Saturday, March 26, 2016

Abuja, Lagos witness unprecedented fuel queues



Between Tuesday and Wednesday last week, the queues at most filling stations were thinning out, which excited most Nigerians.
But that has changed, due largely to the pronouncements of the Minister of State for Petroleum Resources, Dr. Ibe Kachikwu, after leading members of the National Union of
Petroleum and Natural Gas Workers (NUPENG) and Petroleum and Natural Gas Senior Staff Association of Nigeria (PENGASSAN) to a meeting with President Muhammadu Buhari, that the queues at filling stations would linger till May, this year.

Out of the possible excitement of the reduction in the queues, the minister, speaking to reporters at the Presidential Villa, dropped what appeared to be a new twist to the supply of petrol when he put a timeline of May for the queues to disappear.
The minister’s candour is in keeping with the administration’s policy to be open and sincere with Nigerians at all times.It was no surprise to see the queues resurfacing on Thursday morning after a spirited effort by the Group Public Affairs Division of the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) to put out a belated statement Wednesday night saying he did put a timeline to the supply of petrol.

In his comments, Kachikwu had said: “Of course, you are aware the DSAP programme begins in April, ‎so over the next two months, we should see quite frankly a complete elimination of this.”
“Our strategy is that whatever is produced in the refineries will not go for sale; we are going to keep them in strategic reserve, because the key problem here is that there is no reserve and anytime there is gap in supply it goes off.”
“So, we are going to dedicate the next couple of months to moving all the products that we produce to strategic reserve, so that we can pile up reserves in the nation and that will push up the reserves in the nation.”

 But few hours after Kachikwu granted the interview at the Villa, the NNPC issued a statement around 9: 00 pm accusing the media of “misinterpretation.”

However, the corporation was quick to stress that all efforts were in full gear to eliminate all extraneous factors that have so far impeded the free flow of petrol across the country, especially the issue of foreign exchange for oil marketers, which the minister is working with the Central Bank of Nigeria to resolve.
Again, the NNPC said the queues would disappear in “in the weeks ahead,” but declined to say how many weeks precisely. From Kubwa to Nyanyan, from Jikwoyi to Karu and from Kaduna Road to Gwagwalada, all in the Federal Capital Territory (FCT), and in most parts of Lagos, especially the outskirts, the scarcity was silently loud, as most families were on the road in search of the elusive product.
Most residents of Abuja suburbs converged on Wuse, Maitama and Garki few petrol stations that had petrol to dispense and formed centres of fights and struggles for fuel.

The scarcity has restricted the movement of many people in Lagos during the Easter period. As at yesterday many of them still queued for hours wanting to buy fuel at the few filling stations dispensing fuel.
Many people that queued up to buy petrol at Forte Oil, Ikeja along Airport Road were disgusted by the statement credited to Kachikwu.

Source: Guardian

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