Posts Tagged ‘economy’

Flash: Influential Nigerians Behind Oil Theft, Piracy – NIMASA DG; Won’t Reveal Names Because Of 2015 Elections

Crude-oil-theft

The Director-General of the Nigerian Maritime Administration and Safety Agency, NIMASA, Patrick Akpobolokemi, said yesterday that influential Nigerians, including politicians, were behind piracy and oil theft in the country.

Akpobolokemi, who spoke with journalists in Abuja, however, refused to mention their names.

The DG explained that though there was nothing wrong about disclosing their names, he nonetheless said many might read political meanings into it in view of the coming 2015 general elections.

He said: “Many pirates had been arrested. Those who are into piracy are doing it on behalf of influential Nigerians.

“Lagos was a no-go-area before now. We have taken on those behind piracy and oil theft. Today you can hardly hear news of piracy in Lagos because of the cooperation we had with the authorities of the Benin Republic. We will clean up the industry.

“The area we have been having challenge is prosecution; but the Attorney General of the Federation is also stepping into it.

“For the names of the influential Nigerians behind piracy and oil theft, I will be content to say it is a sensitive issue. We may not be able to release names now.

“That is not to say there is anything secret about their names. I will reveal all the big names involved. But people should not come and say it is ethnic cleansing or that it is because of 2015 general elections.”

Courtesy National Mirror

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Flash: NLNG Declares Force Majeure On Exports Over Leaks At Shell Facility In Rivers

NLNG

Nigeria Liquefied Natural Gas (NLNG) has declared force majeure on liquefied natural gas exports from its 22 million tonnes-a-year terminal after a leak at a Royal Dutch Shell facility, the Nigerian company said on Friday.

Shell declared force majeure on gas supplies to the export terminal on Wednesday, blaming a leak along the Eastern Gas Gathering System near Awoba in Rivers State. Around 1.5 billion standard cubic feet of gas per day is impacted, it said.

The move comes barely a month after force majeure on supplies to the plant was lifted on April 18, and at a time when Shell is reporting rising cases of sabotage and oil theft.

Courtesy Reuters

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Flash: New York Breaks Multi-Million-Dollar Cigarette Smuggling Ring Linked To Militants

Cigarrette-smuggling ring

Suspects in a smuggling ring that made a fortune selling more than a million of cartons of untaxed cigarettes in New York, including, from left, Yousseff Odeh; Murad Bishrat, Saad Badr and Izzat Nimer, are led chained together through the corridors of the Federal Courthouse in the Brooklyn Borough of New York, Thursday, May 16, 2013. (AP/New York Daily Photo)

Fifteen men of Palestinian origin have been arrested on charges of running a multi-million-dollar cigarette smuggling ring in New York, and New York authorities who announced the arrests on Thursday said several of the suspects have ties to Hamas and other Islamist militant groups.

The men are accused of smuggling more than a million cartons of untaxed cigarettes from Virginia to be sold in grocery stores across New York, with $55 million in sales uncovered so far, Eric Schneiderman, the New York attorney general, and Ray Kelly, the New York City police commissioner, said at a press conference.

“We don’t know where all of that money went, but what we do know is deeply troubling,” Schneiderman said. “We know that some members of this group have ties to very dangerous people, we know they were arrested with weapons, we know that they made tens of millions of dollars but so far we have found only a fraction of that.”

Investigators are still tracking where much of the money ended up, but they noted similar rings in the past have funneled money to Hamas, the Islamist government in Gaza, and Hezbollah, the militant Shi’ite group based in Lebanon, both of which are considered to be terrorist organizations by the United States.

All 15 men remained in custody on Thursday and could not be reached for comment. It was not immediately clear if they had retained lawyers.

A 16th man accused of taking part in the ring, Ribhi Awadeh, 39, from Guttenberg, New Jersey, remained at large after flying to Jordan several weeks ago, Schneiderman said.

In a 224-count indictment, the men are charged with enterprise corruption, money laundering and other tax crimes, for which each defendant faces up to 25 years in prison if convicted. In addition to costing New York State and New York City an estimated $80 million in lost sales tax revenue, the ring generated at least $10 million in profit, Schneiderman and Kelly said.

None of the men lived extravagantly, Schneiderman said, adding that this supported the idea the money was being funneled elsewhere.

“This is not the lifestyles of the rich and famous,” Schneiderman said. “We are very concerned about where the money went.”

Kelly said that Youssef Odeh, 52, of Staten Island, who is accused of being a distributor for the ring, received an investment for an illegal baby formula distribution business in the 1990s from Omar Abdel Rahman, often dubbed the “blind sheik,” who is imprisoned for helping plot the 1993 World Trade Center bombing.

Muaffaq Askar, 46, of Brooklyn, who is accused of being one of the ring’s resellers, was a confidant of Rashid Baz, Kelly said. Baz, a Lebanese immigrant, is serving a 141-year prison sentence after being convicted in the 1994 shooting of Ari Halberstam, a 16-year-old yeshiva student in Brooklyn, which Baz said was in retaliation for the killing of Muslim worshippers in the West Bank by a Jewish settler from Brooklyn.

Mohannad Seif, 39, of Brooklyn, another accused reseller, had been under police surveillance in part because he had lived in the same three-story Brooklyn building as a former secretary to Moussa Abu Marzouk, a deputy leader of Hamas.

Authorities said the ring was headed by two brothers, Basel Ramadan, 42, and Samir Ramadan, 40, both of Ocean City, Maryland, who ran a couple of local Subway restaurant franchises. Investigators said they found $1.4 million stashed in Basel Ramadan’s home, some of it stuffed in black plastic trash bags, and three handguns following his arrest on Thursday.

The ring bought cigarettes from a wholesaler in Virginia and kept them in a storage facility in Delaware, Schneiderman said.

A co-conspirator, Adel Abuzahrieh, 42, of Brooklyn, was accused of driving from New York to Delaware several times a week to exchange cash for cigarettes, and then return with the illicit goods for resale.

Two of the accused men are in the United States illegally, according to Immigrations and Customs Enforcement. Others, including the Ramadan brothers, are naturalized citizens, while the rest are legal permanent residents.

Courtesy Reuters

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A Must-Read: Like Alaska…..Like Bakassi By Yemi Saka

alaska-maps Two-Direction-Arrow Bakassi Peninsula

It’s no longer news that the Nigerian government has declared it won’t be appealing the Bakaasi verdict, I therefore need all legal and rational minds to join me in evaluating the issue at hand.

If the Federal Government had made such declaration, methink in the spirit of true federalism, Gov. Lyel Imoke of Cross Rivers State can either file a new suit or appeal the verdict, or seek an injunction to be joined as a party in the suit at the International Court of Justice.

Another option is for the indigenes and residents of the Bakassi Peninsula to seek for autonomy and recognition from/of the United Nations and international community.

They have a good case (my humble opinion). It appears the Nigerian government did not consider them important whilst they deem it pertinent to preserve their heritage; they have consistently refused and rejected being part of Cameroun! I believe being an independent colony won’t be a bad idea.

Also, if the United States through the Alaska Purchase got the acquisition of the Alaska territory from the Russian Empire in the year 1867 by a treaty ratified by the Senate, I don’t see why the Nigerian Government did not offer to purchase the disputed region from Cameroun.

A peep into why and how United state acquired Alaska revealed that Russia, fearing a war with Britain that would allow the British to seize Alaska, wanted to sell. Its major role had been forcing Native Alaskans to hunt for furs for them, along with missionary work to convert them. The purchase, made at the initiative of United States Secretary of State William H. Seward, gained 586,412 square miles (1,518,800 km2) of new territory.

Originally organized as the Department of Alaska, the area was successively the District of Alaska and the Alaska Territory before becoming the modern state of Alaska upon being admitted to the Union as a state in 1959.

Russia was in a difficult financial position and feared losing Russian America without compensation in some future conflict, especially to the British, whom they had fought in the Crimean War (1853–1856). While Alaska attracted little interest at the time, the population of nearby British Columbia started to increase rapidly a few years after hostilities ended, with a large gold rush there prompting the creation of a British crown colony on the mainland.

The Russians decided that in any future war with Britain, their hard-to-defend region might become a prime target, and would be easily captured. Therefore the Tsar Alexander II decided to sell the territory. Perhaps in hopes of starting a bidding war, both the British and the Americans were approached. However, the British expressed little interest in buying Alaska. The Russians in 1859 offered to sell the territory to the United States, hoping that its presence in the region would offset the plans of Russia’s greatest regional rival, Great Britain. However, no deal was brokered due to the American Civil War.

Russia continued to see an opportunity to weaken British power by causing British Columbia, including the Royal Navy base at Esquimalt, to be surrounded or annexed by American territory.

Following the Union victory in the Civil War, the Tsar instructed the Russian minister to the United States, Eduard de Stoeckl, to re-enter into negotiations with Seward in the beginning of March 1867.  The negotiations was concluded after an all-night session with the signing of the treaty at 4 a.m. on March 30, 1867, with the purchase price set at $7.2 million, or about 2 cents per acre ($4.74/km2).
It was ‘a frozen wilderness.

While criticized by some at the time, the financial value of the Alaska Purchase turned out to be many times greater than what the United States had paid for it. The land turned out to be rich in resources (including gold, copper, and oil).

The similarities here are many…

Cameroun can not be said to have a growing economy and as good as a nation having financial crisis….The Bakaasi Peninsula is believed to be rich in oil deposit….

If President Goodluck Ebele Jonathan had offered to purchase or purchased this disputed region, the act/action would have shut me up forever. He would have redefined our nation’s foreign policy in which premium importance is placed on the lives of every Nigerian. And with/in the same breathe, show he will stop at nothing to defend Nigeria’s territory and sovereignty.

They might claim “lack of funds” but paying Cameroun $25billion to have Nigerians remain Nigerians to me is not a waste. At least, Nigeria spent N2.2b on London (Summer) Olympics 2012, budgeted N2.8b to maintain and renovate Presidential buildings, FG spent N10b on Independence day celebration, N1.75tr on subsidy as at April 2012 and the President, VP and SGF are to spend N1.59b on welfare this year alone just to mention a few.

And most certainly not forgetting the jumbo pay of all members of the National Assembly…..

- Yemi Saka (Twitter: @patriotic_yemisak) writes from Lagos, Nigeria

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Flash: Nigeria To Increase Foreign Borrowing, As Debt Hits N6 Trillion

The Federal Government will increase its foreign borrowing using part of the loans to offset its domestic debt, the Minister of State for Finance, Yerima Ngama, has said.

Mr. Ngama who briefed journalists after the weekly Federal Executive Council meeting said the Council approved a medium term debt management strategy. The strategy is expected to free more cash for domestic lending for the private sector in the country.

He said part of the new policy is to reduce the domestic borrowing as well as access concessionary windows and raise foreign loans which will be used to actually pay the more expensive domestic debts.

The minister said the policy was put together by the Debt Management Office, Central Bank, Ministry of National Planning, the World Bank, and the National Bureau of Statistics.

The new government strategy is expected to follow the restructuring of the high domestic debt profile, which makes it less expensive to service .

The strategy will also through a comprehensive plan exit the corridors of high domestic debts.

Low foreign debt, High domestic debt

The finance minister explained that Nigeria’s current foreign debt was insignificant and could not create problems for the country as it is just 12 per cent, with the remaining 88 per cent as domestic debt.

“We had four options. One option is to continue as we are doing. Option (two) is to say ok, we are not going to do much but let us borrow more of the twenty year bonds where we raise them and use them to pay down the one year, two years and five year debts so that space will be left for the private sector to operate, which means we are reliving ourselves, giving ourselves time in order to retire the bonds that will actually free some resources for us.

“The third option is to see how we can access concessionary windows or raise cheaper foreign loans and use them to actually pay down the more expensive domestic debts.

“Once we tilt the structure, from 84% to 16% , 84 is concessional while the 16% is non concessional, then the domestic and foreign will also tilt to that. So we can have maybe 40 percent foreign debt and 60 percent domestic debt.

“If we do that after we play it out we are going to reduce out total debt burden to .5% by the year 2015 and we think that is better than the level we are today which is just 2.2%,” he said.

The minister explained that contrary to fears being expressed about increased foreign borrowing, it would help the country. He said the foreign borrowings would be gradual.

“When we do that we can bring a lot of benefits to the country and we will manage the finances free and also reduce the cost of borrowing and that mixed option is the one that the federal government approved and we are happy for that approval.

“One thing is that we are not just going to do it overnight we won’t just start taking loans from abroad or selling bonds we will do it very gradually. We are going to have a smooth transmission so that everything is well managed and that there is no shock to the system,” he said.

N6 trillion debts not high

The Finance Minister said at N6 trillion, Nigeria’s debt was not too high, but for the cost of servicing the debts.
“Nigeria has one of the highest interest rates in the developing world and if you have high level of debt, then the debt servicing will become very expensive”.

He also announced that the government was working to reduce the cost of domestic debt servicing to bring it to as low as 0. 5 % of the Gross Domestic Product, GDP from the current level of 2.5% of the GDP.

He listed the major factor that increased domestic debt as wage increase to civil servants in 2010 which increased wages by as high as 54 % forcing government to borrow N 3.6 trillion to pay salary; adding that since then, federal government budget had incurred deficit of N1 trillion annually.

He gave other reasons for the high domestic debt to include non-payment of local contractors who have executed contract not captured in the budget, and the payment of the pension and gratuity to former staff of the Nigeria Telecommunications Limited, NITEL.

N699 n to service debts in 2012

Mr. Ngama further disclosed that in 2012 alone, the federal government had spent the sum of N699 billion to service debts.

“Government had no choice but to borrow to sustain the level of funding. The new objective is now to reduce growth of such funds and ensure that the rate at which the debt is increasing is decreasing”.

“So, we think that the position as its at the moment is not good for us. We have high interest rate, high debt servicing, last year alone, we paid about N699 billion to service the debt and that compared to the other budgetary provision for our capital expenditure which just over a Trillion, then you realized that we are having a disproportionate cost of debt financing,” he said.

He explained that when government borrows that much, the private sector’s main source of fund will have part of its portfolio in government securities, which means that there is little money left for the private sector to borrow from because government has borrowed most of the money and this will affect the rate at which the economy is growing.

“Intact the entire sector had a liquidity ratio of over 50 per cent which means that there is little money left to the private sector to borrow because government has borrowed most of the money and this is affecting the rate at which our economy is growing,” he said.

Foreign Reserve increases

Mr. Ngama also disclosed that Nigeria’s reserve is now above $53 billion. This, he said, is made up of foreign reserve of $45 billion; excess crude of $7 billion and Sovereign Wealth Fund of $1 billion.

Courtesy Premium Times

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Flash: ATMs Dispense Fake N1,000 Notes

ATM dispensing N1000 notes

There is a disturbing development in the banking industry as some banks’ Automated Teller Machines (ATMs) now dispense counterfeit currencies, particularly the N1000 notes, which is the highest denomination in the country.

A drama played out last week in Lagos when a customer who withdrew money from an old generation bank went to another bank few metres away to deposit part of the money in another bank, but was shocked when the cashier told him that some of the N1000 notes were fake. Efforts to explain the source of the money were rebuffed. The cashier and customers in that bank confirmed that the development was not strange but was now becoming rampant.

Another victim who withdrew some amount of money from an ATM in Ibadan was stunned when he was told by a cashier in his office, in an attempt to make some deposit, that two of the one thousand naira notes were fake.

Efforts to get response from the affected banks proved abortive as they claimed ignorance.

Different opinions have been expressed on this disturbing situation. An ex-banker, Paul Ejodamen said that, there is human factor in the whole arrangement, urging banks to put measures in place to stem the trend.

A head of corporate affairs in one of the banks who pleaded anonymity, did not rule out the handiwork of people he described as ‘bad elements’ in the system.

According to him, there is need for the banks to take extra vigilance on those uploading money into the ATMs and double-check bundle of currency notes being put in the vaults by the Tellers.

A financial analyst and Chief Operating Officer, Twinsronk Consulting, Okechukwu Amadi, said ATM has revolutionised banking in Nigeria, calling on the industry regulator, Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) to take bold step to stop the disturbing trend.

He warned that the act should not be allowed to spread as it was capable of rubbishing the nation’s banking system.

“I heard it before but I thought it was all a rumour. One can understand the use of fake currency in public place certainly not in the bank. CBN and banks must put measures in place to stem it or else, people will lose faith in the ATM technology,” he said.

It is recalled that when the issue of counterfeiting was becoming rampant, CBN advised members of the public to always look out for in-built security features on the note before accepting it for any transaction.There are three major features which are easily identifiable with the original N1000 currency, silver lining which is difficult to tear, imprint of picture images on the water mark side of the note and imprint of N1000 figure on the golden spot of the note, he explained.

Analysts see this as a huge challenge as the apex bank is still contending with the issue of excess charges on customers.

Only recently, CBN said it had recovered N8.6 billion excess charges that banks charged customers in the first quarter of the year.

According to the Deputy Director, Consumer Protection Department of CBN, Mrs Umma A. Dutse, the amount also included what was recovered for customers who complained about conversion, frauds and others.

She said the department received and treated over 2,800 complaints from consumers against their banks at the end of the first quarter.

According to her, “we have also been able to recover more than N8.6 billion in favour of various customers. The figures that I have just mentioned exclude complaints that have to do with Automated Teller Machines and electronic-related complaints, and also complaints from other financial institutions like microfinance institutions and primary mortgage institutions. They are just complaints against Deposit Money Banks.”

The department was created with a view to promoting consumer confidence in the banking industry.

Its roles also include advocacy, enlightenment, education and promotion of awareness among customers.

Courtesy Nigerian Tribune

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Flash: Dangote Secures $4.25 Billion Loan To Build 400,000 BPD Refinery

Dangote

The Chairman of the Dangote Group of Companies, Alh. Aliko Dangote has secured loans to the tune of $4.25 billion to build a refinery in Nigeria. The loan was negotiated from two offshore banks and some Nigerian banks. Dangote made this known in an interview at the World Economic Forum on Africa in Cape Town South Africa on Tuesday.

The refinery is planned to be located in the Southwest of Nigeria and would process up to about 400,000 barrels of crude per day

Nigeria’s four refineries process less than the 445,000 barrels per day working at far less their capacities due to aging infrastructure and poor maintenance while it exports close to 2 million of crude.

Whereas, the nation is a member of the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries, about 70 percent of the oil products needed is imported to meet domestic requirements.

Dangote is Africa’s richest person, with an estimated wealth of $20 billion.

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Flash: Tension In Ibadan Over Brutal Killing Of 4 Bodija Market Traders By Suspected Islamists In Maiduguri

Bodija-Market

There was tension in Ibadan yesterday, an aftermath of the brutal killing of 4 traders of the Bodija market on Sunday.

The Bodija market was shut down as a mark of protest with scores of security agents patrolling the area to ensure  that there was no breakdown of law and order.

Four traders whose names were given as Amodu, Fatai, Nihas and Alaba were travelling to buy wheat from the north and were  two kilometres from Dikua village, close to Maiduguri when they were stopped by unknown gunmen and ordered to alight from a 16-passenger bus. Report say the victims were first identified as Yoruba while other passengers of northern extraction in the bus were spared.

The assailants asked the Ibadan traders to lie face down and thereafter shot the four men to death.

The aggrieved Bodija traders who registered their anger debunked the likelihood of the attack being armed robbery. The gunmen reportedly singled out the traders, shot them before carting away the victims’ money running into millions of naira.

“That was how they killed three cattle dealers from here in the same area three days to the Eid-el-kabir festival last October”, said a trader.

The corpses of two of the victims and a wounded one, who later died were said to have been taken to the Maiduguri General hospital.

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Flash: House Of Reps To Probe N1 Trillion Funds Of Dead Nigerians; Banks Get Jittery

Reps

Palpable fears have gripped banks over the resolution of the House of Representatives to probe the inability of relatives of deceased Nigerians to access the funds of their departed loved ones, put at between N400 billion and N1 trillion.

A top bank executive who pleaded anonymity confirmed last week at a venue of the bank’s Annual General Meeting (AGM) in Lagos, that if such probe come to effect, none of the banks would be exonerated.

Though he put the blame on the nation’s legal system, he, however, admitted that banks have not done well to simplify the process.

In his comment, an ex-banker now Managing Director, Twinsronk Consulting, Okechukwu Amadi, said the probe will expose banks a great deal, stating that the amount put forward by the sponsor of the motion was conservative.

While calling for holistic probe, the former banker regretted that the probe might not see the light of day as banks would do all it takes to frustrate the process.

“This is definitely a good move. But I wonder if the banks will not frustrate the process. The lawmakers should ensure the probe is carried out to save many Nigerians from the agony of recovering the funds of dead relatives,” he said.

It is recalled that the House of Representatives last week passed a resolution to probe delays usually encountered by relatives of deceased Nigerians while attempting to have access to the funds of their departed ones.

The Speaker, Aminu Tambuwal, directed the Committees on Judiciary, Justice and Banking to convene a stakeholders’ meeting to find a way out of the situation which is believed to be very common.

The sponsor of the motion, Abiodun Abudu-Balogun, said there was the need to stop the pains and trauma beneficiaries of such funds usually go through in their efforts to access their funds.

He said while the process of obtaining letters of administration by such bereaved families at probate divisions of state and federal high courts was very cumbersome and corruption-ridden, banks that were custodians of the funds often use both official and unofficial hurdles to frustrate beneficiaries.

Abudu-Balogun stated that unofficial statistics put the figures of such unaccessed funds with banks at between N400 billion and N1 trillion, adding that obtaining a single letter of administration usually lasted over a year.

All the members that commented on the bill agreed that there was the need to address the issue because of the harrowing experiences such beneficiaries go through and in most cases, unable to access the fund, describing it as unfortunate that family members whose lives had been made miserable by death of their bread winners would be subjected to more pains by these undue bottlenecks.

Courtesy Nigerian Tribune

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Flash: Nigeria’s External Debt Rises To $6.67 Billion

Okonjo Iweala

Despite calls by economists for the country to reduce its external debt profile, figures from the Debt Management Office show that it rose by $143m in the first quarter of 2013 to $6.67bn from $6.527bn at the end of last year.

It rose consistently throughout 2012. For instance, as of March 31, 2012, it stood at $5.91bn; by June 31, 2012, it rose to $6.03bn, edging higher to $6.3bn by September 31 before closing the year at $6.527bn.

The development caused analysts, including the Governor of the Central Bank of Nigeria, Mr. Lamido Sanusi, to warn that it was not in the nation’s best interest.

In December 2012, at the Honorary International Investment Council Conference in London, Sanusi argued that if the existing level of borrowing from big nations continued, the huge debt profile would place “undue burden on posterity.”

“We are borrowing more money today at a higher interest rate, while leaving the heavy debt burden for our children and grandchildren,” he had said.

In December, the total external debt stood at $6.53bn; and despite promises by the Federal Government to slash it, it had continued to rise.

In spite of the calls for caution, data obtained from the DMO website on Sunday showed that in one year, March 31, 2012 to March 31, 2013, the country’s external debt rose by $758.32m.

Speaking in Lagos in March this year, the Minister of State for Finance, Dr. Yerima Ngama, had said Nigeria would slash its domestic debt, which had been a source of concern for economists.

Ngama, who disclosed that it cost the government N699bn to service the debt in 2012, attributed the planned slashing to the move to reduce the debt to double-digit interest rates.

While there has been no success in reducing the external debt, the DMO data for the first quarter of 2013 showed that the government, however, reduced its domestic stock by N44.2bn during the period.

As of December 31, 2012, the Federal Government’s domestic debt stock was N6.537tn with FGN bonds accounting for 62.41 per cent (N4.08tn) of the figure, while Treasury Bills and Treasury Bonds accounted for 32.47 per cent (N2.12tn) and 5.12 per cent (N334.56bn), respectively.

Latest data from the DMO, however, showed that as of March 31, 2013, the government’s domestic debt stock was N6.493tn.

A breakdown of the data, which was posted on the DMO website, indicates that FGN Bonds at N3.82tn now accounts for 58.84 per cent of the debt, while Treasury Bills (N2.34tn) and Treasury Bonds (N334bn) accounts for 36.01 per cent and 5.15 per cent of the amount, respectively.

Courtesy Punch

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