A Coalition of Civil Society Organisations (CSOs) have asked the US Department of Treasury’s Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC) to disregard the petition written by the Concerned Citizens on Economic Reform Nigeria (CCERN) seeking the investigation of the Nigerian National Petroleum Company Limited (NNPCL) and its CEO, Mele Kyari, for allegedly violating sanctions on Russian crude oil.
Speaking at a press briefing in Abuja on Monday, the coalition, represented by Comrade Splendour Agbonkpolor (Convener of Initiative for Leadership and Economic Watch); Chief Dominic Ogakwu (Convener of Civil Society Group for Good Governance); Comrade Jacob Okpanachi (Convener of Social, Political, Economic, Educational and Environmental Rights Initiative (SPEEERI) and Comrade Victor Itsede (Convener of Restore Nigeria Initiative) said their investigations showed that CCERN is not registered with Corporate Affairs Commission (CAC), thereby accusing the Group of impersonation as CCERN is not known to the coalition of civil society.
They explained that CCERN has been impersonating CSO to commit crimes. “Last week, we were flooded with calls from all sectors of Nigeria following a petition to the U.S. Department of the Treasury Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC) through its United States, Embassy in Abuja by one NGO self-styled as The Concerned Citizens on Economic Reform Nigeria, signed by two persons namely Comrade Tijani Ibrahim as Convener and Amb. Fatima Abubakar as Secretary.
“The petition titled ‘Persons of interest in the violation of the coalition-agreed price cap on Russian crude’ was against the GCEO of the Nigeria National Petroleum Company Limited, Mr Mele Kyari and the Chief Executive Officer of Matrix Energy group, Abdulkabir Adisa Aliu.
“The various calls to us from Nigerians centred on the fact that the office address listed on the group letterhead belongs to us and the name used by the group was also twisted to look like one of our own. The name of the convener also happens to be assumed to be one of us since we have such a name in our coalition.
“Gentlemen, we have gathered you here to denounce the letter written to the US government and to state categorically clear that we were impersonated by those who wrote it. For the records, the NGO who wrote it in disguise one of us is not registered with the Corporate Affairs Commission. Secondly, the two phone numbers used in their letterhead do not exist anywhere but were created out of their memories.
“Most importantly, the address listed there as Suite B5, 3rd Floor, Danville Plaza, No 5, David Ejoor Crescent, Abuja is currently unoccupied. We all occupied various sections of Danville Plaza for over ten years as NGOs but last year December, the owner of the place sold it and we all moved to new place. Even while we used the plaza as our office, there was nothing like B5 and it was never numbered that way. As we speak, the place is currently unoccupied and totally empty.
“We therefore wonder who will use a non-registered NGO to write to a country like the USA from a non-existing address, in order to make it look like our work as former occupants of the place.
“As NGOs, we do not subscribe to the blackmail of the NNPCL GCEO, Mele Kyari and the CEO of Matrix Energy, Abdulkabir Adisa Aliu and will not sit back and watch people impersonate organizations we have built credibly for years in order to make us look like enemies of a well-meaning Nigeria state. Anyone who has an axe to grind with NNPCL and its management as well as the Matrix Energy Group should be bold to use their registered NGO as well as address and not ours”.
The CSOs therefore asked the United States Department of the Treasury Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC) to disregard the petition submitted by the impersonators as it’s not “authored by any of us who are former occupants of the address in the non-existing NGO.
“We find it distasteful to be used by any group of persons or companies fighting for their own interests, and will be proceeding to submit a letter of withdrawal to the U.S. Department of the Treasury Office of Foreign Assets Control, through its United States, Embassy in Abuja on this issue that is almost eroding our integrity, credibility and reputation.”
The coalition also called on security agencies to investigate, unravel and prosecute the imposters in order to preserve the image of CSOs in Nigeria.