Eniola Akinkuotu, Abuja
The Economic and Financial Crimes
Commission is set to grill some ex-ministers who served under the
administration of ex-President Goodluck Jonathan as well as some serving
and ex-permanent secretaries and directors of budget and finance in
charge of revenue-generating Ministries Departments and Agencies,
The fresh investigation, it was learnt,
was sequel to a report by the Minister of Finance, Mrs. Kemi Adeosun,
that the Federal Government would prosecute any official of
revenue-generating agencies indicted in the audit report, which revealed
that N450bn was not remitted to the Consolidated Revenue Fund Account.
The unremitted amount, which involved
about 33 revenue-generating agencies of government, was for the 2010 to
2015 fiscal period which falls under the leadership of Jonathan.
Some of the agencies are the Central
Bank of Nigeria, Nigeria Shippers’ Council, Nigerian Export Promotion
Council, National Health Insurance Scheme, Nigerian Civil Aviation
Authority and Nigerian Communications Commission.
Others are the Nigerian Postal Service,
National Information Technology and Development Agency, Nigerian
Television Authority, Bureau of Public Enterprises, National Pension
Commission and Nigerian Bulk Electricity Trading Plc.
The list also has the Raw Materials
Research and Development Council, Nigerian Ports Authority, Nigerian
Export Processing Zones Authority, Federal Radio Corporation of Nigeria,
and the Council for the Regulation of Engineering in Nigeria.
It was gathered that the commission
would this week interrogate the affected officers, a majority of whom
served between 2010 and 2015.
A source at the EFCC said, “We will
invite the permanent secretaries of some of the agencies because the
permanent secretaries are the chief accounting officers. We will also
invite the directors of finance and budget in some of these agencies
while the ministers that we believe may have approved such spending will
also be invited.
“We discovered that many of these
infractions had been taking place but never received much attention from
the Federal Government because of the excess oil money during the
Jonathan administration. Now that the Federal Government is cooperating
fully with us, we will look into the matter thoroughly.
“We discovered that many agencies have
never paid any money and never generated any operating surplus including
some whose salaries, overheads and capital are paid by the Federal
Government. In addition to that, they generate revenue which they spend
without any form of control.”
The EFCC told our correspondent that
many of the heads of the agencies were already under probe or were
already being prosecuted.
The detective noted that a former
Director General of the Nigerian Maritime Administration and Safety
Agency, Patrick Akpobolokemi, and some directors of the agency were
already being prosecuted for an alleged N34.5bn fraud.
The source at the EFCC said, “We are
aware that money which was meant to be deposited into the Consolidate
Revenue Fund Account was diverted while agencies were making
extra-budgetary expenses. In some instances, such was done with the
collusion of ministers.
“You are aware that a former Aviation
Minister, Stella Oduah, gave approval to the NCAA to spend N255m on two
cars. We have already charged her.’’
The National Assembly had argued that
the 31 agencies listed as revenue-generating had their budgets shrouded
in secrecy which had let to abuse.
For instance, in the case of the NCAA, the purchase of the two vehicles for Oduah was not listed in the budget by the agency.
The ministry’s own budget too had no plan to purchase any car for the minister or other officials.
Oduah’s spokesman, Joe Ibi, had told
that the cars were to protect Oduah from “imminent threats” bred by the
minister’s purported radical reforms in the aviation industry.
It was the secrecy that had ostensibly helped NCAA and others spend freely with little or no oversight.
All the funds used by the NCAA were
internally generated from charges on airlines, passengers and fines etc
as stipulated by the Civil Aviation law.
Between 2009 and 2012, the agency raised
N35.3bn and spent all of it on its internal needs, according to the
National Assembly Budget and Research Office.
Adeosun had said, “Some agencies have
never credited the Consolidated Revenue Fund despite having salary,
capital and overhead (expenditures) financed by the Federal Government.
Indeed, cost to income rates of 99.8 per cent has been the average,
meaning that they spend all their internally generated revenue and
subventions released to them.”
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