Vice President Yemi
Osinbajo has declared that Nigeria will continue to embrace transparency in the
extractive sector because it is in the country’s overriding national interest
to do so.
Osinbajo stated this during a
bilateral meeting with the Chairman of the Extractive Industries Transparency
Initiative (EITI), Mr. Fredrik Reinfeldt, on the side-lines of the
just-concluded EITI Beneficial Ownership Conference in Jakarta, Indonesia.
“Transparency in this sector
is very important for Nigeria. It is in our enlightened self-interest to do so
because of the strategic nature of this sector to our economy. So we are doing
this more for ourselves.
These are commitments that we
made with all sense of seriousness, not because we are looking for applause or
commendation, but because we are convinced they are in our best interests.”
At the bilateral meeting on
Monday, the Vice President reaffirmed the Buhari administration’s commitment to
a sustained EITI implementation in Nigeria and the establishment of a publicly
accessible register of the ultimate owners of companies operating in the
country.
Earlier in his keynote
address, Osinbajo had noted that the EITI implementation was in line with
President Muhammadu Buhari administration’s anti-corruption drive, and the
commitment the President made at the May 2016 London Anti-Corruption Summit.
The Vice President pledged
that the administration will continue to support the Nigeria Extractive
Industries Transparency Initiative (NEITI) to deliver on its mandates.
The EITI Chairman, a former
Prime Minister of Sweden, commended Osinbajo for his “outstanding speech” at
the opening plenary, and pledged that the EITI board and secretariat will
continue to support Nigeria in its initiatives.
Reinfeldt also praised Nigeria for attaining “meaningful progress” at the last validation despite the complexity of EITI operation in Nigeria.
Reinfeldt also praised Nigeria for attaining “meaningful progress” at the last validation despite the complexity of EITI operation in Nigeria.
Validation, which provides an
independent assessment of EITI implementation, is used to assess whether a
country implementing the EITI has met the requirements for compliance with the
EITI Standard.
The EITI, a global standard to
promote prudent management of oil, gas and mineral resources, is implemented in
52 countries, including Nigeria, which signed up to the initiative in 2003 and
started implementation in 2004. The implementation of EITI in Nigeria is backed
by the NEITI Act 2007. Nigeria is regarded as one of the leading EITI-implementing
countries as its operations have shaped the evolution of the global body.
The EITI Beneficial Ownership
Conference brought together representatives of governments, companies and civil
society groups to exchange ideas and share practices on how to end secret
ownership in the extractive sector in all EITI-implementing countries by
January 2020.
Others at the bilateral
meeting include the Minister of State for National Planning, Mrs. Zainab Ahmed,
who is also a member of the EITI board; the Nigerian Ambassador to Indonesia,
Mr Hakeem Balogun; and the Executive Secretary of NEITI, Mr. Waziri Adio.
The EITI chairman was
accompanied by Eddie Rich and Pablo Valverde, both of the EITI Secretariat in
Oslo, Norway.
Source: BusinessDay
No comments: