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Churches, mosques house stolen Nigerian fuel in pervasive oil theft, says NNPC head

Lagos, Nigeria
Reuters

Every section of Nigerian society is complicit in the theft of millions of barrels, the head of state oil company NNPC Ltd said on Tuesday, adding that make-shift pipelines and stolen fuel had even been found in churches and mosques.

Large-scale theft from the nation’s pipelines has throttled exports, forced some companies to shut in production and crippled the country’s finances.

Nigeria Lagos illegal oil well

An illegally-dug oil well is seen at Ilashe in Lagos, Nigeria, on 23rd January, 2020. PICTURE: Reuters/Temilade Adelaja/File photo.

NNPC chief Mele Kyari said he was not accusing institutions, including government, but at virtually every level of Nigerian society, individuals were siphoning off a total of around 200,000 barrels per day from what is typically Africa’s largest exporter. 

“Some of the pipelines and some of the products that we found are actually in churches and in mosques,” Kyari said, adding this meant those complicit included “members of the communities, members of the religious leadership and also, most likely, government officials”.

It was not immediately clear if the government had found crude oil, in addition to fuel, in those places.

The impact on exports is a reduction of 700,000 bpd, Kyari said, because theft had forced at least 700 “lock-ins” of oil production. 

“No-one produces oil so that the next person can take it,” he said. “The wise thing to do is to stop production.”



Kyari said some of the pipeline taps were so sophisticated that they ran for three to four kilometres and would have involved cranes, industrial equipment and at least 40 workers.

NNPC has engaged companies, including those owned by ex-militants, to stem theft, and Kyari said the nation’s anti-graft agency was also following the cash and would prosecute those involved.

Kyari said Nigeria was building a “national reserve company” that would run the pipelines on a commercial basis and would be able to manage theft and other issues differently. 

“In the meantime, there is very little else we can do except continue to manage [moving oil] on trucks,” he said.

 

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