Tuesday 7 April 2015

STOLEN OIL MONEY TRACED TO ZENITH BANK



STOLEN OIL MONEY TRACED TO ZENITH BANK
BY ABDULMUMINI ADEKU, TIM COCKS,JOE BRUCK  

HIS EMINENCE,MALLAM LAMIDO SANUSI,EMIR OF KANO WAS MADE TO LOOK STUPID FOR STANDING FOR TE TRUTH BUT NOW HE HAS BEEN VINDICATED
The controversial $20 million dollars declared to have been missing by erstwhile Central Bank of Nigeria Governor but now Emir of Kano,His Eminence ,Mallam Lamido Sanusi is now been traced to the vast vaults of Zenith International Bank Plc.
In a statement credited to Online market square,Paedia Express Multimedia learnt that officials of Zenith International Bank Plc are at the moment looking for how to cook up there books in order to look innocent as anti graft agency,the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission[E.F.C.C.]may soon pay the Jim Ovia led bank a visit.
It was gathered through an impeccable source that infact one of the reasons why Mr Godwin Emefiele,Governor of Central Bank of Nigeria was chosen was because he allowed the deal to work out successfully.
In late 2013, Nigeria's then central bank governor Lamido Sanusi wrote to President Goodluck Jonathan claiming that the state oil company had failed to remit tens of billions of oil revenues it owed the state.
After the letter was leaked to Reuters and a local news site, Jonathan publicly dismissed the claim and replaced Sanusi, saying the banker had mismanaged the central bank's budget.
A Senate committee later found Sanusi’s account lacked substance.
Sanusi has since become Emir of Kano, the country's second highest Islamic authority, and has smoothed over relations with the president. He declined to discuss his earlier assertions.
Before he was sacked, though, the central banker submitted to Nigeria’s parliament more than 300 pages of documentation in support of his claim. Reuters has reviewed that dossier, which offers one of the most comprehensive studies of waste, mismanagement and what Sanusi called “leakages” of cash in Nigeria’s oil industry. Detailed here, the dossier includes oil contracts, confidential government letters, private presidential correspondence and legal opinions.
Sanusi’s letter and documents do not state whether he thinks the money was stolen or lost through mismanagement. Nor did he make allegations of illegal acts against any specific individuals or entities. Both corruption and bad governance are perennial problems in Africa’s most populous nation, and central issues in elections due on Feb. 14.
Nigeria’s oil industry accounts for around 95 percent of the country’s foreign exchange earnings. If Nigeria continued to leak cash at the rate described in his letter to the president, Sanusi said at the time, the consequences for the economy would be disastrous. 
Specifically, the failure of state-owned Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation “to remit foreign exchange to the Federation Account in a period of rising oil prices has made our management of exchange rates and price stability ... extremely difficult," he wrote. 
"The central bank of Nigeria is always blamed for high rates of interest,” but “given these leakages, the alternative is a devalued currency ... and financial instability."
That is exactly what has happened.
As oil prices have plummeted to around $55 a barrel, half their level at the beginning of 2014, Sanusi’s successor Godwin Emefiele has devalued the naira, Nigeria’s currency, by 8 percent, and raised interest rates for the first time in more than two year

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