The
Edo State Governor, Mr. Adams Oshiomhole, on Friday alleged that former
President Goodluck Jonathan and his Minister of Finance, Dr. Ngozi
Okonjo-Iweala, jointly denied his state of about N10bn in four years.
He said the sum was an estimate of what
could have accrued to his state if the past administration had been
faithful in remitting taxes paid by the Nigerian Liquefied Natural Gas
Company and Shell Petroleum Development Company of Nigeria into the
Consolidated Federation Account the same way the present administration
did.
Oshiomhole spoke with State House
correspondents shortly after he and former governor of Rivers State, Mr.
Rotimi Amaechi, met with President Muhammadu Buhari at the Presidential
Villa, Abuja.
The
governor claimed that if the $1.6bn NLNG tax that Buhari used as
bailout for states had come during Jonathan’s administration, it would
have gone the same way it had been going without states benefitting.
He said he was happy with Buhari because he made it clear that he would stop impunity and fragrant disobedient of law and order.
Oshiomhole said, “All the noise that have
been generated over what happened last week, there was nothing
extraordinary. What was extraordinary is that the NLNG has over the
years been remitting funds to the Federal Government but the government
illegally refused to transfer these funds to the Consolidated Revenue
Fund which belongs to the three tiers of government.
“All that President Buhari has done is
to, in line with his commitments to ensuring that all funds and money
accruing to the Federation Account are remitted, that he has directed
the Central Bank of Nigeria to transfer the funds to the consolidated
funds. “Our commissioners along with federal officials met last week to
share those funds in line with the revenue allocation formula. If this
money had come under the last administration, it will have gone the same
way as in previous years.
“The NLNG is not starting fresh to remit.
It has been doing that every year plus taxes paid by, I think Shell,
amounting to about $500m added to the amount of $1.6bn from the NLNG
that total to the amount of $2.1bn. That was the money that was shared.
“Imagine what Edo State got from this
renewed transparency and total compliance to the spirit and letter of
the constitution. If what we got last week, courtesy of this renewed
commitment to transparency, if we had gotten this in the past four years
consecutively, we would have made about N10bn.
“So, by the same token, Edo State Government had lost N10bn under Jonathan.”
No comments:
Post a Comment