By The Citizen Reporters
In Summary
- Information made available to this paper shows that the Parliament has ordered TPDC top management to submit all 26 contracts it signed with foreign investors to the Public Accounts Committee (PAC) by Monday (today) or risk going to jail.
Dar es Salaam. Senior officials
at the Tanzania Petroleum Development Corporation (TPDC) risk being
jailed if they fail to submit 26 production sharing agreements (PSA)
contracts, the state-owned entity, signed with multinational and local
investors, it has been revealed.
Information made available to this paper shows
that the Parliament has ordered TPDC top management to submit all 26
contracts it signed with foreign investors to the Public Accounts
Committee (PAC) by Monday (today) or risk going to jail.
Under the Parliamentary Immunities Powers and
Privileges Act, CAP 296 R.E 2002, any person who fails or declines to
submit documents requested by the PAC, among other possible penalties,
risks going to prison.
The House team’s warning comes a few days after
TPDC, the state-owned entity tasked with managing the lucrative natural
gas and oil sector, failed to submit the contract agreements to the PAC.
According to reliable parliamentary sources backed with documented evidence seen by The Citizen,
the TPDC officials have been given until 10am today (Monday) to submit
the much-sought contracts in the natural gas and oil sector, before the
PAC.
The Citizen has reliably established that
the National Assembly’s Clerk, Dr Thomas Kashililah, on October 30 this
year, wrote a letter to the TPDC ordering the relevant officials to
submit documents bearing the 26 contracts on production sharing
agreements (PSA) by November 3, 2014.
Dr Kashililah, according to our impeccable
sources, also ordered the TPDC management to submit an audited report
for the financial year that ended on June 30, 2013.
“I am referring to your letter dated October 28
this year, requesting more time to sort the PSA’s and other documents
which you were ordered by the committee, thus the committee gave you up
to Monday November 3 this year,” reads part of the letter with Reference
Number Cab.135/39/01/53, seen by The Citizen.
In a dramatic turn of events, last week, the PAC
asked the TPDC to submit all the PSA contracts, but the state
corporation declined, saying that first of all, it needed a nod from
investors, before it could avail the contracts to the Parliamentary
watchdog.
While TPDC has been insisting that there is a
clause on the contracts it signed with investors that grants
confidentiality, at the other hand lawmakers and activists have been
pushing for disclosure.
When it comes to accessing contracts signed
between the government and investors in the extractive industry, it has
always been a daunting task, because the State has been insisting on
secrecy, while legislators and activists gun for transparency in the
multibillion dollar sector.
From mining to natural gas contracts, the battle
to make various contracts accessible to legislators has always been a
tough one—sometimes triggering a heated debate in Parliament. But, two
months ago, StaOil, a Norwegian-based company, which has signed
lucrative contracts with TPDC, claimed that it is the government, which
was not willing to disclose the contents of the contracts.
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