Minister of Petroleum Resources, Mrs. Diezani Alison-Madueke
The Minister of Petroleum Resources,
Mrs. Diezani Alison-Madueke, has halted the investigation by the
House of Representatives into the N10bn she allegedly spent on a
chartered private jet, Challenger 850, in the last two years for her
trips.
The House Committee on Public Accounts
investigating the expenditure was set to conduct a public hearing on
Monday, but it was stalled by an Abuja Federal High Court order.
Alison- Madueke and the Nigerian
National Petroleum Corporation listed the National Assembly and the
House of Representatives as the defendants in the suit with reference
number FHC/ABJ/CS/295/2014 and dated April 11, 2014.
The PUNCH had reported
exclusively on Monday that the hearing might not take place, as the
minister had already flouted a deadline the committee gave to her to
make submissions before April 28.
It was gathered that a “surprised” Tambuwal was served the restraining order on Monday morning.
“This has never happened before in this
country that a serving minister is asking a court to stop the
parliament from doing its work,” a committee source told The PUNCH on Monday.
“These are indeed, no ordinary times. I am seriously disturbed about the way we want to run this country”,
he added.
The Chairman, House Committee on Media and Public Affairs, Mr. Zakari Mohammed, confirmed the development to journalists.
“The court processes were served on us today (Monday); the speaker has been served.
“Simply put, it is to notify us that, this matter which you want to investigate, we have gone to court”, Mohammed stated.
Mohammed described Alison-Madueke’s
action as a “temporary setback”? for the House, but assured the public
that the legislature would fight to the finish.
According to him, being a “law-abiding
House”, the first reaction was to put the hearing on hold until legal
opinions were sought.
He spoke further, “We expected the minister to be here today(Monday) for the hearing.
“Instead, we have been served with
court processes. As law-abiding citizens, we have decided to wait. We
will tarry awhile, take some legal opinions and move on from there.
“What has happened tells you the kind
of frustration that the House is facing. A matter of public importance
is under investigation and a minister is telling us that she has gone to
court.
“However, our job is to expose corruption. We will study the court papers and take it up from there.”
The PAC Chairman, Mr. Solomon Olamilekan, expressed shock over the minister’s decision to “rush to court.”
He asked, “Is this to say there is something to hide? What was she afraid of that she went to court?
“The restraining order was served on the Office of the Speaker, stopping us from going ahead with the investigation.
“As a committee, we have not seen a copy, but since the speaker was served, we cannot pretend not to be aware.”
The PUNCH gathered that, while
the original mandate of the committee was to investigate the alleged
N10bn expenditure on the Challenger 850, the committee stumbled on
additional information indicating that Alison-Madueke chartered two
other jets.
One of them, a Global Express XRS, was said to have cost €600,000 in a return charter trip to London.
Olamilekan claimed that all was set for
the probe on Monday (yesterday) only for members to be confronted with
the news on the court order.
He stated that two aviation firms, Visa Jets and Jet Hanger, had already made submissions to the committee.
On the part of the NNPC, Olamilekan said
the committee received a letter from the corporation asking for an
extension of the deadline.
However, he admitted that, with the
minister’s decision to go to court, the committee had been compelled to
await the outcome of the court processes.
But, findings by The PUNCH showed that the committee members were in a dilemma long before the court order reached the House on Monday.
Alison-Madueke had twice failed to
respond to letters the committee wrote, asking her to state her side of
the allegation preparatory to the public hearing.
A further directive to make the submissions before April 28, was again ignored.
When contacted on Monday, an official at
the Petroleum ministry, who pleaded not to be named because he was not
authorised to speak on the subject, said, “I can confirm to you that
there has been some leads as to why the minister decided to stop
answering the House.
“In fact, the court order is one of such leads and it has restrained the House from probing her.”
Another official said the Group Managing
Director, Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation, Mr. Andrew Yakubu,
and the minister decided not to honour the House panel’s request
“because they’ve been very busy lately.
“The minister is a very busy woman, so
also is the GMD. They can’t be answering to every call at the detriment
of their duties at the ministry and the NNPC and we hope that with this
court order, these things will be adequately addressed.”
The FHC will on Tuesday (Tuesday) begin hearing in the suit by the minister and the NNPC.
In the suit, they asked the FHC for
an order of interim injunction restraining the respondents “whether by
themselves, their members, committees or agents from summoning or
directing” their appearance “before any committee, particularly the
PAC set up by the House of Representatives” to conduct the
investigation.
They also want the court to stop the
committee from asking any official of the ministry or the NNPC to
produce any papers, notes or other documents or give any evidence in
line with a letter from the House dated March 26, 2014, pending the
hearing and determination of the motion on notice.
In the same vein, they asked for an
order of interim injunction restraining the defendants from issuing a
warrant to compel the minister’s attendance, or the attendance of
any official of the ministry or the NNPC, with regard to the
investigation.
In the alternative, the plaintiffs want
the court to make an order of status quo, directing the parties to
maintain the current position with regard to the investigation, as of
the date of filing of the suit.
The court order which was made
available to our correspondent, indicated that after hearing an ex parte
motion moved by Alison-Madueke’s counsel, Etigwe Uwa (SAN), Justice
Ahmed Mohammed made an order directing the defendants to appear
before the court to show cause why the interim orders sought by the
plaintiffs should not be made by the court.
Source: The Punch
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