they could not reconcile about 30% of the sale proceeds as they claimed that their search could not locate the sales proceeds in the ’bank statements provided’. We will deal with this issue of reconciliation of sale proceeds in the concluding part of this article, in the light of earlier findings by the Committee which showed that CBN examiners verified the existence of proof of sales proceeds from our banks.
As usual the auditors also claimed that the destination for about 3% of the trucking was not provided by the company, as such they were not able to trace where the PMS was delivered. This appears to be a familiar pattern of making sure that everything can either not be verified or reconciled so that we must have a case to answer.
According to the auditors’ reasoning , notwithstanding that NIMASA, NPA and DPR confirmed the arrival of the vessels as well as the discharge of the requisite quantity of PMS, and the NAVY records has ’no data’ on the same, then it must only mean that the company imported no PMS!! As we noted earlier no vessel that is ’confirmed to have actually arrived in the territorial waters of Nigeria can berth without clearance from the NAVY. The auditors must know that Nigeria is not that porous for a vessel to arrive in the country and the NAVY will not be aware.
In any case if as claimed by the auditors the NAVY records have ’no data’ on the arrival of the vessel, MUST we be made to suffer for that failure?. Does it mean that the confirmation by NIMASA, NPA and DPR of the arrival of the vessels as well as the discharge of the requisite quantity of PMS in Nigeria amounts to nothing because NAVY records have ’no data’ on the arrival.
We also showed evidence of compliance with NPA, NAVY, PPPRA & DPR regulations, yet the same Aig-Imoukhuede of Access bank claimed that we fraudulently received payment for subsidy. One may wonder why. One does not need to be a sorcerer to appreciate why Aig-Imoukhuede acted in a manner very much reminiscent of a sheriff in the Wild West in U.S.A. who while speaking of a man who was alleged to be a horse thief, said: ’’We will give him a fair trial and after that we will hang him’’. The reason for the unnecessary prejudice and the devil-may-care attitude shown by the Aig-Imoukhuede Committee betrays an indecent primordial intent of destruction of our hard-earned reputation under the guise of trying to catch a ’subsidy thief’. How else can he break up and take us over, except by using his new found power to starve us of funds and then exercise the right of a creditor (Access Bank) to move in and take us as spoils of war.
The auditors were hardly independent. They did the bidding of their master. Thus they were ready to say and do anything. Is it not regrettable that to the auditors it did not matter that they (auditors) have confirmed everything up to sales, trucking and delivery as well as sales proceeds but could not verify the transactions. The company MUST be maligned and publicly embarrassed as a ’subsidy thief’. How sad. Having confirmed that these vessels arrived in Nigeria, the quantity was ’independently verified by the DPR’, PMS was discharged, sold, trucked and large percent of the sales proceeds reconciled, shouldn’t the PC have awaited the reply from the NAVY and NIMASA before taking further steps in the matter. Will any negative response from the NAVY and or NIMASA supercede the various findings by the auditors showing importation, discharge and sale. We can only conclude that nothing short of seeing to our company’s downfall will be acceptable to these people. We will hold our peace and God will fight for us.
It is worthy of note that the Committee claimed that the mother vessels claimed were not found in the locations claimed by the company. Without ascertaining from the Company’s supplier about the authenticity of the attestation by our suppliers to show the mother vessel MT HARUNA EXPRESS was offshore Cotonou for the ship-to-ship transfer by the daughter vessel as stated by us, the Committee discarded same. It also failed to ascertain from our suppliers’ whom we stated charters the vessels and loads the PMS Free On Board, about this matter. We also wish to state that we are not usually the charterers of the vessels and as such are never in control of mother vessels. In any case there was no government policy in place at the time which required oil marketing companies/importers to obtain the full documentation of mother vessels.
As noted above the auditors’ conclusion in many respect vindicated the company as regards the falsehood which the public has been fed that the company was among those who collected subsidy payments without importing any PMS. The vindication is so extensive that it goes as far as confirming that at least 97% of the imported PMS was also trucked to and delivered in many destinations in the country. Surely it accords with commonsense that if you imported nothing, nothing could be sold and or delivered! If PMS from a vessel which was confirmed by the various government agencies as well as the auditors, to have ACTUALLY arrived in Nigerian territorial was delivered to various locations in Nigeria, and the sales proceeds also confirmed why weren’t the transactions verified, if not for some ulterior motive?. This comment also applies to the remaining three batches.
(I) TRANSACTION 7
Ref: CAP/1542/CAP/PMS/02/02/11
SUBSIDY: #1,559,875,069.76
(J) TRANSACTION 8
Ref: CAP/1547/CAP/PMS/11/02/11
SUBSIDY: #1,635,078,675.41
(K) TRANSACTION 9
Ref: CAP/1747/CAP/PMS/07/05/11
SUBSIDY: #2,467,281,093.60
(L) TRANSACTION 11
Ref: CAP/1830/CAP/PMS/25/06/11
SUBSIDY: #2,500,589,236.80
(M) TRANSACTION 12
Ref: CAP/1878/CAP/PMS/11/07/11
SUBSIDY: #2,116,460,530.87
(N) TRANSACTION 15
Ref: CAP/1978/CAP/PMS/12/08/11
SUBSIDY: #1,129,882,062.96
(O) TRANSACTION 18
Ref: CAP/2047/CAP/PMS/15/09/11
SUBSIDY: 1,129,882,062.90
Just like the earlier batches the auditors verified that the vessels actually arrived in Nigerian territorial waters and discharged PMS. The DPR vessel entry record also showed that the vessels actually discharged PMS in Nigeria. They also found physical evidence of sales reconciliation with the soft copies of sales records provided by the company. The auditors’ comments about the trucking and verification of sales proceeds are in line with the earlier batches. We therefore adopt our earlier comments.
The PC claimed that a review of the bill of lading in respect of our petrol import on 15th August 2011, showed that the letter of attestation did not state that MT Haruna arrived offshore Cotonou at the time of transaction and that there is no record of the mother vessel or daughter vessel bill of lading. The auditors in their report however stated that, “Our checks with all relevant agencies relevant to the shipping aspect of these transactions, revealed that NIMASA, NAVY and NPA have records showing the vessels’ arrival in Nigerian territorial waters.
At this juncture, we would like to know whether the Committee is suggesting that the various governmental agencies whose records confirm the arrival of the vessels and discharge of PMS, lack credibility that they do not trust entries in the records? If this be so, then the Committee should come out openly to indict such agencies, so that we will know that the Committee is saying that their records are not accurate. Yet when it suits the same Committee it insists that it cannot verify a transaction because ’no data about the transaction could be found in their records’.
(P) TRANSACTION 13
Ref: CAP/1875/CAP/PMS/25/07/11
SUBSIDY: 2,477,183,781.96
(Q) TRANSACTION 23
Ref: CAP/2206/CAP/PMS/20/11/11
SUBSIDY: #2,086,974,929.52
The auditors verified the actual arrival discharge, sale and trucking of the PMS in Nigeria. They only made their usual observation about the inability to reconcile 30% of the sales proceeds from the statements of accounts provided by the company as well as the 3% of the destination of the PMS delivered.
As noted earlier the auditors’ conclusions in many respect vindicated the company as regards the falsehood which the public has been fed that the company was among those who collected subsidy payments without importing any PMS. The vindication is so extensive that it goes as far as confirming that at least 97% of the imported PMS was also trucked to and delivered in many destinations in the country.
(R) TRANSACTION 5
Ref: CAP/1469/CAP/PMS/11/01/11,
SUBSIDY: #1,499,174,844.75
(S) TRANSACTION 6
REF: CAP/1470/CAP/PMS/17/01/11
SUBSIDY: #1,539,370,923.75
(T) TRANSACTION 14
REF: CAP/1972/CAP/PMS/08/08/11
SUBSIDY: 1,992,830,067.19
(U) TRANSACTION 19
REF: CAP/2203/CAP/PMS/06/10/11
SUBSIDY: #2,719,865,676.18
(V) TRANSACTION 20
Ref; CAP/2196/CAP/PMS/10/10/11
SUBSIDY; #2,022,993,488.88
(W) TRANSACTION 21
Ref: CAP/2199/CAP/PMS/10/11/11
SUBSIDY: #1,000,400,708.31
(X) TRANSACTION 22
Ref: CAP/2197/CAP/PMS/17/11/11
SUBSIDY: #989,889,970.70
(Y) TRANSACTION 24
Ref: CAP/2204/CAP/PMS/25/11/11
SUBSIDY: #826,738,244.50
(Z) TRANSACTION 25
Ref: CAP/2230/CAP/PMS/31/10/11
SUBSIDY: #1,989,174,295.62
The auditors confirmed records kept by NPA and NIMASA that the vessels involved in the transactions under this batch actually arrived in Nigeria as well as discharged the PMS in Nigeria. They only raised observations about perceived discrepancies in Maritime Insurance Certificates and Form M. Based on these observations they reached conclusions without drawing the company’s attention to the same so as to elicit their reaction and or explanation neither did they write to the issuing banks or insurance company for their comments/explanations.
They also confirmed that the records which the company provided matched all documents supplied by all the relevant agencies involved in the discharge which authenticated the discharge certificate. Sales and distribution were also confirmed.
At this point it is imperative for us to state that the auditors’ report as regards sales proceeds for the 2011 transactions is of doubtful authority as it materially contradicts and/or is in conflict with the Committee’s report. The Committee in writing the petition to SFU appeared to have accepted the auditors’ conclusion even in the face of manifest inconsistency with the Committee’s report. How can a Committee saddled with so serious a responsibility not have a firm grasp of the issues involved? Why would such a Committee blow hot and cold at the same time?
At page 81 of its report the Committee stated that at the request of the Committee, the CBN sent examiners from the departments of Banking Supervision and Trade & Exchange to review the import documentation and evidence of sales proceeds for oil marketing and trading companies with authorised dealers of foreign exchange (banks) in respect of claims submitted by the companies for 2011. These examiners were at the Banks that processed the 857 (eight hundred and fifty seven) claims which were submitted to the PPPRA, to verify the claims. According to the Committee Report the examiners adopted the following methodology:
1.A schedule of the subsidy claims submitted by for oil marketing and trading companies was obtained from PPPRA containing 857 transactions.
2.The schedule was sorted by banks and the transactions were thereafter allocated to examiners by bank for verification;
3.Transactions files of all the customers were reviewed to ascertain the adequacy of documentation and compare the information contained therein with the information in the claims submitted to PPPRA;
4.The volume of petroleum products discharged in litres was confirmed from the DPR product certificate by converting the quantity in metric tonnes to litres (using the conversion rate of 1.341Litres/MT obtained from PPPRA and compared with the volume in litres used by PPPRA as the basis for subsidy payments;
5.The Naira current accounts of the for oil marketing and trading companies were reviewed to ascertain the nature of funding of transactions and to verify the receipt of sales proceeds;
6.The banks were requested to populate a sales proceeds template designed to capture inflows into accounts in respect of the transactions.
The Committee concluded at page 82 of the Report that “Seven hundred and forty five transactions were found to have inflows of Naira proceeds which appeared commensurate to the value of the imported products…..A total of 112 transactions did not have evidence of sales proceeds based on banks’ available records at the date of verification” emphasis supplied. The 112 transactions did not have evidence of sales proceeds based on banks’ available records at the date of verification, were listed therein form pages 81-85, and the name of CAPITAL OIL & GAS INDS LTD was not listed therein.
In a very worrisome and offhand manner, these auditors reached a conclusion different from that of CBN examiners who were brought in at the instance of the Committee and whose findings the Committee accepted in her Report. This is not the end of the story. The Committee which had actually made a contrary finding in its June 2012 Report, suddenly woke up from a deep sleep and accepted the auditors’ lame finding in this regard despite the detailed work and finding of the CBN examiners. The Committee conveniently forgot that these examiners from the department of Banking Supervision and Trade & Exchange of the CBN did extensive work which it accepted. Is it not clear that the Committee will do this about-turn in order to nail CAPITAL OIL & GAS INDUSTRIES LTD. It appears that its motto in this regard is ’anything as long as we nail Capital Oil & Gas.
These examiners we noted earlier reviewed the import documentation and evidence of sales proceeds in the various banks and confirmed that we have evidence of sales proceeds. Their finding was accepted by the Committee. What then happened between then and the time M/s Ernst & Young were engaged. What changed to warrant there recurring findings that 30% of our sales proceeds could not be reconciled with the statements of account we presented. What better reconciliation could Ernst & Young auditors have done that will be better than the CBN examiners who went to the banks and examined the import documentation and reconciled the accounts with regard to sales proceeds?. Your guess is as good as ours!
Does this not show that the Committee is ready to ridicule itself in order to have our company black-listed and stopped from collecting our subsidy payments so as to meet our financial obligations and remain in business?. Is this not suspicious, moreso when the Committee has adopted same in its report, when it concluded at page 86 that these 112 companies (which excluded Capital Oil & Gas Ind. Ltd.) are to provide proof of sales proceeds?. How ridiculous can things get?. The country is presently experiencing worsening fuel shortage; nobody should be allowed to disrupt the supply chain by putting his interest ahead of the nation’s interest.
We have gone through the worst period of our business since February this year when the investigation of subsidy payments began. The House of Representatives cleared us. The first PC unfortunately indicted us. We challenged the finding as being hasty. The subsequent Committees set up have not succeeded in doing a blame-free work. It is in the light of this that we request you to objectively look into this matter.
We have put our trust in God. He alone will save us from the hands of this buccaneer who is out to rape and plunder us. It is a widely held belief that Aig-Imoukhuede is positioning himself and parading the corridors of power to be appointed the next central bank governor and/or Finance Minister. A fine ambition but it is instructive to remind him that he who must kill to attain a position may have misfortune as sentinel at the door of his new position.
May we at this juncture thank friends, well wishers and customers who have kept faith with us, through their prayers, support and encouragement even as we have remained calm in the face of such a glaring campaign of calumny and blackmail, rather we have remained consistent in the service to our nation by daily dispensing over 35% of national PMS consumption from our depot.
We will keep you updated as events unfold.
Management
(published on elombah.com) Sam Milla: You are ignorantly silly. Not because of your post but because of the reason you gave for quoting the whole article. |