Posted on 10/18/2006 10:24:18 AM PDT by Republicain
World Bank President, Mr Paul Wolfowitz, has stated that about $300 billion oil wealth has been stolen from Nigeria in the last four decades. Wolfowitz however, praised President Olusegun Obasanjo for the fight against corruption singling out the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC), Chairman, Mallam Nuhu Ribadu, as a remarkable man fighting to rid Nigeria of coruption.
The World Bank President who spoke yesterday at the opening ceremony of the Extractive Industries Transparency Initiative (EITI) Third Plenary Conference in Oslo, Norway, also painted a gloomy picture of the poverty level in Africa.
According to Wolfowitz, "20 years ago, there were about 150 million Africans living below poverty line, but today, the figure has doubled to about 300 million. Yet the continent has seen about $500 billion oil wealth that has not helped the people"
With specific reference to Nigeria, Wolfowitz said about 75 percent of the people now live on less than one dollar per day "yet over the past 40 years, about $300 billion oil wealth has disappeared from the country" The World Bank chief said Nigeria presents a classical example of how people in a resource rich country could wallow in abject povery, but recognised the efforts of President Obasanjo whom he said is tackling corruption. "Things have changed in Nigeria. There is a new leadership that has taken the fight against corruption serious. President Obasanjo has made tremendous efforts in the fight against corruption in Nigeria". Interestingly, the person who, however, got most of the accolades yesterday was Mallam Nuhu Ribadu whom Wolfowitz made several references in his speech and the subsequent press conference he held after the session.
"Nuhu Ribadu was with us at the World Bank meeting in Singapore, he is a remarkable young man. He has literally put his life on the line in the fight to rid Nigeria of corruption"
While admitting that a lot of ill-gotten wealth has been recovered in Nigeria with the latest being the $500 million returned by Swiss government last year, Wolfowitz said much more work still needed to be done since "Abacha loot is just a fraction of the money that has been stolen from the Nigerian treasury"
Wolfowitz also praised the chairperson of the Nigeria Extractive Industries Transparency Initiative (NEITI), Mrs Obiageli Ezekwesili, for the leading role the country has been playing globally in getting the sector opened up.
Norwegian Foreign Affairs Minister, Mr Jones Gahr Store in her opening remarks, said transparency straightens the road from national wealth to public good. But while praising the efforts of the EITI, he warned that it should not be allowed to become another debating society. The International Advisory Group (AIG) Chairman, Mr. Peter Eigen presented the report signed by British Prime Minsiter, Mr. Tony Blair and his Norwegian counterpart, Mr. Jens Stoltenberg while Prof Assisi Asobie, former ASUU President and NEITI member was elected by 61 civil society groups from across the globe as their member for the AIG which gives Nigeria two members in the Board with Ezekwesili already a member.
In his keynote address, Obasanjo said Norway with one of the highest standards of living in the world and efficient economic policies, and the transparent use of its oil resources, has become a model for other countries to learn from. In every respect Norway offers the world an enviable example of how natural resources can translate to long-term sustainable development for citizens, reversing a creeping Dutch Disease syndrome through sound economic reengineering and deft fiscal strategies which have led to savings in excess of US$250 Billion as Government Pension Fund now invested in financial markets.
Nigeria, according to the President, has a lot to learn from Norway since "we are still struggling to convert a huge extractive endowment to a similar high quality of life for our citizens. It was in pursuit of this objective that my administration embarked on a programme of far-reaching reforms in the areas of macroeconomic policy, structural adjustment, and governance aspects of our economy '
Corruption, according to Obasanjo who was represented by Ezekwesili, "is the single most virulent impediment to development. It distorts the allocation of national resources, robs the nation of quality service and impoverishes the citizenry. It also has a corrosive effect on our collective integrity and discipline, and contaminates societys moral values by rewarding the unscrupulous and demoralizing the honest, thereby destroying the foundations of innovation, creativity, freedom, competition. It could even threaten the legitimacy of the state in the eyes of citizens.
When the Extractive Industries Transparency Initiative (EITI) came on stream in 2003, it fitted very well with our menu of reforms and openness which we envisaged at that time. We established a competitive tenders arrangement in public procurement (Due Process) as well as the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission, the latter to expose, arrest, and prosecute people associated with corruption and poor governance. "That was why, when Prime Minister, Tony Blair launched the EITI, we were the first country to sign on, and quickly began implementation of the EITI in Nigeria, through the establishment of the National Stakeholders Working Group (NSWG) in February 2004.
As we look back at the past thirty-three months of implementation of EITI in Nigeria, we have learnt several lessons about our extractive sector from our just concluded independent physical, financial and process audits. We now know that all the government entities must improve their record keeping and interface better with one another; we know we must scale up institutional capacity and clearly define their roles to reduce duplication and discrepancy.
We have learnt that we must put a better system in place to ensure we can reconcile the volumes of crude oil from the point of well head to the export terminal through effective metering and policing. We have learnt that we must subject our fiscal regimes as contained in the Memorandum of Understanding (MOUs) to rigorous tests and analysis in line with global best practices. Most importantly we have learnt the urgency in thinking beyond oil by extending the NEITI template to mining and the solid minerals so that the mistakes of the oil sector are not repeated in other sectors.
The conference continues today with other speakers lined up among them THISDAY Editor, Olusegun Adeniyi, billed to present a paper on The Role of the Media in the EITI process alongside Anton Artemyev of the Soros Foundation, Kazakhastan.
That's nothing compares to what has been lost in the "War on Poverty".
Oddly, I keep getting emails offering to share some of that ill-gotten wealth with me if I will only provide my bank account number...
they lost $300b? you mean all those emails were real?? damn...
/sarc
Most of this $300B is currently on its way to me. And I'm not sending any of it back (once I get it, which should be any day now).
Well, I have an arrangment to receive $12,346,115 of money from Nigeria. It's a pretty good deal. I just had to put up $12,000 for bribes and stuff. I expect the money to be in my account shortly.
Well lets just give them more taxpayer money then??
Amazing- all this info and not one mention of Congressman Jefferson and his cash dispensing freezer. Or maybe I missed it in there somewhere.
Sweet! For my deal I had to put a lien on my home (I still don't quite get why), but I figure it's worth it as I'll soon be dumping it for the fanciest digs in town!
So how much American money goes into this corrupt pit and never gets to the people who are suffering under a corrupt regime?
All of it.
Yeah. I can't wait to start spending that Nigerian fortune. Really. It's going to be here any day now. There were just a few delays, but my guy has promised me that it will be in the bank by the end of the month. I did have to send him $5600 last week though. There's this Assistant Finance Minister who has to be bribed, you see.
I've been looking at the new Ferarris lately, but I can't decide between that or something more sedate, like a Rolls. Heck...maybe I'll buy them both.
LOL.
I got my $30M, didn't you get yours?
Piasa - are you aware that you're quoted on page 28 of David Horowitz's book The Shadow Party? (This book, btw, is a must read for every Republican, military family, freeper or anyone who loves America).
Horowitz and co-writer Richard Poe (a freeper) searched the internet for information about Soros paying for Lynne Stewart's defense.
This is what they wrote in the book:
We typed "Lynne Stewart" and "Lynne Stewart Defense Committee" into the website's (Soro's web site) general and advanced search engines. Our searches produced no links to any Lynne Stewart listing in the Institute's grant database.
Only after much rambling around the internet did we finally locate a page on the FreeRepublic.com message board where an anonymous researcher using the screen name "piasa" just happened to have posted a direct web address to soros.org's grant listing for the Lynne Stewart Defense Committee. We found the link, but it took luck and persistence . Without "piasa", we might have failed. This experience ssuggests to us that, prior to Byron York's expose, potential donors wishing to avoid contribution to charities that fund terrorists might have found it difficult to learn about the Institute's involvement with Lynne Stewart.
Yeah, me, too. I'm SO sorry I deleted those e-mails.
Ok lets name one African nation that the West has not poured money into like water down a rat-hole? Stolen, used, what is the difference?
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