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The Nigerian National Petroleum Company Limited (NNPC), Group Chief Executive Officer, Mele Kyari has disclosed that it has discovered 295 illegal connections of crude oil pipeline via which oil theft is being perpetuated for years on focardos 48” trunk pipeline in Niger Delta.

 Mr. Kyari stated this at a Legislative Transparency & Accountability Summit in Abuja, organized by the House of Representatives Anti-Corruption Committee.

 “We have seen thousands of illegal refineries that we have taken down in the last 45 months. We have seen connection in a 200 kilometre line. we have up to 295 illegal connections to our pipelines and many of them have been there for years,” Kyari noted.

Kyari said oil theft has affected production which witnessed a downturn from about 1.8million barrels to 1.1 million about January of last year.

The NNPC boss noted that in spite of all the illegal activities, not all the oil was stolen.

In the same vein, the Federal High Court holden in Port Harcourt has remanded 16 foreign nationals who allegedly attempted to illegally lift crude oil from the Akpo field, offshore Bonny Island, on board the oil tanker, MT Heroic Idun. The 16 foreign nationals, who are from India, Sri Lanka, Philippines and Poland, were charged along side their vessel, MT Heroic Idun, on three count charge bordering on conspiracy, attempt to deal in crude oil theft without approvals within Nigeria’s Exclusive Economic Zone, and forceful pretence to become victims of maritime offence in order to resist arrest by the Nigerian Navy Ship Gongola.

The oil tanker almost the size of three football pitch and its 26 man crew had entered Nigerian waters on August 7, 2022 to lift crude oil in Akpo field, operated by TotalEnergies EP Nigeria Limited, without prerequisite approvals, and fled towards Equatorial Guinea when accosted by the Nigerian Navy. At Equatorial Guinea, the vessel was arrested and detained on August 10, 2022 and was handed over to the Nigerian Navy on November 6, 2022 in Malabo, with the Nigerian Navy bringing the vessel back to the country on Friday, November 11, 2022.

When the matter came up in court on Monday, only 16 out of the 26 crew members of MT Heroic Idun were arraigned and they all pleaded ‘not guilty’ to all three-count charge. When the case was called, the Prosecuting Counsel, Abidemi Adewumi-Aluko, said they had challenges in producing other 10 defendants in court, noting that they have already filled an amended charge to substitute the earlier charge.

Adewumi-Aluko requested that the other 10 defendants be produced in court, while the 16 defendants and the vessel take their plea and be remanded on board the vessel, pending when the other 10 takes their plea. Also, counsel to the defendants, Udace Ezeobi, who did not oppose the request, urged the court to allow the defendants access their lawyers and medical needs. The judge, Justice Turaki Muhammed, after listening to the both counsels, ruled that the defendants be allowed to access their medicals and remanded them on board the oil tanker. Muhammed adjourned the case to Tuesday November 15 for the other 10 defendants to be produced in court for their plea.

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