The
long-awaited list was due to be submitted to parliament for approval,
four months after he took office vowing to tackle endemic corruption in
Africa's most populous nation.
On Tuesday evening, Buhari said in
New York, where he has been attending the UN General Assembly, that he would appoint himself minister of petroleum resources.
A junior minister will oversee the day-to-day affairs in the sector, which provides the majority of government revenue, his spokesman Femi Adesina confirmed to AFP.
Buhari, 72, has made stopping the rot in the oil sector a priority, as he seeks to cut graft and put the country's crippled, crude-dependent finances on a firmer footing.
OPEC-member Nigeria -- Africa's number one crude producer and biggest economy -- has been hit badly by a slump in global crude prices since last year, squeezing government revenue.
Oil accounts for some 90 percent of Nigeria's foreign exchange earnings.
The president has vowed to recover "mind-boggling" sums of stolen oil cash, starting with a drastic overhaul of state-run oil firm the Nigerian National Petroleum Company (NNPC).
The NNPC has become a byword for corruption and last year was accused of failing to remit $20 billion (18 billion euros) in revenue to the central bank.
Former military ruler Buhari has vowed that corruption and the corrupt will have no place in his government and vetting of candidates has been seen as delaying his nomination of ministers.
- 'Maximum power' -
Buhari has prior experience of dealing with the oil industry. In 1977, he was oil minister under General Olusegun Obasanjo and helped establish the NNPC.
He was later in charge of the Petroleum Trust Fund during the time of General Sani Abacha in the 1990s.
A committee advising Buhari on policy before he took office has recommended he streamlines the number of ministries and ministers.
He has already moved to revamp the NNPC, sacking the entire board, announcing a probe into accounting practices and appointing a new boss to make the company more transparent and profitable.
Malte
Liewerscheidt, senior Africa analyst at risk consultancy Verisk
Maplecroft, said Buhari's decision "furnishes him with maximum power to
push through necessary reforms" in the sector.
It
also demonstrated the importance he places on overhauling the industry
but he cautioned that concentrating powers "could send the wrong signal
for the reform path ahead".
"Concentration
of powers is among the chief reasons for the poor performance of
Nigeria's oil sector governance," Liewerscheidt said in an email.
"Buhari
will need to make clear that combining the roles of president and
petroleum minister will only be an extraordinary and temporary measure
to accelerate reforms."
Obasanjo
also oversaw the oil ministry when he was civilian president from 1999
to 2007 and Buhari will have to guard against the perception of and
potential for abuse.
"Buhari's
self-appointment is a high-risk strategy, as it links his fate as
president with successful reform of the oil and gas sector," he added.
"If he fails to deliver tangible successes soon, there will be no minister to shift the blame to."
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