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For 13 years (1999-2012), Farouk Lawan was the poster boy of the House of Representatives. At the height of his influence, Mr Lawan served as the chairman of an ad hoc committee that investigated fuel subsidy scam. It turned out to be his waterloo.
“We were told that we were not going to live long [enough] to even finish the exercise. They were death threats, very clearly death threats. Fortunately, we are still around,” Mr Lawan said to the BBC during the probe.
Unknown to Nigerians then, the self-acclaimed ‘Mr Integrity’ was using the free publicity to negotiate deals with those he was investigating.
The Probe Committee
The selection of Mr Lawan to head the probe committee was not a coincidence. For the over a decade that he had been a federal lawmaker, the diminutive politician had publicly carried himself as an outspoken critic of corruption and injustice, often challenging the Executive on crucial issues to the admiration of many Nigerians.
And so, when he was appointed to chair the ad hoc committee investigating the multi-billion naira petroleum subsidy fraud, the expectations were high.
The petrol subsidy fraud under the Goodluck Jonathan administration was one of the largest and most daring frauds in the country. Billions of naira had been paid to private businesses from the public purse for imported petrol; most of which turned out to have never been imported or which figures were extravagantly inflated.
The public knowledge of the fraud was triggered by the decision of the Goodluck Jonathan administration to abruptly remove the subsidy on petrol on January 1, 2012.
There were nationwide protests against the policy, which was later partially reversed. But it was allegations of corruption in the scheme that necessitated the investigation by the House.
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