
Lagos lawyer, Femi Falana, has kicked against suggestions that Nigeria
should sell off its national assets to raise funds for the country’s
ailing economy.
Nigeria’s business mogul and Africa’s richest man, Aliko Dangote, had
suggested that the federal government should sell off some national
assets like the multi-billion dollar Nigeria Liquefied Natural Gas
Limited, NLNG, and use the proceeds to pull the country from the current
economic recession.
“If I had challenges in my company, I would not hesitate to sell assets
to remain afloat, to get to the better times. It doesn’t make any sense
for me to keep any assets and then suffocate the whole organization,”
Mr. Dangote, who is the chairman, Dangote Group, told CNBC Africa.
“We have a lot of assets to sell. We can sell part of the joint
ventures, or part of the shares. My suggestion before was that they
should even sell 100 percent of NLNG. I don’t think government should be
in any business of investing in sectors like LNG.”
Mr. Dangote’s suggestion, backed by notable figures like Senate
President, Bukola Saraki, and Governor of Central Bank, Godwin Emefiele,
has generated intense debates among Nigerians.
Mr. Falana told Premium Times , Thursday, that the suggestion was “in
total conflict with section 16 of the (Nigerian) Constitution which has
prohibited the concentration of the nation’s wealth in the hands of a
few people or a group.
“Indeed, by virtue of section 44 of the Constitution, the nation’s
natural resources shall be held in trust for the Nigerian people by the
federal government.”
Falana said that senators would have been expected to kick against
Dangote’s suggestion, since they had sworn to protect the constitution.
“But for selfish considerations, a few legislators who may be queuing up
to participate in the purchase of the nation’s assets are not prepared
to defend the Constitution.
“If the senate is genuinely desirous to contribute meaningfully to the
debate on the economy, it should, as a matter of urgency, propose a
substantial reduction in the jumbo emoluments of federal legislators
which are said to be the highest in the world.” Falana said the
country’s privatization programme in the past was discovered to be a rip
off on the nation and the people, but that nothing was done about it,
despite a senate resolution, under the leadership of the then senate
president, David Mark, that the government should recover such assets.
President Muhammadu Buhari’s administration could still implement the
resolution of the senate for the interest of the national economy, Mr.
Falana said.
The lawyer advised the government to also go for the official quarters
that he said were “illegally sold” to the then Chief Justice of Nigeria,
Katsina-Alu, the then Senate President, Mr. Mark, and the then Speaker,
House of Representatives, Dimeji Bankole.
“It is on record that whereas the federal government had spent billions
of Naira to renovate the properties, each of them was fraudulently sold
for about N50 million,” Mr. Falana said.
“Many other properties of the federal government in Abuja, Lagos and
other cities were under many public officers and their cronies. Apart
from the recovery of the NET building in Lagos which was sold to the
father of a legislator for N4 billon instead of the market value of N75
billion, the sale of the other 531 properties of Nitel and other
agencies of the federal government located in the various parts of the
country have not been accounted for.”
Mr. Falana said, instead of selling the nation’s remaining assets, the
federal government could liquidate “over N5 trillion” of toxic debts and
also recover huge funds that were given as bailouts to banks and other
private companies during the eras of Sanusi Lamido and Chukwuma Soludo
as CBN governors.
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