Scientology
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Monday 3 July 2000
SENATE COMMITTEE SAYS NIGERIA SAVED $5 BILLION
FROM 1988-93 DEBT BUYBACK SCHEME
A committee of Nigeria's upper legislative chamber has backed
the strategy of debt buy back schemes in reducing the country's
huge external debt. The Senate committee's stance is contained
in a report on local and foreign debts that investigated
Nigeria's debt buy back transactions from 1983, especially the
controversial 1996 Ajaokuta debt buy back deal. In the report
made available to Nigeria Today Online at the weekend, the
committee, which was until recently led by Senator Idris
Abubakar, said it was wrong to insinuate that all debt buy back
schemes approved by past governments were fraudulent. The
committee stated that the debt buy back scheme undertaken
between 1988 and 1993 was beneficial to Nigeria because the
country was able to reduce its debt by $5 billion. The
committee noted that the full benefits of the debt buyback
scheme were yet to be fully achieved and urged President
Olusegun Obasanjo to continue the ''scope of the debt
conversion programme by all means at its disposal'' as a
deliberate policy. The committee however cast aspersions on
the conduct of the 1996 Ajaokuta debt buy back scheme.
The 1988-1993 debt buy back deals were handled by the Central
Bank of Nigeria (CBN), through the former governor, the late
Alhaji Abdulkadir Ahmed. The CBN used a subsidiary company,
Greenland Holdings, while the Ajaokuta deal was handled by the
Federal Ministry of Finance. London based former footballer,
John Fashanu, two months ago alleged financial impropriety in
the 1988-93 scheme. His accusing fingers were pointed at
retired American investment banker Bob Minton, whose firm
handled the 1988-93 scheme. Responding to Fashanu's allegations
at a public forum which the United Kingdom resident, failed to
attend, Minton said Fashanu was being used by the Scientology
organisation in the United States with which he had a
three-year battle over the group's alleged human rights
violations and murder of certain persons which he was trying to
expose.
''If people had plundered Nigeria, they should be brought to
book, but such a campaign would lose its focus if the main
motivation is vendetta. The Fashanu Report was a document
conceived out of vendetta. As far as I am concerned Fashanu is
being economical with the truth. He should focus on those who
stole Nigeria's money and not people like me who are being
maligned for a completely different reason'' Minton told a
public forum in Howard University, Washington D.C. last month.
Privately, Fashanu has denied allegations that he had offered
to sell his unsubstantiated findings to the federal government
to the tune of 500 million naira. He has also failed to refute
the allegations in public.
The senate committee, in its report, concurred that the debt
buy back deals undertaken by Greenland Holdings were beneficial
to the country. "There is no doubt that the London Club debt
buyback done by government through the instrumentality of the
offshore company, Greenland Holdings, was transparent and
enjoyed input from all concerned at all levels within the CBN
who were responsible for the debt and therefore handled the
debt buy back.....It was covered by the CBN procedure for debt
buy backs and attracted little or no controversy at least
within the country. Possibly as a result of the openness with
which it was done, it attracted the attention and ire of the
government of US which advised in strong terms that the
operation of the Nigerian government be closed down before it
seriously embarrassed the nation."
The committee, stated that the debt conversion programme of the
CBN, had a clearly defined procedure which included advertising
the Nigerian debts available for purchase while open bids were
conducted on regular basis. The committee pointed out that the
Greenland debt buy back resulted in a reduction of Nigeria’s
debt by $5 billion..."
The committee did not give a clean bill of health for the
Ajaokuta debt which was handled by the Federal Ministry of
Finance. "The Ministry of Finance (MOF) stated in the memo
submitted that no procedure existed for the purchase of the
debts managed by the MOF. Mr. Ani who testified as a
representative of the Minister of Finance re-emphasised this
position in his oral submission. The submission of Chief
Anthony Ani who was then the Minister of Finance also confirms
this fact. Intense pressure from the committee could not
produce any record of any completed debt buy back transaction
in the MOF other than Ajaokuta Steel Complex Limited (ASCL).
The committee did not therefore have the benefit of any other
completed transaction for it to draw any inference as to the
procedure that should have been followed in the ASCL debt buy
back." The committee pointed out that debts managed by the
finance ministry had no procedure for buying those debts back.