In the first of a two-part series, investigation shows how government
officials secretly make purchases never approved in the budget,
frittering away billions in revenue in what seems a ploy to evade public
fury over inflammatory purchases.
When a fierce outcry forced the presidency to back down from more
than half a billion naira car spend early this year, critics, who helped
make that happen, missed something more serious.
As the State House suspended the plan to buy cars worth N565 million for President Goodluck Jonathan
and Vice, Namadi Sambo, federal lawmakers, renowned for controversial
spending, were sealing a more than N6 billion car purchase deal, their
biggest such expenditure yet.
Reps shipped in 400 Toyota Camrys while Senators got more than 109 Prado jeeps, all 2012 models.
The slip notwithstanding, public anger, galvanized by a ruthless new
media, has been credited with helping to push back budget cost this
year. An initial review authorized by the president, saved N100 billion –
enough to pay 104 thousand graduates N80,000 monthly for one year.
Now, evidences have shown that days after the uproar over
presidential cars, dozens of government ministers, and hundreds of Heads
of agencies began taking delivery of the same kind of cars senators
acquired, in breach of the monetization policy.
Hundreds of the officials are today chauffeured in the 2012 Toyota Prado or Land Cruiser jeeps.
Over several weeks, PREMIUM TIMES tracked over 90, while the
Directorate of Road Transport Services, DRTS, confirmed registering
another 57 in less than six months for Abuja alone.
Hundreds more are said to be registered by the Federal Road Safety Corp. The FRSC could not release the data before this report.
But for all the ubiquity of these government-owned cars across the
nation, one location they can hardly be found is the national budget.
Months of PREMIUM TIMES investigation into how officials comply with
approved spending guidelines has shown that that budgetary provisions
were never made for many of the new government-owned vehicles littering
the nation’s roads this year.
Spending public funds on stuff that are not budgeted for, lawmakers
say, highlight a bigger narrative and appear to bolster a long-held
belief that government officials, desperate to avoid criticism,
circumvent budgets, conceal frivolous subheads and arbitrarily deploy
public funds without supervision.
It is part of long-standing anomalies that have plagued federal
appropriations for years, derailing implementations, and undermining
badly needed developments, procurement activists say.
“Procurement in this country is where you find the highest form of
corruption,” said Austin Onuoha of the African Centre for Corporate
Responsibility, one of over a hundred independent observer teams
accredited by government to monitor federal procurements.
Cornering billions meant for developmental projects to buy cars
At an average of N11 million each, the hundreds of Prados total more
than N3 billion this year, excluding those owned by senators.
But the budget provides only N1.2 billion for cars this year, and
even many of them are supposed to be project vans, patrol trucks, buses
and ambulances.
Approved utility vehicles were to cost N348 million, our analysis of the 2012 budget shows.
Of the 29 ministries reviewed, only eight ministries received
approvals for cars purchases, while 48 departments and agencies got the
nod amongst 507 establishments reviewed. Only forty two departments got
same approval in 2011.
Yet, nearly all ministries have purchased at least the Prado or Land
Cruiser within the past nine months, the assessment found. In one
ministry, the Prado is commonplace as it is assigned to Special Advisers
to the ministers.
What that means, lawmakers say, is that officials either cornered
monies meant for other projects-possibly developmental ones –for the
unauthorized vehicles; or cornered part of their internally generated
revenues to acquire the cars.
Under the scheme that has cost several billions over the last few
years, offices would often not state their plan to procure
cars-perceived as amongst the most inflammatory budget items-but they
will always take delivery of exotic vehicles.
Where such proposals are ever tabled for National Assembly approval,
and rejected, officials still divert unallocated funds to secure them.
Offices involved in this brazen mismanagement of public funds usually
defy a federal law punishing unbudgeted expenditure with a three-year
jail term and a N100,000 fine; and a lesser penalty of one year or N50,
000 fine, where the offender merely transferred monies to other approved
subheads.
Despite being in place since 2007, the legislation has indicted no
government minister or head of parastatal for embarking on unbudgeted
expenditures or diverting public funds.
The Economic and Financial Crimes Commission, EFCC, declined to
comment on why the violations are pervasive yet senior officials hardly
get punished.
Spokesperson, Wilson Uwajeren told PREMIUM TIMES he could only
comment on specific cases. But when presented with some cases that
clearly stood out, he asked that an email be sent to him.
In interviews, representatives of the ministries deny knowledge of the violations.
Yet, lawmakers who spoke to PREMIUM TIMES say the plot has thrived
for years, and still does for a nation often accused of a short-lived
memory, proficient at condemning government misdeeds, but taking no
specific action to press for change.
Lying on the facts
When such projects are detected by the National Assembly during
oversight, responses from the ministers or directors involved, usually
go like this: “Oh we had one grant like that” or “We have other sources
of funding” or “It was a gift”, lawmakers said.
At a recent oversight tour, the legislators grilled the petroleum
ministry over a building project that apparently was absent from the
budget, a member of the House committee on petroleum downstream said.
The response was typical, according to the lawmaker. The ministry claimed funding was drawn from a foreign grant.
“No matter how much you say these things, the people will never take
on the executive,” said Victor Ogene, who is the deputy chairman, House
committee on Media and Public Affairs. “If the people could accord the
same attention the national assembly receives to the executive, 80
percent of this country will be more prosperous,” Mr. Ogene said.
At the ministry of works for instance, one spokesperson said the
Prados were “inherited” from the former minister who left office mid
2011. No new purchases have been made since then, he said.
While the investigations noted ministries purchased old 2009 Prado
years back, some which still remain in the ministers’ convoys, denials
such as the work’s ministry’s informed PREMIUM TIMES’ decision to target
only 2012 brands of the Prado and Land Cruisers in its review, given
they could only have been released early 2012 or late 2011.
For weeks, correspondents mapped government-owned Prado and Land
Cruiser 2012 brands which are today amongst the commonest utility
vehicles on officials’ fleet, visited offices, called at hotels where
most officials attend events.
In addition, data obtained from the DTRS, reviews of contract details
between 2007 and 2009 from the Bureau of Public Procurement, BPP, and a
collation of cars appropriation in 2011 and 2012, provided a glimpse
into an audacious violation that has for years cost the nation dear.
Ministers, DGs bend the budget to buy cars
For 2012, while nearly all the ministries own at least one Prado and
Land Cruiser jeeps (PREMIUM TIMES could not immediately confirm those
owned by Finance and Health ministries), only the ministries of Foreign
Affairs, Works, Education, Health, Agriculture and Rural Development,
Trade and Investment, Culture and Environment received approval for
cars.
Even so, the cars are not being used for the purposes for which they
were appropriated for. For instance, while the foreign affairs ministry
received N50m, N42m, N88 m and N30 million car votes, they were meant
for Nigerian
embassies in London, Pretoria, Singapore and Lisbon respectively, not the headquarters.
This newspaper confirmed at least one 2012 Land Cruiser jeep listed
after the local Foreign Affairs office, and one Prado with registration
number, FG 173 A09.
In the 2011 budget, the foreign affairs in 2011 got approval for only
“project vehicles” comprising 10 Toyota Hilux pickup and 10 Ford
Explorers.
For the Works ministry, car approvals came only for 10 Hilux project
pickups, plants, equipments, towing vans, and excavators. The ministry
received nothing for 2011.
But no other office examined appeared with more 2012 Prado than this ministry.
PREMIUM TIMES found FG-517 F20, FG-507 F20 and 20A 61 FG, marked to
the ministry. At its office, one was stationed in the parking lot of the
minister or the minister of state, the other a Special Assistant.
While there were others, their registrations could not be immediately noted.
A spokesperson for the ministry, Bisi Agbonhin, Director of
Information, denied knowledge of the violations when reached via phone.
“I don’t have any information about that,” he said.
When confronted with the details, spokesperson for the Minister of
State, Tony Ikpasaja who initially explained the cars were inherited,
said only the permanent secretary could provide further details.
For the Tertiary Education Tax Fund, TETFUND, a well-off office with
billions of undisbursed education tax funds, not only was the office
denied allocations for cars, but for any other capital expenditure this
year. But the agency was credited with a 2012 Prado, numbered FG 02A
H07.
The University of Abuja Teaching
Hospital for instance only received funding for the construction of an
intensive care, accident, and burns unit and purchase of medical
equipment including endoscopy.
Somehow the hospital officials managed to accommodate a recently purchased Prado with the new number plate, 12Q 01 FG.
Vague billions help hide abuses
Lawmakers hinge the sourcing of funds for the unapproved purchases on
a wieldy cash envelope passed to the offices under bogus and ambiguous
subheads that encourage inappropriate spending.
At the Aviation ministry for instance, the Director General of the
Nigerian Airspace Management Agency(NAMA), is chauffeured in a Prado
2012 recently purchased as indicated in the new number plate, 21E 03FG.
Yet, the office got no such either for 2012 or 2011.
The agency only got approvals for the “purchase of navigational equipments” – N2.09 billion for 2012, and N3.24billion for 2011.
At the Agriculture ministry too, such vague allocation of funds are
rampant. The 39 research institutes under the ministry are annually
entitled to hundreds of millions of naira earmarked for “research and
development”.
Under that subhead this year, the Agricultural Research Council of Nigeria, like many others, secured N400 million.
The specific reason for requesting the funds is even hazier:
“Competitive grant for research and development of value chains” took
N200 million, then renovations, journals, “infrastructural upgrade” and
certain food security advocacy summit took the remaining.
The council has recently commissioned a new 2012 Prado, with the new
plate number for the head office, ARCN FG 21. Officials would not
respond to request for comment on the acquisition of the new cars.
The National Environmental Standards and Regulations Enforcement
Agency ( NESREA), for instance, too has no car vote, but owns the latest
model of Kia Optima, X02 09FG.
Long history of abused budget
For years, hardly has any subject pitted the executive against the National Assembly as the budget.
Lawmakers have repeatedly alleged that appropriations intended to
stimulate growth and build infrastructures are annually distorted by the
MDAs who unilaterally decide what to implement.
As the officials jettison approved projects, they foist new ones and
transfer funding without recourse to further approvals, successive
sessions of the national assembly have always argued.
The entire exercise has so ridiculed the budgeting system, turning it
to mere “ritual” than an actual economic process with targeted reliefs,
House speaker, Aminu Tambuwal, said recently.
“The Appropriation Act is observed more in breach than execution,” Mr. Tambuwal said a fortnight ago as lawmakers re-assembled.
In exclusive reviews, PREMIUM TIMES examined the Bureau of Public
Procurement’s contract award details for dozens of offices for 2007,
2008 and 2009, matching implemented projects against budgetary
proposals.
The pairing turned up a startling find: several unbudgeted subheads
received allocations in some offices; and many centered on relatively
less critical subheads often cited as a conduit for draining public
funds.
In 2009, the ministry of petroleum for instance spent far into an
extra billion naira not stated in its budget, according to the
procurement records.
Contracts for several gas pipeline expansion contracts and other
technical needs were duly awarded as stated in the budget, and so were
“project workshop”, “sensitization workshop”, found nowhere in the
budget.
Two of the three “project workshops and training” went to the
ministry headquarters. One cost N1.04 billion, the other N143 million.
A curious “Implementation of workshop/Sensitization Retreat programme
in Public Procurement Act” was also awarded for N39 million in addition
to a number of other “Workshop and sensitization” totaling nearly N200
million. None of those appeared in the budget.
In an earlier emailed response to PREMIUM TIMES on pricing
irregularities in the budget, the Bureau for Public Procurement, BPP,
which made the records available, said it often monitors violations in
the procurement process but lacks the power to punish erring offices.
Indicted organizations are forwarded to the EFCC for investigations,
the bureau said. It would not give names of those referred to the EFCC
so far, and it would not say whether he petroleum ministry was among
those so far indicted.
“Only a Court can convict a person,” Segun Imohiosen, the bureau’s Chief Press Secretary said.
Ministers, worst culprits
While nearly all ministers currently drive the Prado and the Land
Cruiser, none of the ministries has such exotic cars approved for it,
either in the 2012 or 2011 budgets.
Officials have continued to spend public funds to buy exotic cars for
themselves despite the monetization policy, which expects majority of
our public office holders to buy cars for themselves from allowances
paid to them upfront for the purpose.
If the search is narrowed from “vehicles approvals”, to “Prado or
Land Cruiser approvals” in the entire budget this year, only two offices
out of hundreds, would be spared an indictment.
The Librarian Council of Nigeria listed the Prado for N10 million and
the National Eye Centre listed the Land Cruiser for N16.5 million.
As for “utility vehicles” which may also imply the two cars, only twelve offices got approvals.
They include, Code of Conduct Bureau, National Obstetric Fistula,
Institute of Public Analysts of Nigeria, Federal Medical Centra, FMC Taraba, FMC Birnin Kebbi, FMC Yola and the Federla government college, Okigwe.
Others are, National Orthopedic Hospital, Lagos, Community health
practitioners’ registration council, National Gallery of Arts, London
and Pretoria embassies, University of Maiduguri and, Federal College of
Animal health and Production Technology, Ibadan.
Thirty-seven remaining offices given car approvals were for buses,
Hilux for projects, ambulances, vans, and ranger patrol vehicles.
Goοd ԁay! I сould have ѕworn I've visited this web site before but after browsing through some of the articles I realized it's nеw to me.
ReplyDeleteAnyhοω, I'm definitely delighted I discovered it and I'll be
book-marking it anԁ сhecking back
regularly!
Μy ωeb blоg ... chatroulette