An Indian firm, Continental Transfer Technique
Limited, has hijacked a sensitive national security project – the Combined Expatriate
Residence Permit and Aliens Card – (CERPAC) which was supposed to be managed by the
Nigeria Immigration Service.
Apart from controlling the sales of the residence
permits to foreigners, each of which goes for $1,000 (about N250, 000) and is
valid for two years, the company has also sidelined the NIS and it is the sole
manager of the project.
Findings indicate that the contract was awarded
to CONTEC in 1999 by the Ministry of Interior on a build-operate-and-transfer
basis and it took off in May 2002 after installation of equipment and systems
by the contractor.
Investigations by our correspondent indicated
that the project should have been handed over to the NIS in 2006, but this was
not done as the firm had refused to train immigration service officers on the
nitty-gritty of the project and had been using its own workers ever since.
Apart from controlling the production of the
vital security cards, CONTEC also excluded the immigration service in the sale
of the security document, according to sources.
The implication of this, according to NIS
officers, is that the firm can unilaterally issue the CERPAC cards to
foreigners and illegal migrants who may pose a security threat to the country.
According to the contract agreement, the company
was supposed to produce 900,000 CERPAC cards at the profit-sharing formula of
60 per cent for the Federal Government, 30 per cent for CONTEC and 10 per cent
for the ministry for operational expenses.
But the firm failed to meet the target as it was
producing only 37,000 cards per annum instead of 300,000.
The Federal Government had attempted to take over
the project in 2007 following the inability of CONTEC to meet the production
targets of 300,000 residence permits and 200,000 aliens’ registration
certificates annually, but the move was resisted by the firm which demanded
N5bn pay off.
In 2009, the then Minister of Interior, Godwin
Abe, wrote a letter to then President Umaru Yar’Adua informing him about the
need to review and possibly revoke the contract with the firm.
In the letter dated February 17, 2009 and
obtained by our correspondent, Abe narrated how the CERPAC project was awarded
to the detriment of the nation. He stressed that those who signed the contract
agreement with the firm “did a disservice to our country as it was heavily
skewed in favour of Messrs CONTEC.”
Abe further explained that he arranged for a
meeting with the then Attorney-General of the Federation, Michael Andoaaka,
adding that he was accompanied by the Minister of State, the Permanent
Secretary, Comptroller-General of Immigration and Director, Finance &
Accounts and the legal adviser.
At the meeting on April 17, 2008 with CONTEC, the
minister stated that the sum of N3.67bn was offered as exit option to the firm,
adding that he also offered to pay off the company the sum of N1bn.
He said, “CONTEC resolutely rejected our offer
and even refrained from making a counter-offer, despite promptings from the
members including the representative of the Attorney-General of the Federation,
to indicate what they wanted.”
In spite of Abe’s advice to the government to
either review or revoke the contract, checks showed that nothing had changed as
CONTEC is still in control of the project and may remain so for a long time.
A brief on the NIS presented by the CG,
Immigration Service, Martin Abeshi, to the Minister of Interior, Lt. Gen.
Abdulrahman Dambazzau (retd.) on November 26, 2015 indicated that the reviewed
contract agreement on the project favoured CONTEC.
When asked for comment on the discrepancies in
the project management, the spokesman for CONTEC, Tunde Ayansanwo, directed all
inquiries on the project to the immigration service, stressing that it was
being managed under a tripartite arrangement between the firm, the Federal
Government and the immigration service.
He said, “The project is being managed under a
tripartite arrangement between CONTEC, the Federal Government and the
Immigration Service. So, we cannot comment on it, please direct your enquiries
to the immigration service.”
The CG, Martin Abeshi, also declined to comment.
He said questions on the project could best be answered by the ministry.
“I am sorry; this question can best be answered
by the Ministry of Interior, not NIS please. NIS did not sign any contract with
CONTEC,” he said in a text message.
The Director of Press, Ministry of Interior,
Alhaji Isiaka Yusuf, in turn passed the buck to the immigration service.
Findings indicate that past interior ministers
had turned blind eyes to the anomalies observed in the contract as pointed out
by Abe in his letter to Yar’Adua.
For instance, rather than address the
discrepancies in the CERPAC project, the immediate past Minister of Interior,
Abba Moro, awarded a new project to CONTEC in which he awarded a higher
percentage of the profit to the company against the Federal Government.
Investigations reveal that Moro approved the
award of an e-Pass biometric project to CONTEC on behalf of the NIS without
advertising it for competitive bidding in violation of the Public Procurement
Act.
According to Section 17 of the Act, requests for
proposal for contracts must be advertised in at least two national newspapers
of general circulation and the Federal Tender’s Journal, but this was not done.
Moro, according to the document obtained by our
correspondent, favoured the private firm in the sharing formula for the
proceeds of the project which was based on Private-Public-Partnership
arrangement.
Visitors who stay in the country beyond 56 days
but not exceeding 90 days would pay a fee in the equivalent of $200 while 91
days to 180 days will attract a fee equivalent to $1,000 which must be paid to
Sterling Bank Plc only.
According to the scheme, an aggregate stay by
immigrants beyond 180 days but not exceeding 365 days would attract a fee
equivalent to $2,000 while an over-stay without due permission from the Federal
Government would attract a penalty which is 100 per cent of the prescribed
fees.
An additional fee of N8, 000 will be charged for
each application form by the receiving bank.
Parradang had, in his letter to Moro on the
e-Pass project, proposed that the government should abolish the issuance of
re-entry visa while adding a $100 fee to the $1,000 being charged for the
Combined Expatriate Residence Permit and Aliens Card.
Parradang had proposed that the service provider,
CONTEC be given 15 per cent of the $100 added to the CERPAC fee while NIS
collects 15 per cent.
But Moro, who signed the letter, amended the
sharing formula by giving 30 per cent to the service provider against the 15
per cent suggested by the immigration service.
A retired Commissioner of Police, Alhaji Abubakar
Tsav, called on the Federal Government to investigate the observed
discrepancies in the management of the CERPAC project.
He warned about the security implications of allowing
a foreign private firm to manage such a sensitive project which has a bearing
on national security, particularly now that the country is fighting an
insurgency.
Tsav said, “The Federal Government must direct
the company to hand over the project to the immigration service immediately
given the security implications; allowing a private foreign company to handle
such a sensitive national project have serious consequences because they could
bring in anybody into the country.
“They can use the alien cards for diabolical
purposes just like the way Nnamdi Kanu brought in transmitters for his Radio
Biafra project. The government needs to find out the people behind the
company.”
Culled from PUNCH
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