No blame game over fuel scarcity — FG

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The Minister of State for Petroleum Resources, Timipre Sylva, on Monday, said the Federal Government will not embark on blame game over the fuel scarcity in the country.

This is as the National Assembly plans to grill importers of dirty premium motor spirit (petrol) on Tuesday.

While apologising for the hardship caused by the scarcity, Sylva admitted that inspection failure – a regulatory laxity – was responsible for the challenge across the country.

The House of Representatives’ Committee on Petroleum Resources (Downstream) had said importers of the adulterated fuel, which included Duke Oil, owned by the government, would appear at the House tomorrow to face interrogations.

The committee, last week, had grilled Group Managing Director of Nigerian National Petroleum Company Limited, Mele Kyari.

While the scarcity lingers, with signs of a little ease, yesterday, Sylva said the development is regrettable, noting that the Federal Government sympathises with the citizenry over the hardship.

In a statement signed by his spokesman, Horatius Egua, in Abuja, Sylva appealed to Nigerians to be patient with the Federal government as it tries to find a lasting solution to the crisis.

The minister said: “This is a time that calls for collective action to save a situation that was not foreseen. It is not a time to trade blames as is customary in Nigeria. It is, therefore, not a time to query anyone but a time to come together to salvage the plight of the average Nigerian.

“After the storm settles, there will be time enough to investigate and get to the bottom, so that this does not repeat itself.”

According to him, President Muhammadu Buhari’s charge to all parties and agencies concerned is to work together to ensure normalcy returns quickly.

He said Nigerians deserve the best and the Federal government is determined to set the country on the right path of petroleum products availability and sustainability, as demonstrated in award of contracts for rehabilitation of refineries and acquisition of stake in Dangote refinery.

Although queues across the Federal Capital Territory (FCT) reduced, yesterday, most filling stations were still without products. Some of the stations that opened for business in the early hours ran out of stock by mid-day.

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