Fuel Scarcity Looms As Oil Marketers Threaten Strike Over N800bn Subsidy Debt

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Nigerians may experienced a difficult Yuletide following Oil marketers’ seven-day ultimatum to the federal government to pay the outstanding N800 billion subsidy debts to avoid shut down of oil depots across the country.

The threat which is likely to jolt Nigerians into bracing up for a difficult Yuletide is coming weeks after the Labour unions have suspended its industrial action on the new minimum wage demand.

The marketers, comprising Major Oil Marketers Association of Nigeria, Depot and Petroleum Products Marketers Association and Independent Petroleum Products Importers, said the debt was adversely impacting their operations, and failure by the government to meet the deadline would force its members to disengage workers from depots.

Mr Patrick Etim, Legal Adviser to IPPI lamented that banks have taken over investments and assets of oil marketers over unpaid debts and are faced with the option to ask their workers stay at home over unpaid salary arrears due to huge subsidy debts owed by the government.

“The only way to salvage the situation is for government to pay the oil marketers the outstanding debts through cash option instead of promissory note being proposed.

“As I speak, nothing has been done several months after assurances received by government saying it would pay off the outstanding debts.

“The oil marketers have requested that forex differential and interest component of government’s indebtedness to marketers be calculated up to December 2018 and be paid within next seven days from the date of the letter sent to the government,’’ he said.

Etim said that several thousand jobs were on the line in the industry, as oil marketers begin to cut-down their workforce due to inability to pay salaries.

“At the inception of the current administration, marketers engaged the government with the view to secure approval for all outstanding subsidy-induced debts handed over to the current administration,’’ he said.

The counsel said that the current administration paid part of the debts with a substantial portion of the subsidy interest and foreign exchange differential still pending.

The Executive Secretary of DAPPMA, Mr Olufemi Adewole, also confirmed the seven-day ultimatum notice.

Adewole disclosed that the oil marketers on November 28 served the ultimatum letter on the Debt Management Office, Minister of Finance, Chairman, Senate Committee on Petroleum Downstream, Department of State Services and Minister of State, Petroleum Resources.

“We urge the DMO to process and pay marketers in cash for their outstanding forex differentials and interest component claims, together with the amount already approved by the Federal Executive Council (FEC) and the National Assembly.”

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