Editorial
Beyond That IPMAN’s Action
Those ageless words from Othman Dan Fodio that “Conscience is an open wound (which) only truth can heal” could not have been more aptly exemplified by the leadership of the Independent Petroleum Marketers Association of Nigeria (IPMAN), when in apparent self indictment it admitted that some of its members were to blame for the near frequent scarcity of petroleum products in Rivers State. In clear terms the leadership admitted that the scarcity was artificial and indeed orchestrated by some unscrupulous members in their ranks.
Chairman of Rivers State branch of IPMAN, Mr. Sunny Mpeh, at a media briefing in Port Harcourt a fortnight ago said that there was no petroleum scarcity in the State. He insisted that the artificial scarcity was caused by some members to excite panic-buying and make huge profits, and warned members of unpleasant consequences if found hoarding and selling products above approved prices.
The body, went further to advise the public against panic-buying of the products, with the assurance that the association was on top of the situation to ensure that Port Harcourt and its environs did not lack petroleum products.
That positive introspection by a group of petroleum dealers, generally perceived to be unscrupulous and heartless at best, portends admirable attitudinal change. For one thing, it demonstrates the rebirth of a public-friendly enterprise. For another, it exemplifies a positive signal for better service delivery, which, if built upon could help check the unwholesome activities of some filling stations operators.
While The Tide considers that self-indictment as a sign of willingness and indeed preparedness for positive change, we fear that such proactive reform will be meaningless, if other very serious concerns of the public regarding operations of some filling stations are not addressed holistically. As a first step, IPMAN needs to move a step further to properly investigate and bring to book those of its members responsible for creating artificial scarcity to frustrate the buying public.
That way, IPMAN would not only be sending a positive warning to those who take delight in inflicting pain on motorists and other product consumers, by hoarding petroleum products to create artificial scarcity, it will help redeem the battered image of petrol stations in Port Harcourt and environs.
Of urgent need for mention is the practice among filling stations to manipulate their service metres, thus forcing the ordinary consumer to pay more for less supply. At other times, filling stations deliberately dispense products using few sale points in order to create long queues which naturally excites panic buying and create black market operations.
Sadly, the ultimate beneficiaries of that illicit trade are the black market operators with whom the filling stations collude to short-change the desperate public. Sad as that is, very little has been done by IPMAN to check such nefarious activities.
The new IPMAN must consider its rebirth as a fresh opportunity to redeem its self, and frontally tackle the practice by some of its members to close shop at dusk only to re-open in the ungodly hours of the night to sell to their black-market business partners.
But perhaps the most worrisome of all the concerns is the adulteration of petroleum products by some filling stations. The Tide is reluctant to accept as fact, that petrol markets and indeed filling station owners also patronize crudely refined products of crude oil thieves to maximize profit. This, if true, amounts to economic sabotage and needs to be checked by IPMAN because of the destructive effects of such products to vehicles and the danger it poses to human life.
We are indeed pained by the unwholesome activities of many petroleum stations in Rivers State and the seeming inability of relevant state agencies saddled with the responsibility of enforcing order to sanitise the sector.
This is why it has become necessary for IPMAN to set up a taskforce to monitor the activities of its members and discipline erring ones. This they can achieve by partnering with the Rivers State Taskforce on Petroleum Monitoring of fuel stations.
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