Marilyn Amobi may now serve out her tenure as the Managing Director of bulk electricity trader, NBET, following a letter to that effect conveyed to her late Monday by the finance ministry, a few moments after power minister, Saleh Mamman, had announced her removal “with immediate effect”.
The counteractions
of the finance minister, Zainab Ahmed, and her power ministry counterpart, Mr
Mamman, underscored the confusion and power play in the government of President
Muhammadu Buhari.
The two ministers
separately said Mr Buhari authorised their opposing actions.
In a statement on
Monday evening, Mr Mamman said Mr Buhari had approved the removal of Ms Amobi,
asking her to proceed on terminal leave and hand over to NBET’s General Counsel
and Secretary, Nnaemeka Eweluka, as the new substantive boss of the agency
immediately.
That was five days
after PREMIUM TIMES exposed Ms Amobi’s continued violation of Nigeria’s code of
conduct for public officials as she runs a private company, ESL Economics and
Management Limited, and operates foreign bank account in the United Kingdom.
Mrs Amobi’s
four-year tenure is to end July 24 this year.
Top government
officials said our report on Ms Amobi’s abuse of code of conduct, indeed a
constitutional breach, angered Mr Buhari who immediately ordered her removal.
However, shortly
after Mr Mamman announced the removal, based on Mr Buhari’s approval, it
emerged the president had earlier, through his Chief of Staff, Ibrahim Gambari,
given an instruction that Ms Amobi is allowed to serve out her tenure.
The approval to
serve out her tenure was given in a June 8 memo, obtained by PREMIUM TIMES late
Monday. That memo was then attached to a June 15 letter from the finance
ministry to Ms Amobi asking her to serve out her tenure ending in July, thereby
countering Mr Mamman’s earlier announcement.
The finance
ministry’s letter was signed by the permanent secretary at the finance
ministry, Mahmoud Isa-Dutse.
Although the
correspondence gave Ms Amobi a temporary reprieve, it, nevertheless, asked the
embattled official to hand over to Mr Eweluka at the completion of her tenure
in July. But Mr Mamman’s instruction was that the replacement should take place
immediately.
Insiders said the
clash on the fate of Ms Amobi between the two ministers was indicative of the
confusion in the administration of Mr Buhari, said to have a way of giving
conflicting instructions and approvals to his officials on a single subject.
Regardless of the
approval of June 8 to allow Ms Amobi serve out her tenure, the president gave
another instruction that the official be removed immediately PREMIUM TIMES’
report of June 11 and the previous reporting by Leaks.ng on Ms Amobi’s abuses
were brought to his (president’s) notice, insiders said.
The finance
minister, Ms Usman, is the chairperson of NBET board but the company is a major
player in the power sector overseen by Mr Mamman, the power minister.
In the power
industry, NBET is the “manager and administrator of the electricity pool.” It
has been covering the market shortfall using public funds to shore up the
revenue of the electricity generation companies to prevent the collapse of the
system that is perpetually afflicted by liquidity crisis.
In 2018, N701
billion was released for this purpose from the Central Bank of Nigeria for the
2017-2019 period.
After becoming a
public official as the chief executive of NBET, a wholly-owned Nigerian
government company, Ms Amobi did not withdraw from running ESL in the UK,
management and accounting filings obtained by PREMIUM TIMES from UK authorities
showed. This was first reported on June 10.
But during the
weekend, she distributed a statement trying to deny this newspaper’s report.
She said her company had become inactive and thus she was not running it.
She lied. According
to records the UK authorities hold and which PREMIUM TIMES still accessed
Tuesday morning before this publication, ESL, with company number 06413894,
still holds an “active” business status and Ms Amobi’s running of the company
remains “active”.
Also, several
accounting filings, including yearly balance sheets, including the latest,
submitted in 2019, were signed by Ms Amobi as the sole director of the
consultancy firm.
Ms Amobi wholly owns
ESL, which she registered in 2007 in London. But she did not withdraw from the
running of the company as a director, after her appointment into public office
in Nigeria as the country’s law requires.
She said she had
resigned from the Nigerian version of ESL. PREMIUM TIMES cannot verify this
claim immediately although records suggest her claim needs to be authenticated.
However, we can
authoritatively report that she remains active running the private firm, ESL,
in the UK and the firm is not inactive contrary to her claim.
The development on
Monday evening is a new chapter in Ms Amobi’s controversial stint at NBET. She
has variously been accused of abuses, including misuse of funds and
maladministration.
On December 24, Ms
Amobi was suspended by the power minister, Mr Mamman, who claimed that the move
was in continuation of the government’s effort to reorganise and sanitise the
Federal Ministry of Power and its affiliate agencies.
Consequently, a
five-member investigative committee was constituted to probe the myriad
complaints levelled against Ms Amobi.
The suspension, last
December, of Ms Amobi came after PREMIUM TIMES reported how she instigated the
arrest and detention for several hours of nine top officials of the bulk trader
by the State Security Services (SSS, also called DSS).
The embattled MD had
been accused of abuse and intimidation of employees in recent time, with
concerns over workplace safety and failing teamwork protocol among staff
members.
But in January, Mr
Buhari curiously overruled the minister, reinstating Ms Amobi despite
indictments by anti-graft agencies — the EFCC and ICPC.
Apart from the two
main antigraft agencies, (EFCC and ICPC), Nigeria’s auditor-general also found
Ms Amobi culpable of maladministration.
Earlier in February
2019, PREMIUM TIMES reported how Ms Amobi controversially paid at least N2
billion to two power generating companies and made controversial payments to law
firms and other consultants.
Documents obtained
by Leaks NG – a coalition of Nigerian newsrooms and civil society groups –
revealed that Ms Amobi, was also involved in a series of alleged corrupt acts
such as subversion of board approvals and infraction of procurement laws. She
had denied all the allegations.
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