News Agency of Nigeria
Forensic expert advocates robust private sector investment in fraud prevention

Forensic expert advocates robust private sector investment in fraud prevention

                                          

By Monday Ijeh

An Author and Forensic Expert, Dr Pearl Ogbulu has called for robust private sector investment in fraud prevention to position Nigeria as a safe destination for investment.

Ogbulu made the call on Wednesday in Abuja at a news conference ahead of her book launch, titled “Fraud Unmasked: Forensic Fraud Solutions” and the maiden Joint Security Forensic Conference.

The author said strengthened laws to support inter agency collaboration and citizens’ vigilance were also keys to curbing the activities of fraudsters in the country.

She said the launch of the book was a defining moment for professionals, leaders, and citizens that believed in the power of knowledge, collaboration, and shared responsibility in building a stronger and safer Nigeria.

Ogbulu said fraud was a silent predator that infiltrates systems, drains resources, and corrodes public trust.

According to her, fraud does not just steal money, it steals opportunities, livelihoods, and futures.

“Over the years, in my work within the fields of economics, energy, forensic accounting, and risk management, I have seen that combating fraud requires more than reactive enforcement.

“It demands a proactive, strategic, and multidisciplinary approach and that is why I wrote the book – Fraud Unmasked.

“It is not just a book; it is a toolkit, but a collection of tested forensic methods, investigative insights, and policy recommendations.

“It is designed to help institutions detect fraud early, prevent its occurrence, and respond with precision when it is discovered,” she said.

She said the book was written to assist the bankers, auditors, policymakers, entrepreneurs, investigators and ordinary citizens who want to understand the workings of fraud and how it could be stopped.

Ogbulu said the theme of the conference, “One Nation, One Network” was deliberate, considering the fact that fragmentation was a major weakness in the fight against fraud and insecurity in the country.

“Agencies work in silos, data is not shared in real time, and valuable intelligence is lost in bureaucratic bottlenecks.

“Imagine what could happen if our law enforcement bodies, financial regulators, security services, tech experts, academic institutions, and civic organizations worked together as one network, sharing information, best practices, and coordinated strategies.

“That vision is why this conference was born and during the sessions, we will hear from experts in forensic science, cyber security, risk management, and governance.

“We will explore practical tools and technologies, and most importantly, we will begin building the kind of unified, intelligent, and resilient network that our nation needs,” she said. (NAN)

Edited by Yakubu Uba

Group seeks forensic audit of refineries, disputes bn repairs claim

Group seeks forensic audit of refineries, disputes $18bn repairs claim

By Lucy Ogalue

The Independent Media and Policy Initiative (IMPI) has called for a comprehensive forensic audit of Nigeria’s four state-owned refineries covering the period from 2000 to 2023.

 

Dr Omoniyi Akinsiju, Chairman of IMPI, said this in a statement on Friday in Abuja.

 

Akinsiju also faulted allegation by the African Democratic Congress (ADC) that successive All Progressives Congress (APC) administrations had spent 18 billion dollars on refinery rehabilitation.

 

The IMPI chairman dismissed the claim as misleading, insisting that decades of mismanagement and opaque spending predated APC rule and deserves full scrutiny.

 

“We do not object to an audit, but limiting it to the APC years alone is a disservice to transparency.

 

“A credible audit must trace all disbursements from the year 2000 onward, which is when Nigeria’s refinery woes deepened under civilian rule,” he said.

 

Akinsiju provided a historical breakdown of the various Turnaround Maintenance (TAM) contracts awarded since the 1990s, many of which he said delivered little to no improvement.

 

He cited specific cases, including a 1994 contract awarded to Chrome Oil Services Limited for the Port Harcourt refinery, which reportedly yielded poor results in spite a 216 million dollar spend.

 

The IMPI boss recalled how successive administrations spent over 4.6 billion dollars between 2000 and 2015, yet left the refineries in disrepair.

 

He said that this included administrations led by former Presidents Olusegun Obasanjo and Goodluck Jonathan collectively.

 

He pointed to a 2015 NNPC internal report which revealed that no proper maintenance had occurred since 2001, with aging infrastructure and untraceable components stalling operations.

 

On the role of the APC administrations, Akinsiju said that while late former President Muhammadu Buhari did commit resources to refinery rehabilitation, the process was fundamentally different from past TAM exercises.

 

He referenced contracts awarded in 2021 for full-scale rehabilitation and quoted former NNPC Group Chief Executive, Mele Kyari to explain the distinction.

 

“We are not doing turnaround maintenance; we are doing rehabilitation of the refineries, and this is very different.

 

“It means that we are replacing certain major components. In rehabilitation, we normally do not shut down the plant completely.

 

“We repair a segment of it, and then it starts working, and then you move to the next segment.

 

“You continue to scale up, which is why, within the four years, the contractor would have completely left your premises,” he quoted Kyari as saying.

 

Akinsiju said that a full-spectrum audit would help Nigeria account for billions of dollars and shape future oil and gas policies, particularly in the midstream sector.

 

“We must clarify history and ensure accountability. This is not about party politics but national interest and public trust.”(NAN)(www.nannews.ng)

Edited by Kadiri Abdulrahman

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