Nigerian President
Muhammadu Buhari is working to defeat Boko Haram militants, root out
government corruption and overhaul the country’s large but fragile
economy, among other things. And now the 72-year-old leader plans to add to his
to-do list running Nigeria’s petroleum ministry, one of the most powerful and
controversial posts in the presidential cabinet.
Buhari, who
previously served as petroleum minister, has vowed to halt corruption in
the nation’s powerful oil sector. But experts said the Nigerian leader
isn’t an oil expert and keeping the crucial portfolio for himself will divert
attention from his presidential duties at a time when Nigeria needs to revive
its economy and end the Boko Haram insurgency. Appointing himself as petroleum
minister also raised concerns the ex-military ruler might wield too much power.
President Muhammadu Buhari |
“Being petroleum
minister will take away his gaze from other areas of the economic and, of
course, political system in the country that he needs to focus on,” said
Omolade Adunbi, a professor of African studies at the University of Michigan
who specializes in oil and natural resource politics. “He’s going to be
dividing his time between looking at the petroleum sector and governing the
nation, which I think is not the appropriate thing to do when the economy is in
deep crisis.”
Nigerian Senate
President Bukola Saraki said Wednesday Buhari submitted the names of
ministerial nominees for his new cabinet to the upper chamber for approval.
Saraki gave no names of those on the much-awaited list, which he said will
remain sealed in an envelope until the senate meets next week. But Buhari said
Tuesday he will appoint a minister of state to oversee the daily
running of the petroleum sector while he keeps the oil portfolio for himself.
Nigeria is Africa’s
largest oil producer and the industry provides more than 90 percent of the
country’s foreign exchange revenue and about 70 percent of government revenues.
This dependency on oil has put the Nigerian economy at risk, not just from
massive and chronic oil thefts, but more recently from falling crude oil
prices. The Nigerian Bureau of Statistics said in August the West African
nation’s annual economic growth in the second quarter plunged to 2.35 percent
from 6.54 percent a year earlier, Reuters reported.
‘He
Doesn’t Have The Time’
Buhari was
appointed as the federal commissioner, now called “minister,” of
petroleum and natural resources in March 1976 under military ruler Olusegun
Obasanjo, who was democratically elected president in 1999. When Nigeria’s
state-owned oil company, Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation, was
established in 1977, Buhari was also appointed as its chairman and held both
posts until June 1978. During his brief tenure, 2.8 billion naira ($14 million)
apparently went missing from the oil company’s accounts in the United Kingdom.
Former Nigerian President Ibrahim Babangida accused Buhari of the theft, but an
investigation found no truth to the allegations.
“To be brutally
honest, I do not recollect Buhari being an effective petroleum minister. A very
honest one, though,” said Sola Kasim, research fellow in energy economics at
the University of Aberdeen in the United Kingdom, who previously was an energy
consultant to the Nigerian government. “I venture to postulate that Buhari is
the cleanest, least corruptible, petroleum minister Nigeria ever had.”
There’s no evidence
that Buhari enriched himself while overseeing the country’s petroleum and
natural resources, and the Nigerian leader has sold himself as a tough-talking
general who will show no mercy when it comes to graft. Buhari, who took office
in May, has vowed to straighten out Nigeria’s crooked oil industry and recover
a “mind-boggling” sum of money looted over the years.
However, Buhari’s
lack of expertise in the oil business might allow others below him to continue
stealing money without his knowledge. “Buhari is not a petroleum engineer. He
is not a technocrat. He is not a specialist on oil. So people can still
successfully [steal] without him knowing,” Adunbi said Thursday. “That’s why
it’s important for him to appoint someone who knows the economics of oil as
well as the politics to manage the industry and move it from where it is right
now to where it can be an agent for growth.”
Apart from corruption, Buhari has promised to tackle education reform and
create more jobs. But experts said these processes could get
delayed because Buhari will have to split his time between overseeing the
country and controlling the petroleum ministry if he appoints
himself. Nigeria’s unemployment rate increased to 8.2 percent in the
second quarter of 2015 from 7.5 percent earlier this year, according to the
Nigerian Bureau of Statistics.
“Being the
president, he doesn’t have the time,” said Alexandra Gillies, director of
governance programs at the Natural Resource Governance Institute, a policy
think tank in New York. “It worries me from the scale of things that need to be
done … If you don’t delegate, you’re not going to be able to make progress on
all of those urgent fronts.”
‘He
Sees Oil As The Bedrock Of The Economy’
The scale of
corruption within Nigeria’s state-run oil company was revealed in a
report published in August by the National Resource Governance Institute,
an international watchdog in New York. The report found the Nigerian National
Petroleum Corporation has stolen a virtual fortune from the Nigerian
treasury. The company, which did not responded to requests for
interviews, withheld about $12.3 billion from the sale of 110 million
barrels of oil over 10 years.
Buhari, who was
elected in March on an anti-corruption and anti-terrorism ticket, split the
company into two entities earlier this year and said Tuesday he was considering
breaking it up further to improve efficiency and eliminate graft. He said he
would revisit the matter in about 18 months.
“I haven’t
absolutely made up my mind about that. We want to see what we have done in
reducing the size and redeploying most of the management. We want to see the
impact of that before we decide further,” Buhari said Tuesday, according to
Reuters.
Experts said
Nigeria desperately needs a diversified economy, but Buhari appears keen
to continue relying on the country’s natural resources and export commodities.
“All his actions
indicate he sees oil as the bedrock of the economy and that is the only way
things can continue, and I don’t think that’s right,” said Adunbi, who has
lectured at several Nigerian universities. “It is highly imperative for him to
start to think of life of the Nigerian state outside of oil and he has the
opportunity to do that right now.”
‘It’s
Not Ideal’
Buhari, who seized
power in a 1983 military coup and was thrown out 18 months later, is also
aiming to end a six-year Islamist insurgency in northern Nigeria. A regional
offensive by Nigeria, Niger, Chad and Cameroon earlier this year forced Boko
Haram jihadists to retreat from much of their territory in the north. But the
insurgents have struck back with a renewed vengeance. More than 1,260 people
have been killed since Buhari took office May 29, vowing to crush the
rebellion. At least 17,000 people have been killed and more than 2.5
million displaced since Boko Haram launched its insurgency in 2009,
according to AFP news
agency.
While some of
Buhari’s objectives may be put on the back burner to lead the petroleum
ministry, experts said Buhari will likely stay on top of security issues.
Within his first 100 days in office, the former major-general replaced his top
military brass in a fresh attempt to take on Boko Haram.
“I would be very
surprised if Boko Haram did not remain atop his agenda,” said Darren Kew,
associate professor of conflict resolution at the University of Massachusetts
Boston and executive director of the Center for Peace, Democracy and
Development. “It was his primary campaign promise. He promised to rid the
country of the insurgency within several months’ time. Clearly, we’re pushing
up on that deadline.”
Keeping the circle
of power small by not appointing an individual petroleum minister might enhance
transparency and save on administration costs. However, as both president
and petroleum minister, Buhari could risk the vital, democratic system of
checks and balances that help keep a government from getting too powerful.
“From a governance
standpoint, it’s not ideal,” Gillies said during a telephone interview
Thursday. “You need that [petroleum] minister to balance it out.”
Source: International Business Times
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