PRESIDENT Muhammadu
Buhari has ordered the immediate termination of the coastal and pipeline
protection contract awarded to former Niger Delta militant leader
Government Ekpomupolo alias Tompolo by President Goodluck Jonathan.
In 2011, President
Jonathan awarded a contract to provide security along Nigeria's maritime
borders to Global West Vessel Specialists Nigeria, a company owned by
Tompolo. Seen as a political gesture, President Buhari has instructed
the Nigerian Maritime Administration and Safety Agency (Nimasa) to
discontinue payments for the provision of platforms for security.
With the revocation of
the contract, money paid to the private firm will now be channelled to
the Nigerian Navy and marine police to secure the nation’s waterways.
According to a source at the Federal Ministry of Transport, the $103m
(N21bn) maritime security contract was approved by former President
Jonathan and awarded by Nimasa in 2011, shortly after Patrick
Akpobolokemi, was appointed to head the agency.
It is believed that
payments have been stopped since June, with Mohammed Bashir, the
permanent secretary in the transport ministry directing Mr Akpobolokemi
to halt payments for the controversial maritime security contract until
further notice. Others who benefitted from similar contracts include
Mujaheedin Asari-Dokubo and Chief Bipobiri Ajube, Alias General
Shoot-At-Sight, as well as Odua People's Congress founder Dr Frederick
Fasheun and the leader of its other faction Otunba Gani Adams.
According
to the transport ministry source: “It is difficult to believe that
former President Goodluck Jonathan would hand out the security of the
nation’s entire maritime domain to his kinsman under the guise of
public-private partnership. It was certain that such a contract would
not stand the test of time and like the pipeline security contracts
awarded by the same regime, its time is over.” However, former senior
special assistant to the president on maritime, Leke Oyewole, advised
the federal government not to go back to the old ways when Nimasa was
handling water security.
He
noted that ever since Tompolo's company was put in charge of providing
platforms for security on the nation’s waters, there had been an
improvement.
Last
month, pioneer Nimasa chairman Alhaji Tijjani Ramalan, alleged that
Tompolo's company was paid N1.5bn monthly to execute the contract. He
lamented that despite the huge payment, the country is still losing more
than 400,000 barrels of crude oil daily to oil thieves.
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