Tag: Agencies

  • Spreading MDAs across geopolitical zones – By Carl Umegboro

    Spreading MDAs across geopolitical zones – By Carl Umegboro

    By Carl Umegboro

    RECENTLY, the country was enmeshed in uproars over the move of some federal agencies and departments back to Lagos by President Bola Ahmed Tinubu-led federal government with allusions in some quarters perceiving it as a scheme to limit economic growth in Abuja but upturn Lagos. In fact, it was punctured as a plot to marginalize the north and its people by a president from the southern part of the country. The presidency on the other hand refuted the claims of alleged plot to diminish economic importance in the north, however did not profoundly give stout reasons for the action under the administration of President Tinubu, a hitherto governor of the state. Some of the critics believe the action is to energize the state using presidential might as “my Lagos”.

    Therefore, there is a need for caution when taking some actions in a multi-ethnic society like Nigeria to avert misinterpretation. More worrisome was the fact that the presidency negligently didn’t carry the National Assembly that constitutes representatives of all constituencies and ethnic groups in the country along for deliberation prior to the action. Without a doubt, such fears, misgivings and murmurs are expected in any society that nepotism has eaten deep and continues to take dominance. Any society where merit is always forced aside while nepotism is enthroned animatedly will always meet such incongruous uproar.

    Admittedly, such an action may have targeted Lagos state and the South-West geopolitical zone but the bitter truth is that concentrating all the federal ministries, departments and agencies in the federal capital territory is ill-thought. Suffice that the existing federal infrastructures domiciled all over Lagos could justify the choice of Lagos. Beyond the choice of Lagos, spreading MDAs outside the FCT with at least a federal agency or key department in each of the six geopolitical zones in the country will be a stimulus towards rapid economic growth across the entire country simultaneously.

    The lawmakers, policymakers have to cogitate it as a model, afar being a prerogative, to circumvent a discontent in future as witnessed from a quarter over moving some agencies and departments by Tinubu who has indisputable interest in Lagos. I am sure if Tinubu had picked any state from other five geopolitical zones, instead of southwest, or got parliamentary consent, the action would receive crystal green light as public interest-oriented, and that should be a model for a multi-ethnic society like Nigeria. Of course, this is worth a sober parliamentary reflection.

    Nonetheless, the antagonism certainly results from narrow-mindedness, bias and ethnic bigotry which have been impeding economic growth in the nation. There is no possible way all MDAs could be concentrated in an area without resulting in population surge with its associated outcomes particularly economic or societal imbalance. And certainly, it must propel rapid migration of people to the area and ultimately lead to congestion with high cost in vital living needs, particularly land and houses. This is a hard lesson the leaders failed to grasp over the years that made Lagos uncontrollably overpopulated. The leaders shouldn’t continue to repeat the same oversight after escaping to Abuja, otherwise, the same outcome is inevitable.

    Ideally, apart from Presidential Villa which comprises the offices and residences of the president and vice president, and then office of the Secretary to the Government of the Federation and the FCT Minister, all other ministries, departments and agencies of the government can prudently operate from any side of the federation, and not mandatorily in Abuja. Take the population of the federal civil service of the nation, for instance, all being resident in Abuja with families. Thus, concerted spread of agencies and departments should be deeply considered beyond Lagos alone. Albert Einstein (1879 – 1955), a German-born theoretical physicist held to be one of the greatest and most influential scientists said, “If you keep doing the same things, you’ll end up getting the same results”.

    The dirge over the action is a total bunkum. It must be emphasized that there’s no region or part of the country that has a monopoly or preference of hosting federal institutions. A national establishment can be located anywhere in the north as well as the south. Abuja and Lagos are not exclusively anointed to be the federal capital territory but by mere time and chance. So, criticism must necessarily be constructive. Imagine the volume of economic activities that will spread across the six geopolitical zones in the country having at least a ministry, agency or department of federal government in each of them instead of having everything stocked in Abuja. This would certainly develop the zones simultaneously.

    With a spread, the rapid development witnessed in Lagos and now in Abuja as a result of the FCT status could replicate, spread across other states.  Just give Abuja a few years from now, it would become another ‘Lagos’ both as an economic hub and in terms of population explosion at the detriment of other states. This is a way of restructuring. As Einstein thundered, you cannot repeat the same errors in Lagos that led to relocating the federal capital territory to Abuja and get a different result. The then military junta only saw a suitable large expanse of land in the Abuja axis and concluded on relocation as a remedy without addressing the core factors that led to congestion in Lagos. But the error can be corrected by equitably empowering every geopolitical zone with equal opportunity. The existing structure of the nation where almost all national assets are domiciled in only two locations; Lagos and Abuja at the detriment of others is imbalanced and ill-advised.

  • Benue gov, Alia appoints board members, heads of govt. agencies, 12 aides

    Benue gov, Alia appoints board members, heads of govt. agencies, 12 aides

    Benue State Governor, Hyacinth Alia approved the appointment of 12 new aides, three board members, and four heads of parastatal agencies on Friday in Makurdi.

    His media aide, Mr Tersoo Kula stated that the governor charged the appointees to always put the state first in their official engagements.

    Those appointed were a director-general for the Bureau of Special Projects and Infrastructure and a manager of the state-owned Novus Microfinance Bank.

    The governor also appointed a director-general for the Bureau of Agricultural Development and a director-general for the Education Quality Assurance Agency.

    He appointed a chairman and members of the Christian Pilgrims Welfare Board and those of the Muslim counterpart

    Gov. Alia also appointed a chairperson and members of the State Universal Basic Education Board and 12 aides attached to the offices of the deputy governor and his wife.

  • BREAKING: President Tinubu appoints new CEOs for CAC, SON, ITF, others

    BREAKING: President Tinubu appoints new CEOs for CAC, SON, ITF, others

    President Bola Tinubu has approved the appointment of 14 new Chief Executive Officers of several agencies and parastatals under the Federal Ministry of Industry, Trade and Investment.

    This is contained in a statement by Chief Ajuri Ngelale, Special Adviser to the President on Media and Publicity, on Friday in Abuja.

    He said that the appointments were in line with Tinubu’s resolve to base Nigeria’s economic revival on the foundation of trade expansion through small, medium, and large scale industry facilitation in the country.

    The new chiefs executives are:

    1.  Corporate Affairs Commission (CAC) — Hussaini Ishaq Magaji, SAN,

    2. Industrial Training Fund (ITF) — Afiz Oluwatoyin,

    3. National Sugar Development Council (NSDC) — Kamar Bakrin

    4. Nigeria Export Processing Zone Authority (NEPZA) — Olufemi Ogunyemi

    5. Nigeria Export Promotion Council (NEPC) — Nonye Ayeni

    6. Nigeria Investment Promotion Commission (NIPC) — Aisha Rimi

    7. Oil & Gas Free Zone Authority (OGFZA) — Bamanga Jada

    8. Small & Medium Enterprises Development Agency of Nigeria (SMEDAN) — Charles Odii

    9. Standards Organisation of Nigeria (SON) — Ifeanyi Okeke

    10. Financial Reporting Council of Nigeria (FRCN) — Rabiu Olowo

    11. Nigeria Commodities Exchange (NCE) — Anthony Atuche, CFA

    12. Lagos International Trade Fair Complex (LITFCMB) — Veronica Ndanusa

    13. Tafawa Balewa Square Management Board (TBSMB) — Lucia Shittu

    14. National Automotive Design and Development Council (NADDC) — Oluwemimo Osanipin

    Ngelale said that the president expects all new appointees to deliver in accordance with new key performance indicating benchmarks as established by the Federal Ministry of Industry, Trade and Investment.

    He said that by this directive of the President, all of the appointments was with immediate effect.

  • Reps to streamline revenue collecting agencies – Deputy Speaker

    Reps to streamline revenue collecting agencies – Deputy Speaker

    The Deputy Speaker of the House of Representatives, Rep Benjamin Kalu, said the parliament would enact laws to streamline multitude of revenue collecting agencies.

    He further said that a law would be enacted to effectively eliminate multiple taxation in Nigeria.

    Kalu said this at the World Bank Fiscal Governance and Institutions Project (FGIP) Focus Group Discussion at the Federal Ministry of Finance, Abuja on Wednesday.

    According to him, the house is in the process of streamlining the multitude of revenue-collecting agencies as a government.

    He said the streamlining initiative was aimed at improving coordination and crucially reduce duplicity in tax administration, ultimately making the system more efficient, transparent and accountable.

    He said President Bola Tinubu had embarked on a path of fiscal reform that directly addressed some of the most pressing issues in the tax system and overall fiscal policy.

    He said the commitment to reform was a testament to the dedication of the Federal Government towards achieving a more robust and equitable economic landscape.

    “One of the paramount challenges we are currently addressing as a government, is the issue of tax multiplicity, a labyrinthine web of taxes that has placed undue burdens on both individuals and businesses.

    “Simplifying and rationalising this system is imperative to alleviate the compliance burden and to foster an environment conducive to economic growth.

    “In parallel, we have recognised the necessity of modernising revenue collection through automation.”

    He said this strategic move would enhance efficiency and reduce opportunities for corruption and revenue leakage.

    He said there were promising opportunities to introduce
    comprehensive reform bills that would encompass a wide spectrum of objectives.

    This he said, include simplification, modernisation, and consolidation of tax laws, adding that the reforms hold the potential to bring about increased clarity and efficiency.

    He added that it would benefit both taxpayers and tax administrators.

  • Gov. Sani appoints new heads of agencies for Kaduna State

    Gov. Sani appoints new heads of agencies for Kaduna State

    Gov. Uba Sani of Kaduna State has approved the appointment of new heads of government agencies in the state.

    This is contained in a statement by his Chief Press Secretary, Malam Muhammed Shehu on Wednesday in Kaduna.

    Shehu said those appointed included Alhaji Inuwa Ibrahim, as the Managing Director, Kaduna Line, Dr Iliyasu Neyu, as the Executive Secretary, Kaduna State Aids Control Agency (KADSACA) and Malam Umar Waziri as the Special Adviser, Revenue Matters.

    He added that Mr Umar Bambale was appointed as the Special Adviser, Drugs & Narcotics Control, while Prof. Aminu Sharehu was appointed as the Chairman of the Local Government Service Board.

    Shehu said that Mr Abubakar Abubakar was appointed as the Managing Director, Kaduna State Development and Property Company Ltd (KSDPC), while Hadiza Hamza was appointed as the Managing Director, Kaduna Industrial and Finance Company (KIFC).

    “Dr Bello Jamo will serve as the Executive Secretary, State Primary Health Care Board (SPHCB), Mr Joseph Ike will serve as the Executive Secretary, Kaduna State Bureau for Substance Abuse Prevention and Treatment (KADBUSA) among others,’’ he said.

    The governor urged the appointees to excel by creating initiatives and programmes that would benefit the people of the state.

    He advised them to serve the people of the state with the utmost diligence, discipline and honesty.

  • Buhari approves new appointments, renewals of officers in parastatal agencies

    Buhari approves new appointments, renewals of officers in parastatal agencies

    President Muhammadu Buhari has approved the appointment of chief executives and renewal of tenure of some officers of parastatal agencies.

    This is contained in a statement by the Secretary to the Government of the Federation (SGF), Mr Boss Mustapha and issued by Mr Willie Bassey, Director Information, in his office.

    According to the statement, Buhari ratified the appointment of Dauda Biu as the Corp Marshal/Chief Executive Officer, Federal Road Safety Commission (FRSC) with effect from Dec. 23 for an initial term of four years.

    Also, Prof. Mojisola Adeyeye was re-appointed as the Director-General, National Agency for Food and Drug Administration and Control (NAFDAC), with effective date of December 2022 for a final term of five years.

    Equally, Mr Lanre Gbajabiamila was re-appointed as Director-General National Lottery Regulatory Commission (NLRC) with effect from Nov. 21 for a final term of four years.

    Meanwhile, five executive directors were re-appointed in four of the nation’s River Basin Development Authorities.

    They are: Bello Gwarzo, who was re-appointed as Executive Director (Planning), Hadejia Jama’area River Basin Development Authority with effective date of Nov. 23 for a final term of three years.

    Also, the duo of Olatunji Babalola, Executive Director (Engineering) and Adewale Adeoye, Executive Director(Planning and Design), have their positions renewed effective Nov. 23 for a final term of three years in office.

    Also, Bashir Zango, Executive Director (Planning), Sokoto Rima Basin Development Authority has his tenure renewed with effect from Nov. 23, 2022 for a final term of three years.

    Mrs Mary Nwabunor, Executive Director (Agricultural Services), Benin Owena River Basin Development Authority was freshly appointment, effective Dec. 19 for an initial term of three years.

    The President congratulated all the appointees and urged them to bring their wealth of experience to bear on their duties.

  • ICPC reveals how govt. agencies steal public funds

    ICPC reveals how govt. agencies steal public funds

    The Independent Corrupt Practices and Other Related Crimes Commission (ICPC) Thursday made damning revelations that some Ministries, Departments, and Agencies of government are habitually duplicating projects to siphon public funds.

    Chairman of the Commission, Prof. Bolaji Owasanoye, gave the revelation on Thursday before the Senate Committee on Finance sitting in Abuja.

    The anti-graft agency boss explained that the MDAs padded 2021 budget with N300 billion in duplicated projects, while the 2022 budget with N100 billion duplicated projects, adding that the Commission had tracked N49.9 billion ghost workers salary between Jan to June 2022.

    Detailing how some Chief Executives perfect their stealing strategy, the ICPC boss disclosed that projects worth N100 billion were inserted into the N17.12 trillion 2022 budget by some MDAs aside N49.9 billion tracked as salary for ghost workers between January and June this year.

    He said the commission was able to track the projected slush fund as a result of its thorough scrutiny of approved projects for the various MDAs.

    He said they were poised for proactive nipping of their plans rather than allowing funds to be stolen before going after them, stressing that funds already stolen were not easily recovered.

    He noted: “The same preemptive move saved the country from spending N49.9 billion for salaries of ghost workers put on fictitious pay rolls by the fraudulent MDAs between January and June this year.

    “Names of MDAs involved in project duplications running into intercepted billions of naira and fictitious pay rolls, are available and will be forwarded to the Committee.

    “The good thing about the preemptive moves made by us is that monies for the fraudulent acts were prevented from being released to the affected MDAs and it is gratifying that the Finance Ministry and Accountant General Office cooperated with us.”

    He advised relevant committees of the National Assembly to be on the lookout for such project duplication in the proposed N19.76 trillion 2023 budget to be presented by President Muhammadu Buhari anytime soon.

    Reacting, the Senate Committee Chairman on Finance, Senator Solomon Adeola Olamilekan lamented that leakages and waste has been the biggest challenge the nation has been facing.

    He vowed that the parliament would not give up to the antics of fraudsters, noting that they will stop at nothing to ensure that any Chief Executive found culpable was prosecuted.

  • Reps to investigate recruitment into NSITF, other agencies under ministry of Labour

    Reps to investigate recruitment into NSITF, other agencies under ministry of Labour

    The House of Representatives has resolved to investigate ongoing recruitment exercise into the Nigeria Social Insurance Trust Fund (NSITF) and other agencies under the Federal Ministry of Labour and Productivity.

    This followed the adoption of a motion by Rep. Ismail Tijani (APC-Kwara), on the floor of the House on Wednesday in Abuja.

    Tijani stated that the NSITF is currently recruiting for management positions.

    He alleged that only people from a particular part of the country are being recruited in the current exercise, which negates the principles of Federal Character.

    According to him, the Minister of Labour and Productivity, Dr Chris Ngige, has been embroiled in a battle to control Ministries, Departments and Agencies (MDAs), including the NSITF.

    He said that the Minister had been summoned by the National Assembly for the alleged misdemeanor in 2016 and 2021 respectively

    He stated that the summons followed allegations of employment irregularities, impunity, and anomalies indicating gross abuse of office

    He said that the current recruitment process at the NSITF, alleged to be biased, could negatively affect the promotion of hardworking staff of the organisation.

    ”The alleged undue favouritism in the ongoing recruitment exercise at the NSITF could prevent the country from deriving the maximum benefits from the MDAs.

    The House, therefore, mandated the Committees on Federal Character and Labour, Employment and Productivity to investigate the ongoing recruitment in NSITF and other agencies under it.

    The lawmakers also recommended appropriate sanctions for anyone found culpable of undue favouritism and asked the committee to report back within four weeks for further legislative action.

  • Ikoyi building collapse: Archbishop warns regulatory agencies against compromising standards

    Ikoyi building collapse: Archbishop warns regulatory agencies against compromising standards

    The Catholic Archbishop of Lagos, Most Rev. Alfred Adewale Martins, has advised regulatory agencies against compromising building standards in order to prevent unnecessary deaths and disasters.

    Martins’ advice is contained in a statement by Rev. Fr. Anthony Godonu, Director of Social Communications of the Catholic Archdiocese of Lagos.

    The cleric was reacting to the Nov. 1 collapse of a high-rise block of luxury flats under construction in Ikoyi, Lagos, .

    At least 36 people have been reported dead.

    The cleric described the incidences of building collapse in Lagos and other parts of the country as alarming.

    He urged regulatory agencies to ensure they enforced building codes to prevent unnecessary disasters.

    The Archbishop said that the unfortunate incidences of building collapse in Ikoyi and other similar cases elsewhere could have been prevented if proper regulation and strict monitoring by relevant supervisory authorities were in force.

    Martins expressed delight at the state government’s setting up of an independent panel of inquiry into the circumstances surrounding the collapse of the building.

    He expressed the hope that those culpable would be made to face the penalty.

    “We hope that as the panel unravels the immediate and remote causes of the collapse, it would also identify ways of ensuring that we do not experience such disasters again,” he said.

    The cleric called for three days of mourning for the repose of the souls of those who lost their lives in the collapsed building.

    He commiserated with Gov. Babajide Sanwo-Olu and the families of those who lost their lives in the collapsed building.

  • Just in: Buhari makes new appointments [Full list]

    Just in: Buhari makes new appointments [Full list]

    President Muhammadu Buhari has approved the appointment of five Chief Executive officers and two Executive Directors of some Federal Agencies.

    This was disclosed in a statement issued by Mr Olusegun Adekunle, Permanent Secretary (General Services) Office of the Secretary to the Government of the Federation on Friday in Abuja.

    According to him, Mr Okechukwu Ukwuoma, Director-General, National Centre for Technology Management (NACETEM) is re-appointed for a final term of four years with effect from July 22.

    Also, Prof. Victor Adetiloye, Chief Medical Director (CMD), Obafemi Awolowo University Teaching Hospital, Ile-Ife, was re-appointed for the final term of four years with effect from Sept. 22.

    Buhari also approved the appointment of Amb. Abdul-Jalil Suleiman as the Director-General, Directorate of Technical Cooperation in Africa (DTCA), for an initial term of four years with effect from Sept. 17.

    Also appointed was Dr Bassey Abasi as Chief Medical Director (CMD), University of Uyo Teaching Hospital, for an initial term of four years with effect from Sept. 22.

    Capt. Junaid Abdullahi was appointment as the Executive Secretary, Border Communities Development Agency (BDCA) with effect from Sept. 22 for an initial period of four years.

    The president also appointed Mrs Mojoyi Dekalu-Thomas as Executive Director (Liability Management) of Electricity Liability Management Company (NELMCO) for an initial term of four years with effect from Sept. 20.

    Mrs Chinedum Olisakwe- Lawrence’s appointment was renewed as the Executive Director (Corporate Services) of Electricity Liability Management Company (NELMCO) for a second term of four years with effect from Sept. 20.

    The President enjoined the appointees to regard their appointments as a call to National Service and to carry out their responsibilities with uprightness, diligence and prompt response to the yearnings of the public.

    He also charged them to bring their wealth of experience to bear in the discharge of their duties.