The Kogi State House of Assembly has ordered Dangote Cement owned by billionaire Aliko Dangote to provide all necessary documents with regards to the transfer of Obajana Cement Company owned by the state government to Dangote Cement Company.
The assembly also demanded for the 10 per cent shares that belong to the state government from Dangote Cement.
To make the claim possible, Kogi State House of Assembly ordered the management of Dangote Cement to provide all necessary documents that have to do with the transfer of Obajana Cement Company owned by Kogi State government to Dangote Cement Company.
The parliament also directed that the documents signed at the establishment of the company and relevant receipts of dues it claimed to have paid to Kogi State government be made available at the next adjourned sitting date.
The speaker of Kogi State House of Assembly, Matthew Kolawole, gave the order after interim reports of the ongoing investigative hearing on Internally Generated Revenue (IGR) which was submitted by the ad hoc committee led by Hon. Isah Tenimu Umar, member representing Lokoja I Constituency and deliberated upon at the plenary on Wednesday.
Kolawole said this has become important in view of the claims and counterclaims between the chairman of Kogi State Internally Generated Revenue Service (KGIRS) and representatives of Dangote Cement as the acting chairman of KGIRS, Salisu Enehe had earlier accused Dangote Cement Plc., Obajana of forging its tax receipt during the investigative hearing by the State House of Assembly.
According to the state revenue boss, most of the figures the company claimed to have paid are totally incorrect, urging the company to check its record.
He added that despite the billions of naira that the company is making from the state monthly, it has failed to pay taxes that are due to the state and Lokoja Local Government Area.
In a similar development, following the unrestrained environmental degradation in Ankpa and Olamaboro local government areas of the state, the parliament has also directed the state Commissioner of Police and Commandant of the Nigeria Security and Civil Defence (NSCDC) to seal off operations of Dangote Plc in the affected areas of the State.
The House gave the order during a public hearing on activities of Dangote Group in the state, especially on the massive exploitation, environmental degradation and non-compensation to the affected owners of the land and without revenue accruing to the state government.
The Kogi assembly speaker, charged the NSCDC commandant to ensure immediate implementation pending when the ad hoc committee on revenue clarifies some grey areas. Kolawole, who lamented the environmental degradation caused by mining activities on Kogi by the Dangote group and its subsidiaries, accused the multi-national business concern of making billions in the state but yet fails to give back to it.