Monday, 27 February 2012

FUEL SCARCITY IS TO BLACKMAIL NIGERIANS

The current artificial fuel scarcity in parts of the country is to blackmail Nigerians into accepting higher fuel prices and pressure the National Assembly (NASS) to discontinue the probe into the wholesale fraud in the oil industry. The contrived scarcity is an unholy alliance between major oil marketers and  various government agencies.

The  claim by the Major Oil Marketers Association of Nigeria and the Independent  Petroleum Marketers of Nigeria that the patriotic probe into the corruption-ridden oil sector  by the NASS  has created "uncertainties" and loss of confidence by the financial institutions which has translated into fuel scarcity, is ridiculous. Banks cannot be scared to work with honest businesses as the marketers are claiming, and the country cannot be blackmailed to allow fraudsters continue to dominate the oil sector.

It is unacceptable to the NLC  that marketers and the Government  will contrive to push the price of a litre  of petrol (PMS) back to N140  under the guise of fuel scarcity. We also assure the National  Assembly that Nigerians are solidly behind its probe into the age long theft of our oil wealth and the fleecing  of the country through the inflation of the subsidy on fuel. The future of our country  lies in our ability, determination and the political will to tackle the endemic corruption that has become cancerous and is threatening our very existence.

It is ironic that the very people  who contributed to the present state of affairs in the oil industry are those claiming to be sanitizing it by setting up a plethora of committees allegedly to cleanse the industry. These committees which are mainly political patronage, are creating a new bureaucracy  in Government and driving up the cost of governance contrary to President Goodluck Jonathan's January 16, 2012  pledge to the country that the cost of governance will be reduced.

The NLC again reiterates that the Jonathan administration has no alternative but to live up to its promise that Nigerians will richly reap the dividends of the fuel price hike. The claims by some government officials that the mass protests organised by Labour and it's allies which led to the reduction of a litre of PMS from N140 to N97 has made the fulfillment of the promise impossible  is childish. it is like a dull, in attentive pupil  blaming the teacher for his failure. Nigerians are not interested in excuses; they demand and deserve good governance and the dividends of democracy.

Owei Lakemfa
NLC Acting General Secretary.
Sunday 26th February, 2012