Tag: 2023 budget

  • Why we shifted passage of 2023 budget – Lawan

    Why we shifted passage of 2023 budget – Lawan

    President of the Senate, Ahmad Lawan says the Senate decided to shifted the passage of the 2023 budget to Dec.28, due to some challenges.

    Lawan said this at the commencement of plenary on Thursday against the backdrop of an earlier announcement that the Bill would be passed before the chamber adjourned for Christmas recess on Thursday.

    “Today was scheduled for us to receive and consider the report of our committee on Appropriation for the 2023 Appropriation Bill.

    “However, due to some challenges, we are not able to receive the report of the committee.

    “And the main reason is that the Appropriation Bill came to the National Assembly with some problems.

    “And when our Committees on Appropriation in the Senate and the House of Representatives started to reconcile the figures of what we have done and what was presented, the problems became very obvious and they were not easy to deal with, and therefore our committees had to start a process of cleaning up the Bill first,” Lawan said.

    He added: “That process, of course, also engaged the executive arm because the problems came from t

    “It was concluded only on Wednesday and our committee secretariats are not able to finish processing the budget for us to take today nor tomorrow, nor Saturday nor Sunday because this are periods that are for festivities, Christmas period; Monday, Tuesday are public holidays.

    “Consequently, we can only receive the report and consider it on Wednesday, Dec. 28. That is the earliest, that’s next week.

    “So far, this ninth National Assembly has done so much to pass the previous appropriation Bills since 2019, before the end of the year to date and I’m sure that this would remain one of the
    cherished legacies of the ninth National Assembly.”

    “So by the Grace of God, on the 28th of this month, the senate and indeed the House of Representatives will all come back to receive and consider the budget report from our committees.

    “We had arranged on Wednesday, that the finance committee will present a report of the Finance Bill Hearing today.

    “That of course would not be possible. This is the reason: We also received two communications- Supplementary Budget 2022 and of course, Ways and Means.

    “So our committees on Appropriation, Finance, Water Resources, Agriculture and Works and Housing will be processing the Bills for today.

    “In that respect, the senate will adjourn immediately so that our committees start the action they are supposed to take and therefore those reports will also be available to us on the 28th when we will be here.”

    “I want to thank all of you my Distinguished colleagues for your support, cooperation, commitment, dedication on all these things that we have been doing as a legislature.

    “Let me advise the Executive. The Bills that have come to us, the Ways and Means, the Supplementary Appropriation, whoever is invited to come and explain, give information or any details for the National Assembly to understand must do so, because its not our work alone.

    “We want to do our work thoroughly, we want to understand whatever we are going to deal with and to base our decisions on information, and time is of essence.

    “Just like we are going to sacrifice part of our festive period to be back here, nobody should tell us that they are in their places because it is Christmas. They should be available with every necessary information.”

  • JUST IN: Reps shift passage of 2023 budget

    JUST IN: Reps shift passage of 2023 budget

    The House of Representatives has shifted the passage of the 2023 budget to December 28. The reason, it was learnt, is to tidy up some key ends in the very important money bill.

    The lawmakers initially planned to pass the N20.5 trillion budget on Thursday (today) before proceeding on their Christmas/New Year break.

    However, during plenary on Thursday, the Speaker, Rep. Femi Gbajabiamila, announced a slight change in the plan, urging members to adjourn for Christmas but to return on December 28 for the singular assignment of passing the budget.

    “We just have to come back on Wednesday. We will come back for the one item of passing the budget; that’s all. Then, we can proceed on break fully”, he stated.

    President Muhammadu Buhari had laid the estimates of the budget before a joint session on of the National Assembly in Abuja on October 7.

    Lawmakers, desirous of sustaining the January-December budget cycle, made a pledge to pass the 2023 Appropriation Bill this December.

  • Gov Okowa assents Delta’s 2023 Appropriation Bill of N571.6bn

    Gov Okowa assents Delta’s 2023 Appropriation Bill of N571.6bn

    Governor of Delta State, Sen. (Dr) Ifeanyi Okowa, on Friday in Asaba, signed the state’s 2023 Appropriation Bill of N571.64 billion.

    The budget, which is the last to be signed by Okowa as Governor of the state, comprises N235.5 billion for recurrent expenditure and N336.1billion as capital expenditure.

    The governor also signed assented to nine other Bills – The Delta State Manufacturing and Use of Cotonou Boats Bill, 2022; Delta State Public Finance Management Bill, 2022; Delta State HIV/AIDs Anti-discrimination, Prevention and Protection Bill, 2022; Delta State Waterways Tax, Control and Licensing of Boats (Repeal and Re-enactment) Bill, 2022.

    Others are Delta State Forfeiture of Property Bill, 2022; Delta State Maternal and Perinatal Deaths Surveillance and Response Bill, 2020; Delta State Passenger Welfare Scheme Repeal Bill, 2022; Delta State Administrative Procedure Bill, 2022 and the Delta State Transportation Data Management Bill, 2022.

    In his remarks after signing the Bills, Okowa assured Deltans that the state would strive to implement capital projects embedded in the 2023 Budget as well as endeavour to complete ongoing projects before the end of his tenure.

    He commended the House of Assembly for its cooperation over the years, adding that his administration couldn’t have achieved the much it did without the strong support of the Assembly and Deltans.

    “To have found time to work through these bills in spite of the electoral campaigns shows that you have stayed committed to our people who voted you into office.

    “We will continue to remember you in the course of history because a lot has been done over the past seven and half years during which we have truly impacted on our people.

    “We could have done better if we had a better security because we need a secured country for us to be able to impact more meaningfully to the people.

    “But under the circumstances we have found ourselves, working with our people we have delivered the dividends of democracy to the best of our ability.

    “Until May 28, 2023, we will remain functional and continue to impact on the lives of our people, including the youths to make them get entrepreneurial skills that will ultimately make them self-reliant,” Okowa stated.

    On the other Bills signed into law, he said they would contribute to the socio-economic development of the state and thanked the lawnakers for their commitment to duty.

    Presenting the Bills earlier, the Speaker of the Assembly, Chief Sherrif Oborevwori, said that the Bills went through all legislative process before being passed.

    He expressed appreciation to the Governor and members of the House for their support and cooperation over the years he served as the longest serving Speaker of the House of Assembly.

    “I wish to express our profound gratitude to you for the cordial working relationship and synergy existing between the House and the Executive.

    “This has not only brought stability to the House but also prosperity to Deltans and development across the State.

    “God has indeed been gracious to Delta State and the House of Assembly in particular. We have enjoyed peace and harmony which have resulted in the excellent working relationship among the members.

    “As you remarked during the presentation of the 2023 Budget on the floor of the House that this is the last Budget you will be laying before the honourable House, this will also be the last Budget I will be presenting to His Excellency, the Governor for assent as a Speaker of the House of Assembly,” Oborevwori stated.

  • BREAKING: Reps approve N599 billion as NCC budget for 2023

    BREAKING: Reps approve N599 billion as NCC budget for 2023

    The House of Representatives has approved N599.080 billion as the budget of the Nigerian Communications Commission (NCC) for 2023.

    TheNewsGuru.com (TNG) reports the approval came following the consideration of the report on the NCC budget by the Committee of Supply, presided over by the Deputy Speaker, Rep. Ahmed Idris Wase.

    The key provisions of the budget were N86.7 billion for Recurrent Expenditure; N5.2 billion for Capital Expenditure; and the sum of N35.089 billion for Special Projects.

    The sum of N16 billion was approved to be transferred to the Universal Service Provision Fund (USPF); another N416.013 billion was for transfer to the Federal Government of Nigeria; and the sum of N16 billion for the Budget of the USPF).

    TNG reports that the third reading of the money bill was slated for another legislative day.

  • N206bn insertion in 2023 budget: Resign now – Reps tell Humanitarian Minister

    N206bn insertion in 2023 budget: Resign now – Reps tell Humanitarian Minister

    The House of Representatives on Tuesday asked the Minister of Humanitarian Affairs and Disaster Management, Hajiya Sadiya Farouk to quit as minister if she was not ready for the job.

    This followed her incessant failure to appear before various Committees of the House to defend the ministry’s 2023 budget proposal.

    Rep. Muktar Betara, Chairman, House Committee on Appropriation said this during an investigative hearing on alleged budget insertion of N206 billion in the 2023 budget of the ministry in Abuja.

    The N206,242,395,000 billion in question is for the National Social Safety Nets Project, which is domiciled in the ministry, to be funded by World Bank.

    A visibly angry chairman of the committee had queried why the Minister was not present to defend the insertion, adding that if she was not ready for the job she should quit.

    “Most times the committee calls the minister, she refuses to come. If she is not ready for the job, she should quit,” Betara said.

    Explaining the error in the ministry budget, the Minister of Finance, Hajiya Zainab Ahmed said the item was wrongly coded by the Budget office.

    She added that the minister of Humanitarian Affairs and Disaster Management should have called the attention of the budget office to the anomaly like her counterparts in other ministries.

    She said the Ministry of Defence, Federal Ministry of Power among others also committed the same error.

    She called for collaboration among Ministries Department and Agencies of Government (MDAs) in a bid to forestall such oversight.

    The minister said, “the project was correctly described in the submission in the 2023 budget, but unfortunately the Budget Office used the wrong code.

    She said this resulted in it being captured as “Purchase of Security Equipment” in the budget preparation system.

    She added that the budget preparation had a limited range of encoded programme and project descriptions.

    The Minister of Humanitarian Affairs and Disaster Management, represented by the Permanent Secretary of the ministry, Dr Nasir Gwarzo said the minister directed him to represent her

    “The minister said she did not understand the budget code, it was the media that reported the error as padding.

    “We did not go to the media refuting the work the committee or the Ministry of Finance have done, but we wrote for clarification which was given.

    The amount of money in question was a counterpart funding that was given by the world bank, if it was done without appropriation, Nigerian would not have known what was borrowed,” he said.

    In their response the members of the Committee, Rep. Igariwey Enwo (PDP-Ebonyi) and the Deputy Chairman, Appropriation said the budget should not be subjected to controversy.

    “We are talking about money we borrowed, we should also know how we spend the money.

    “Raising unnecessary controversy about the budget will not augur well. There should be inter agency coordination.

    Rep Benjamin Kalu (APC-Abia) said, ” my concern is that the image of our country should be protected in respect of the budget.

    ”I reached out to the minister of finance on the issue but nothing was done and I could not go ahead to give the media the information its needed at the point in time.”

  • Ogun governor, Abiodun presents 2023 budget to state assembly

    Ogun governor, Abiodun presents 2023 budget to state assembly

    Ogun state governor, Dapo Abiodun today presented the state budget  to the Ogun State House of Assembly.

    The appropriation bill was on Thursday presented to the lawmakers in a session chaired by the speaker of the house, Olakunle Oluomo.

    The governor said that a total of N472.25 billion  has been proposed for the state government in the year 2023.

    He said the total sum of  N201.84 billion is proposed as recurrent expenditure, while N270.41 billion is budgeted as capital expenditure.

    The governor put personnel costs at N79.47 billion; social contribution and social benefits at N21.12 billion; public debt charge at N39.90 billion; overhead cost at N61.35 billion; while capital expenditure is N270.41billion.

    In his speech, Abiodun implored the leadership of the State House of Assembly to ensure that the budget be thoroughly, but expeditiously vetted and returned in earnest for his assent.

    He said that all the contents of the bill emanated from the wishes expressed by Ogun people at the different Budget Town Hall meetings earlier held.

    “I will appreciate, if we maintain our set standard of signing the Appropriation Law before 1st of January of the incoming year,” he pleaded.

  • Buhari transmits FCT, NDDC budget to Reps

    Buhari transmits FCT, NDDC budget to Reps

    President Muhammadu Buhari has transmitted the 2023 statutory budget of the Federal Capital Territory (FCT) and the Niger Delta Development Commission (NDDC) to the House of Representatives for approval.

    Buhari also transmitted to the House, the Code of Conduct Bureau and Tribunal (CCT) and the Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria alteration bills 2022 for consideration.

    This is contained in three separate letters to the house and read by Speaker Femi Gbajabimila at the resumed plenary in Abuja on Monday.

    In the letter, Buhari said the conveyance of the FCT statutory budget which aligned with the Federal Government’s fiscal development policies was pursuant to section 121 of the 1999 Constitution as amended.

    “In the preparation of the Federal Capital Territory’s 2023 budget, the Federal Capital Territory Administration aligns with the federal government’s fiscal development policies.

    “Accordingly, the FCT 2023 budget proposal prioritises improvement in healthcare services, job creation, youth empowerment, social welfare services

    “Others include: education and increased productivity in agriculture in our determination to lift 100 million Nigerians out of poverty,” he said.

    Buhari said he hoped the submission would receive the usual expeditious considerations of the House.

    On the NDDC budget, the letter read: “In accordance with section 18(1) of the NDDC Establishment Act, I forward herewith the 2023 estimate of the NDDC for the kind consideration and passage of the House of Representatives.”

    For the CCT and Constitution alteration bills, Buhari said the aim was to ensure effective performance of the functions of the bureau and assist the tribunal in the effective and speed dispensation of cases.

    “The Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria alteration bill 2022 aims to ensure the effective performance of the functions of the Code of Conduct and assist the Code of Conduct Tribunal in the effective and speed dispensation of cases.

    “Also, we hope that the House will as usual in its manner considers this submission for passage into law,” he said.

  • 2023 census to gulp N532.7 billion

    2023 census to gulp N532.7 billion

    The National Population Commission (NPC) has budgeted N532.7billion for the conduct of the 2023 National Housing and Population Census in April 2023.

    Alhaji Nasir Kwarra, the Chairman, NPC, said this at the 2023 budget defence before the Senate Committee on National Identity Card and NPC on Wednesday in Abuja.

    “Based on the budget for census, what we need to be able to complete the conduct of the census as well as the post enumeration survey and all other post census activities is a total of N532. 7billion.

    ”Aside from the N10 billion budget for 2023, the NPC earmarked the sum of N532.7 billion for conduct of 2023 Census.

    ”NPC is ready to re- write the history of census in Nigeria by making the 2023 one not only accurate, credible and reliable, but acceptable to all Nigerians,” he said.

    Kwarra said that the budget also covered the post enumeration survey for the census, saying that it would be a great departure from the past in terms of keying into the issue of climate change.

    He said that N206.85 billion was the approved budget of the commission in 2022, out which N107.7 billion was for capital expenditure, N615 million for overhead and N7.8 billion for personnel cost.

    Sen. Sahabi Ya’u, the Chairman of the Committee urged the NPC boss to furnish the committee with details of projects executed with the 2022 budget in contract with the 2023 budget.

  • A minister’s difficult journey to the National Assembly – By Okoh Aihe

    A minister’s difficult journey to the National Assembly – By Okoh Aihe

    It can be exasperatingly helpless when somebody tries to make a point and nobody seems to understand. So it was the other day as the Information and Culture Minister, Alhaji Lai Mohammed, made a passionate appeal to the lawmakers at the National Assembly to, at least, add more funds to his 2023 budget to enable his ministry perform its responsibilities in the remaining but challenging days of this administration. He was stone-walled by a group of people who seemed to have woken up on the wrong side that very day or probably waited long for the opportunity to deal him a telling blow.

    The reputation of the minister precedes him. You hate him before you see him. People jump to a conclusion before they even hear him. And working for a government whose success is harboured only in the imagination of those who work for it, his job, which he has pursued with unwavering loyalty and doggedness, is particularly difficult, thus earning him some unsavoury sobriquet and a natural attraction to loathsomeness. But he is never one to turn his back in a battle. So, he is resolute in every sense of his job at the Information ministry.

    Lai Mohammed had a case, and a very good one, in my opinion. He had gone before the House Committee on Information to defend the 2023 Budget of his Ministry. With him were his lieutenants from the parastatals under him, which include: Voice of Nigeria (VON), News Agency of Nigeria (NAN), Nigeria Television Authority (NTA) and Advertising Regulatory Council of Nigeria (ARCON). It was his final budget defence, he wanted to leave on high personally and leave the ministry in some financial comfort and buoyancy.

    What he got was a shocker. While the ministry enjoyed an approval of N2.5bn in 2022 as capital budget, with N1bn of that sum going to the ministry; for 2023, the House has only approved N869m capital budget for the entire ministry with the ministry itself getting a miserly N346m, making Mohammed to cry out that his ministry “has been dealt a very heavy card in this year’s budgetary allocation.”

    Just looking at the parastatals alone tells you that Mohammed has a very important job to do for the government. Apart from ARCON, the other ones like VON, NTA and NAN are major vehicles of mass mobilisation and information dissemination. Without speaking for the minister, media is not cheap; making it work and getting the right personnel is even more challenging.

    But his concerns are much more than that. Fighting hate speech, fake news and disinformation, which have been his major obsession, serious push back at the international community to educate them on the goings-on in Nigeria, instead of the kind of advisory issued recently on security by some countries, awareness campaign on the coming elections, the national census that may happen in the lifetime of this administration, and above all, just to get the right funds to properly inform Nigerians of the great work that the Buhari administration has done in nearly eight years. One thing you can say about Mohammed is that he doesn’t fit the description of some of the people the President himself accused recently of not speaking well enough of the achievements of his administration. He tries his best and he wants to continue to do so but he needs funds.

    “I fully understand the current challenges the country is facing, but I don’t agree that the ministry of information and culture at this critical time should have less, it actually should have more,” he appealed.

    The minister is only getting a small taste of what happens to the media each time there is a little dip in the economy. The media is the first to be affected. Everybody loves the media. They want to be seen, they want to be heard, and they want lofty stories written about them, sometimes, just celebrating their inanities. But they cut the budget, take advertising from the media or, in some other orchestrations, make it impossible for the media to operate.

    Apart from some kind of excuses the lawmakers pleaded, I want to observe here that the minister was unfairly treated. He got a raw deal. Some obviously have premeditated reasons for not listening to the length of his appeal. Apart from the Committee Chairman, Hon. Olusegun Odebunmi, who counselled the minister to return to the executive to launch his appeal, a member of the Committee, Hon. Ahmed Jaha, simply told the minister it was hard for them to do anything as the National Assembly members had been serially accused of padding budgets.

    “It’s the same federal government that will come through the ministry of information and accuse the National Assembly of padding the budget. So, minister, I want you to understand that we are being placed between the devil and the deep blue sea,” the lawmaker said without mincing words.

    It was payback time, and that smacks of some cheapness. In the description of the 6th Edition of the Nigerian Broadcasting Code, both NTA and VON are public broadcasters which should be funded by the government or the public, as they shouldn’t generate money through advertising. But the Nigeria situation is amorphous as the public broadcaster, like the NTA, collects lots of money from advertising, but accounting for such revenue has always been a matter of concern. It then becomes difficult to make a case for government support but it does not absolve government of its responsibilities to the stations.

    Irony has no respect for anybody, not even the occupant of the big office of the minister who has only been made to experience what it means to have power and yet be castrated into helplessness. Which is what he has done to broadcast operators since he assumed office. Under his watch, private broadcasters have been made to feel pain as they are often threatened or sanctioned without following due process. It is not that the broadcast regulator, the National Broadcasting Commission (NBC) would not know what to do, it is often pressured to expedite the speed of punishment and impose sanctions.

    It may not be superfluous to also point out to the minister that some of the parastatals under him, like the VON, NTA and NAN, have not been properly run, and that could irritate some people, including the lawmaker who accused the platforms of being used by the government against the legislative arm. They are public channels but their public seems to be approximated only by the government. Opposition parties or even dissenting voices have no place in their programming arrangement. Good professionals who should be allowed to thrive in their trade are micromanaged by the ministry and thrust on the borderline of mediocrity, to their shame and impotence. Were the government outfits allowed to run more professionally, perhaps it would have more support from the advert market, no matter how incongruous the idea is, and enjoy more hefty votes from the National Assembly.

    And this leaves me with a plea. Is it possible for the minister to spruce up the operations of the agencies under his ministry – NTA, VON and NAN, among others before the end of this administration, early next year? At least make them run like media outfits and not some kind of rag-tag ministerial appendages. It will be a befitting parting gift. But is such a good thing capable of coming from this administration with tendentious fidelity to the illusory reality of life in our nation, and obtuse entitlement to non-existent achievements? I wait to be proved wrong.

  • NDLEA denies requesting for costly sniffer dogs in 2023 budget

    NDLEA denies requesting for costly sniffer dogs in 2023 budget

    The National Drug Law Enforcement Agency (NDLEA) has denied requests to buy sniffer dogs in its 2023 budget proposal.

    NDLEA spokesman, Mr Femi Babafemi stated on Saturday in Abuja that NDLEA chairman, retired Gen. Buba Marwa only spoke about dogs while defending the agency’s 2023 budget proposal.

    He added that Marwa spoke about dogs while responding to a question posed by the Chairman of the House of Representatives Committee on Drugs and Narcotics, Hon. Francis Agbo at the budget defence.

    He stated that the chairman only spoke about the prohibitive cost of specialised dogs, adding that the question centred on the need for sniffer dogs at the Nnamdi Azikiwe International Airport, Abuja.

    Recall Marwa defended NDLEA’s 2023 budget before the committee on Nov. 4

    Babafemi explained that in response to Agbo’s question, Marwa noted the total package of getting a specialised dog including its training, costs an average of 15,000 dollars to 20,000 dollars.

    He quoted Marwa as telling the committee that the specialised dogs are able to detect up to 70 different types of drugs and substances.

    Marwa said the cost could be verified openly online by anyone interested in knowing the facts about the dogs.

    “Indeed, the full package of some specialised dogs, especially those used for special protection, detection and law enforcement in other jurisdictions cost between 30,000 dollars and 80,000 dollars.

    “They could cost more, depending on the type of skills and duties in which they would be trained.

    “In fact, Harrison K-9, an Aiken, South Carolina, U.S.-based company sells a dog for as much as 230,000 dollars.

    “This is because acquiring specialised dogs goes beyond the cost of purchase.

    “It is a total package that includes the training of the dogs and their handlers as a team over a period of months,’’ Marwa said at the budget defence.

    He included in his response to the question that NDLEA has and uses sniffer dogs provided by the German government, adding that it already acquired new scanners for use at airports.

    According to him, all of these have been largely responsible for the daily arrests and seizures made by officers and men of the NDLEA.

    “We remain grateful to the German government, which has provided the sniffer dogs currently being used and has even added more this year.

    “It is also building a sniffer dog academy for use by the NDLEA and others in the sub-region.

    “This is why the agency has not and did not make any request for the specialised dogs in its current budget proposal before the National Assembly,’’ Marwa also said.