Immediate past Minister of Finance Ngozi Okonjo Iweala has responded
to allegations that she spent $2.1 billion from the Excess Crude Account
without the approval of the National Economic Council. While speaking
to newsmen after the inauguration of the National Economic Council
yesterday June 29th, Governor Adams Oshiomole accused the former
minister of spending $2.1 billion from the Excess Crude Account without
the necessary authorization.
“We looked at the numbers for the Excess
Crude Account. The last time the former Minister of Finance and
Coordinating Minister of the Economy, Mrs Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala, reported
to the council, and it is in the minutes, she reported by November 2014
that we had $4.1 bn. Today, the Accountant-General Office reported we
have $2.0bn.
Which means the honourable minister spent $2.1bn
without authority of the NEC and that money was not distributed to
states, it was not paid to the three tiers of government,” Adams
Oshiomhole said
However in a statement released and signed by her spokesperson Paul
Nwabuikwu today June 30th, Dr Okonjo-Iweala said there was no
authorized spending from the Excess Crude Account under her watch as
Minister of Finance. She described the allegations as a political witch
hunting.
“It is curious that in their desperation to
use the esteemed National Economic Council for political and personal
vendetta, the persons behind these allegations acted as if the
constitutionally recognized FAAC, a potent expression of Nigeria’s
fiscal federalism, does not exist. But Nigerians know that collective
revenues, allocations and expenditures of the three tiers of government
are the concern of the monthly FAAC meetings. It is important to
acknowledge the efforts of governors who are working hard to overcome
the current revenue challenges facing their states without resorting to
character assassination and blame games.
It is clear that this is the latest chapter
of a political witch-hunt by elements who are attempting to use the
respected National Economic Council for ignoble purposes having failed
abysmally in their previous attempts to tar the Okonjo-Iweala name. It
will be recalled that one of such attempts took place in May when some
of these governors, hiding under the auspices of the Nigerian Governors
Forum asked Okonjo-Iweala to explain $20 billion alleged to be missing
from the same ECA. The Finance Ministry subsequently issued a news
release and published an advertorial in national newspapers on May 25,
2015 giving details of what the Federal Government and states received
from the ECA in the last four years. It also provided details of the use
of the funds for payment of petrol subsidies for the Nigerian public
and SURE-P allocations to the three tiers for development purposes.
After the publication, the accusers lost
their voice. But the latest allegations show that these persons are
still in the business of throwing up wild, unsubstantiated figures to
damage Okonjo-Iweala’s name. For instance, within the last few months,
Governor Oshiomhole and his fellow travelers have asked Okonjo-Iweala to
account for “missing” $30 billion, $20 billion and now $2.1 billion.
What they don’t seem to understand is that the strategy has lost all
credibility because the falsehood is clear for all to see. How can some
governors who fought FG’s efforts to leave robust savings in the ECA
and even took the Federal Government to court over the matter turn
around to make such unfounded allegations? The world knows that it was
Okonjo-Iweala who pioneered, during her first stint as Minister of
Finance in the Obasanjo administration, the practice of publishing
monthly updates of all allocations to different tiers of government in
order to empower Nigerians with information and knowledge of government
revenues and expenditure.
This enabled the Nigerian public to ask
questions about the utilization of these resources. Of course many
elected and appointed public officials were not happy with this
development. She continued this practice when she returned in 2011 and
even added periodic updates on the Excess Crude Account, subsidy
payments for verified claims by oil marketers for fuel imports as well
as SURE-P payments to the three tiers of government. Against this
background, the idea that she spent $2.1 billion “without authorization”
is simply not credible given that details of government receipts and
expenditure are public knowledge. We believe that Nigerians are too
smart to be hoodwinked by this partisan desperation to tar the name of
Okonjo-Iweala. In the interest of the country, we advise that public
officials should avoid the temptation to politicize economic issues so
that balanced analysis can lead to real solutions.”the statement read
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