The House of Representatives Special Committee on Crude Oil Theft has emphasised the need for a special court to try saboteurs and crude oil thieves wreaking havoc in Nigeria’s oil and gas sector, saying their activities undermine the country’s socio-economic development and national security.
The Chairman of the Committee, Mr. Alhassan Ado Doguwa, and other stakeholders made the call at a stakeholders’ meeting held by the committee in Abuja.
The meeting was part of a series of engagements organised by the committee to identify ways of curbing the menace of crude oil theft in the country.
Mr. Doguwa also stated that tackling criminals engaged in crude oil theft and sabotage in the oil and gas sector requires a review of existing legislation on penalties to make them commensurate with the gravity of the offences.
He noted that weak legislation dating back to the military era has become outdated and has emboldened criminals because the penalties prescribed are too lenient to deter repeat offences.
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“We have been able to achieve some very remarkable progress in the course of our interface. We all agreed to work on the same page to address the existing legal frameworks and some of the bottlenecks affecting them.
“The global oil and gas economy is now in an advanced stage. Virtually all oil-producing countries are making progress because they have provided effective legal instruments to address their challenges. For this reason, we believe Nigeria should also review some of its laws.
“Some may ask what happens to the PIA. This has got nothing to do with the PIA. The PIA merely addresses the fundamentals and basic principles of doing business within the global oil economy. None of its commitments or provisions will be affected.
“However, we still have old legislation, some dating back to the military era, including military decrees and orders, which are still being applied at various levels. The courts have no option but to rely on those laws.
“Unless we provide new measures, new laws and a new legal framework, the courts will continue to rely on this obsolete legislation in handling serious criminality within Nigeria’s oil and gas sector.
“I want to assure Nigerians that the National Assembly, especially the House of Representatives, through this committee, will partner with the Office of the National Security Adviser to effectively combat crude oil theft and every other criminal activity within the oil and gas environment.
“We must not forget that our daily crude oil production target in the budget remains below expectations. Until we address this problem, our production projections may continue to fall short.
“Major stakeholders present at this meeting included members of the Armed Forces. Representatives of the Nigerian Army, Nigerian Air Force, Nigerian Navy, the Nigeria Police Force and the Nigeria Security and Civil Defence Corps were all represented by senior officers.” Mr. Doguwa said.
