Tag: Dickson

  • PDP governors, elders reject Dickson’s panel

    PDP governors, elders reject Dickson’s panel

    Tukur under fire for not consulting 

    ‘Bayelsa governor capable’

    Barely 24 hours after the announcement of a 30-man reconciliation committee, the National Chairman of the Peoples Democratic Party(PDP), Alhaji Bamanga Tukur, is facing bitter criticisms over its membership.

    Party leaders are angry that Tukur and the Interim National Working Committee members did not consult with key organs of the party on the reconciliation.

    It was also learnt that PDP governors and leaders are more at home with a recent reconciliation mission undertaken by the Chairman of the Board of Trustees (BOT), Chief Tony Anenih, than a fresh panel.

    To the former PDP governorship aspirant in Adamawa State, Dr. Umar Ardo, the reconciliation committee is capable of destroying PDP’s electoral fortunes in 2015.

    Ardo said the committee was dead on arrival, unless Tukur reconsiders its membership.

    Members of the committee are Governor Seriake Dickson (Chairman); ex-Governor Asheikh Jarma(Deputy Chairman); Amb. Umar Damagun (Secretary); a former Deputy Senate President Alhaji Ibrahim Mantu; Senator Umar Gada; Dr. I. A. Obuzor; Salisu Suleiman; Senator Walid Jibrin; Senator Hope Uzodinma; Hon. Bello Mohammed Matawalle; Mr. Niyi Fadimula; Chief Jerome Eke; AVM Chris O. Marizu(rtd); and Hon. Tijani Ibrahim Kiyawa.

    Others are: Dr. Christy Silas; Mr. Jangwe Yusuf; Mrs. Ngozi Olejeme; Hon. Ifeanyi Ugwuanyi; Chief Onyema Ugochukwu; Yakubu Shehu; Mohammed Kuchazi; Mrs. Adedeji Otiti Olanrewaju; Chief Dapo Sarumi; Prince Arthur Eze; Chief Emma Iwuagwu; Chief Dosu Fatokun; Mr. Harold Eze; Hajiya Fati Sabo; Hon. Wakili Mohammed; and Shittu Mohammed.

    PDP governors and leaders are said to be aggrieved that such organs, like the National Executive Committee(NEC), the National Caucus and the Board of Trustees, were not consulted before the constitution of the committee.

    Tukur did not table any reconciliation plan at the last NEC meeting of the party, it was learnt.

    A PDP governor, who pleaded not to be named because of what he described as the sensitivity of the matter, said: “With the magnitude of the crisis in the party, do you think Governor Seriake Dickson can address it? Is there any difference between Dickson and President Goodluck Jonathan? Is Dickson not a party to the PDP crisis, going by the face-off between Bayelsa and Rivers on oil wells.

    “Some of us are suspecting that the 30-man panel has a hidden mandate because some apostles of third term tenure are members of the committee.

    “Governors have been going to statesmen and elders to intervene and save our democracy from collapse but the PDP leadership is playing to the gallery.”

    Another governor said: “I think you should count some of us out of working with the reconciliation committee. Those of us who are members of G-19 are uncomfortable with the membership. They cannot broker peace at all in PDP.

    “There is no record to show that any of the organs of the party was consulted by Tukur, not even the PDP Governors Forum or the 50-member Advisory Committee (headed by ex-Vice-President Alex Ekwueme) but established by Tukur).

    “Those in charge of PDP now are managing the party as if there are no elders again.

    “We should ask Tukur: what is wrong with the reconciliation mission of the Chairman of the BOT, Chief Tony Anenih, which was accepted by PDP governors? What of Governor Ibrahim Shema’s reconciliation panel?

    “Outside Anenih’s committee, we will not work with Dickson’s committee at all. Some of us told Anenih that were he not involved, we would not have granted him audience.”

    A source in the PDP secretariat, however, defended the choice of Dickson as chair of the committee and the membership.

    He said: “The Dickson committee is to painstakingly harmonise all the previous peace committees. The PDP leadership believes in Governor Dickson’s persuasive and consensus building skills which could help unite the PDP family.

    “The warring parties should give the Dickson Committee a chance to do justice to all the previous peace committee reports.

    To a former member of the NWC, who also preferred anonymity, the list is “laughable” because the crisis is deeper than “the cosmetic approach” adopted by Tukur.

    “I am aware that the NWC can take decision on behalf of NEC but the party is in a mess and it cannot reconcile its members without the input of the BOT, the National Caucus and NEC,” he said, adding:

    “Maybe Tukur should stay action and have a broader consultations or else he will end up being reconciled himself.”

    But a party source said: Tukur consulted the President and some leaders of the party on his plan to reconcile those aggrieved to put the party in a better shape for the 2015 poll.

    “Most of those appointed are non-partisan, the source said, adding that they have not been linked to any form of crisis in the party.

    A former PDP governorship aspirant in Adamawa State, Dr. Umar Ardo, said the reconciliation committee could destroy PDP’s electoral fortunes in 2015.

    Ardo made his position known in a statement issued in Abuja.

    He urged Tukur: “to kindly reconsider the appointment of Governor Seriake Dickson of Bayelsa State as Chairman of the Reconciliation Committee.”

    “Other than the fact that as a governor, Dickson would have little time to devote to such an onerous and time-consuming task. I also think that he is eminently unqualified to handle such an assignment,” Ardo said, adding: “In the first place, Dickson lacks the national exposure and experience that such a task requires. Secondly, Dickson himself is a subject of conflict within the party apparatus and membership. The way and manner in which he was brought in as governor, and the furore and controversy that it generated across the country, drain him of all moral standing to undertake a reconciliatory mission.”

    Dickson is of the same state as the President, which to Ardo, will make him not to be objective and fair in his judgment.

    “Given that one of the most central causes of the present disputes within the party is the inordinate ambition of the President for 2015, I cannot see how Governor Dickson can depart from this goal, should it be imperative for the Committee to do so in the course of its assignment.

    “In fact, Dickson’s appointment will only be seen as an act of nepotism aimed at satisfying the impulsive determination of the President to achieve his aspiration. This perception will automatically estrange most aggrieved members and stakeholders of the party. The committee will thus be dead on arrival.

    “I should have thought that such an important committee would be better handled by more experienced hands, such as members of the Board of Trustees of the party or by the eminent 50-member Advisory Committee constituted by Bamanga himself last year when he came into office.

    “If one may respectfully ask, of what significance is this Advisory Committee headed by no less a personality than Chief Alex Ekwueme, if it cannot handle issues of this nature?

    “For the party to bypass such eminent personalities within its fold and go and pick Dickson who is hardly known outside his governorship office is, to me, a clear indication of how far alienated the PDP is in the national support reckoning.”

     

     

     

     

     

  • Dickson to Sylva: you are a drowning man

    Bayelsa State Governor Seriake Dickson has described his predecessor, Timipre Sylva, as “a drowning man”.

    The duo resumed hostilities, following the non-payment of pensions to retirees for five years.

    The governor set up a judicial panel of enquiry to probe the Sylva administration, to which Sylva told his successor to resign.

    In a statement by his Chief Press Secretary, Daniel Iworiso-Markson, Dickson said he would not join issues with Sylva, describing him as a drowning man.

    The statement said Dickson’s competence was not in doubt as “it is very much evident for all to see”.

    The statement said the decision to establish the panel was to address the rot and systematic failures of some civil servants and political leaders.

    It said: “These persons have, over the years, siphoned the N5billion meant for pensioners.

    “Concerned about the plight of these pensioners, Governor Seriake Dickson paid N1billion to the pensioners to clear the backlog.

    “Instead of hiding their faces in shame, these people have chosen to embark on a campaign of calumny and propaganda against the government by inciting some of the pensioners to protest.

    “To this end, the government decided to set up a judicial commission of enquiry to probe why pensioners were not paid for five years.

    “It is laughable that some people, who may have perpetrated the scam, are questioning why the governor limited the period of the investigation to five years.

    “Those who were responsible for the payment of pension and gratuities during the period should be ready to provide answers.”

     

  • Sylva to Dickson: Resign now

    Embattled former Bayelsa State Governor Timipre Sylva yesterday resumed hostility with his successor, Seriake Dickson.

    Sylva asked Dickson to throw in the towel accusing him of suffering “a severe governance deficit”.

    The former governor reacted to a statement credited to Dickson at the last transparency briefing, accusing him of non-payment of pensions amounting to N4billion to retirees for five years.

    Dickson also threatened to establish a Judicial Commission of Enquiry to investigate the matter.

    But Sylva in a statement by his Media Adviser, Doifie Buokoribo, said Dickson’s habit of finding faults with the Sylva administration smacked of incompetence and failure.

    “We call upon Dickson to resign now since he has shown that the job for which he was imposed on the people of Bayelsa State is bigger than him.

    “Failing which the people of Bayelsa State should exercise their civic duty to remove him from office using all available constitutional options,” Sylva said.

    He said Dickson’s claim on non-payment of pensioners from May 2007- January 2012 was scandalous, petty and irresponsible.

    The statement said: “When Sylva took over as governor from Dr. Goodluck Jonathan, there were outstanding pension and gratuity arrears, and no noise was made about it.

    “As a leader, Sylva took responsibility on the conviction that government is a continuum. Pensioners were paid along with people still in service, promptly and monthly.

    “Those who retired from service at the time also received their gratuity once the appropriate documentations were done. Not even Sylva’s opponents could accuse him of non-payment of salaries and pensions.

    “By our records, the government paid an average of N216 million monthly and about N2.6 billion per annum on pensions.

    “If nobody protested over non-payment of pension for five years, it means pensioners as well as labour in Bayelsa were satisfied with the Sylva administration.

    “Why is Dickson restricting his pension probe to the period from 2007- 2012? Why not commence from the beginning of civilian rule in the state in 1999? Why the obsession with Sylva?

    Dickson has been in office since February 2012. In April 2012, he set up a 11-person Financial Management Review Committee headed by Ndutimi Alaibe to probe Sylva.

    “Yet, Dickson is only just realising – in July 2013 – that pension funds were mismanaged from 2007-2012.

    “Dickson said it has come to his knowledge that the pension thieves in Bayelsa State used the stolen funds to build hotels and buy exotic cars. Meaning that he already knows who these criminals are? So, why set up a Judicial Commission of Enquiry?

    “Dickson and his master at the top have run out of options in the schizoid attempt to ruin the political career of Sylva, hence the decision to set up this Judicial Commission of Enquiry.

    “By working to the answer, they would like the Commission to indict Sylva having failed in their previous attempts with the Alaibe Committee and the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC).”

     

  • Dickson signs BHSS bill into law, releases N500m as take off grant

    Dickson signs BHSS bill into law, releases N500m as take off grant

    Bayelsa State Governor Seriake Dickson has presented a draft of N500m as take off grant to the newly inaugurated board of the Bayelsa State Health Services Scheme to kick start the programme. This was just as he signed into law the Bayelsa State Health Services Scheme bill that has been described as the first of its kind in the country.

    In addition, the government will be remitting between N50m and N100m monthly into the coffers of the board, to assist in the delivery of the present administration’s health policy.

    Disclosing this at the inauguration ceremony of the Bayelsa State Health Services Scheme Board on Friday in Yenagoa, Dickson said the scheme is primarily targeted at the public servants in the state, adding that they are automatic subscribers to the scheme.

    According to him, with the inauguration of the board, government has provided a legal backing for the establishment of a credible functional and sustainable health scheme for the public servants.

    “The board will come up with a scheme whereby different people at different grades in our public service will pay and subscribe to it. Irrespective of what they get, because of the importance we attach to this programme and the need to ensure its sustainability, government of this great state, apart from the initial N500 million deposit that we are going to give to them, we will also make a monthly payment to the fund of N50 to N100 million.

    “The whole idea is that whatever they get from the subscriptions from the public sector, whatever the amount is, government will also augment it so that those who require medical attention will always have enough funds for treatment.

    ‘‘When our facilities are completed, and I hope in the next four months, our diagnostic centre will be completed, it will be our policy and it will be the duty of this board to implement same, that every public sector worker, every tax-paying citizen of this state will be entitled to at least, free medical diagnostic treatment once every year.”

    Also speaking, the Minister of Health, Professor Onyebuchi Chukwu, commended Governor Dickson for initiating the scheme, stating that it would boost the delivery of primary health care in the state.

    Prof. Chukwu described the establishment of the health programme as a demonstration of total leadership and assured the state government of Federal Government’s collaboration in the provision of training for medical personnel.

    Responding, Chairman of the BHSS, Dr. Markson Amaigbe expressed appreciation to Governor Dickson for the confidence reposed in them and admonished members of the board against sharp practices in the discharge of their responsibilities.

  • Dickson swears in new commissioner

    Dickson swears in new commissioner

    Governor Seriake Dickson of Bayelsa on Thursday in Yenagoa swore-in Mr. Parkinson Macmanuel as Commissioner for Science and Technology.

    He urged all members of the state executive council and political appointees to imbibe team spirit.

    Macmanuel was until his appointment the Special Adviser to the Governor on Secondary Education.

    He replaced Mrs. Didi Walson-Jack who was deployed to the Government House as the Chief of Staff.

    The governor charged the new appointees to render quality service to the government and people of the state.

    He also warned them not to engage in unnecessary bickering and acts capable of distracting the government from implementing its developmental plans.

    While expressing confidence in the ability of Macmanuel to deliver on his mandate, the governor noted that there were challenges ahead, and urged him to rise to the challenges.

    “You are joining us at a time the restoration train has moved for about a year and a half.

    A lot is happening, but a lot still lies to be unfolded.

    “As you have joined us, we expect loyalty, hard work and selfless dedication to assignments, formal and informal that will be assigned to you,’’ the News Agency of Nigeria quoted the governor as saying at the event.

    Dickson urged the commissioner to urgently liaise with his predecessors and the permanent secretary in the ministry for proper briefings.

     

  • Niger Delta militants steal crude oil to buy arms, says Dickson

    Niger Delta militants steal crude oil to buy arms, says Dickson

    Governor Seriake Dickson of Bayelsa has said oil theft is a threat to national security and responsible for the proliferation of arms in the Niger Delta.

    Militants who engage in oil theft, according to him, use the proceeds to finance their operations, recruit members, and buy arms and ammunition.

    Receiving the new Flag Officer Commanding (FOC) Central Naval Command, Yenagoa, Rear Admiral Sidi-Ali Usman, in his office at the weekend, the governor expressed concern over the rising incidence and sophistication of illegal bunkering, sea piracy and pipeline vandalism and condemned the negative impact of the crimes on the nation’s economy.

    “What is going on is more of a threat to national security than even the loss of revenue that everybody is shouting about. Let me tell you that all the violence, brigandage and criminality that we experience in the Niger Delta states, particularly Bayelsa where I know more, have their roots in the activities in the creeks.

    “It is from there they have easy funds to recruit followers; it is from these activities of crude oil theft and illegal refining that people are able to sustain such large number of youths and put them into various cult groups.

    “What is going on has a direct effect on the proliferation of small and light weapons because they need an army of youths to protect their territories, to be able to withstand the onslaught of legitimate security personnel.”

    Oil bunkering and pipeline vandalism has been on the rise in the Niger Delta leading to dwindling revenue by government. Oil majors in the region have shut down or threatened to shut down some of their operations because of the vandal’s activities.

    President Goodluck Jonathan has also set up a committee made up of some state governors and ministers to look for ways of solving the problem, which persists despite the hundreds of billions of naira spent by the government on the amnesty programme for militants.

    The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) said Dickson also warned cult members who rejected government’s plea to have a change of heart, as his administration would not hesitate to bring them to justice.

    “For those who have defied the Cultism Proscription Law, in spite of the olive branch we have put forward and arrangement for their renunciation and eventual integration, but still want to go ahead with cult activities, I am sounding a clear note of warning that this government will not succumb to blackmail or propaganda.

    “This government will work with security agencies in this state to ensure that those who violate the laws of this state and country will be brought to book,” he said.

    He called for maximum cooperation from the security operatives, especially the Nigerian Navy, to achieve the administration’s policy of zero tolerance for violence and criminality.

    Governor Dickson described the establishment of the Central Naval Command in the state as strategic, considering its maritime nature. He said the navy had a crucial role to play in policing the waterways.

    While commending the former Flag Officer Commanding, Rear Admiral Olutoyin Johnson, for serving the state creditably, he assured his successor of government’s continuous support.

    The new FOC spoke of the determination of the Navy to combat oil theft and other criminal activities in line with the Federal Government’s mandate.

  • Dickson’s antidote to insecurity in Bayelsa

    Dickson’s antidote to insecurity in Bayelsa

    Before now, Bayelsa state was under siege by the cultists. Locked in a supremacy battle, members of rival cult groups turned the state, especially its capital, Yenagoa, to a killing field.

    Staccato of gunshots were a regular feature of daily life in Yenagoa. It was common to see people running in different directions to escape from a sudden violent scene created by cultists.

    Gun-wielding and machete-carrying youths overran the city at night and in broad daylight and mowed down their rivals with impunity.

    Each day, a group of armed youths raided pubs, beer parlours, eateries and other relaxation centres and killed their perceived enemies including innocent fun-seekers.

    September 2011, was particularly bloody in the state. It recorded a harvest of deaths. No day passed without stories of violent skirmishes. In fact, within one week in September, about 11 persons were reported killed at different parts of the city.

    Cultism had hitherto defiled solutions in the state. In flamboyant display of wealth, cultists lived large, own business empires and occupied juicy political positions. Membership of a cult group was believed to be part of a bargaining power for allotment of political positions.

    It was obvious that the then government lacked the will to tackle the menace. Security ,especially the police, appeared handicapped as superior orders were issued to them to release cultists in their custody.

    The development dealt a deadly blow on the state’s economy. Investors avoided the state like a plague. Panic-stricken business owners closed their shops and retired home early to escape the anger of the marauders.

    Clubs, beer parlours and other business owners prayed earnestly for the end of cultism and the reign of terror in the state.

    The question, however, on all lips is: can the efforts of the current administration of Governor Seriake Dickson eradicate cult-related activities in the state?

    The governor had from inception toed a path of zero-tolerance to crime and declared his readiness to stamp out all forms criminalities including cultism.

    Dickson went further to give legal backing to the war against cultism by signing into law, the Bayelsa State Secret Cult, Kidnapping and Similar Activities (Prohibition Bill, 2012), a law that prescribes 10-year jail term for convicted cultists.

    Shortly after assenting to the bill, he said: “In the last few years, this state became the headquarters of cult-related violence.

    “I want to thank the security agencies for heeding our call for normalcy to return because in the past three months, we are witnesses to a semblance of normalcy, that has returned to the state, particularly, the streets of Yenagoa. But this is not good enough.

    “This government has said it over and over that we had no room for criminality and violence. Especially, criminal activities that are violent in nature, whether they are products of militancy or cult related activities.

    “We are very serious about that and to underscore our seriousness and to show that in this government there would be no room for tolerance of crime, we sent a bill to the House of Assembly and they have passed it into law.

    “The consequences of this law are very severe. The security operatives now have the authority to go after all those who are members of cult groups listed in the law.

    “By my signature to this law, I have hereby proscribed all of them. They are hereby proscribed as associations and groups in Bayelsa State. By this laws that I have signed, it is a crime to belong to any of these groups in Bayelsa State”, he said.

    The law also made it a crime for any landlord to provide accommodation for cultists or allow his premises to be used in anyway by cultists. Governor Dickosn said this much when he declared that:

    “It is also a crime for any household or landlord and landlady or anybody who is in control of any premises whatsoever to allow that premises to be used for any cult-related activities or to allow any cult member to stay in any such premises.

    “Once it is proved and upon conviction, such premises, however big it is, will be forfeited to the state government. I want to use this opportunity to call on landlords and landladies to be vigilant and watchful, because I will see to the strict implementation of this law,” he warned.

    But the governor gave a lifeline through the law to the cultists. He made a provision for renunciation, an opportunity for members of secret organisation to publicly renounce such membership and benefit from a rehabilitation and reintegration programme.

    In pursuant of his olive branch, the Governor, through his Senior Special Assistant on Civil Society, Mr. Tony Ile, proposed amnesty for cultists.

    Ile described the proposed amnesty as part of government’s efforts to further extend the olive branch to repentant cultists, especially, those hiding in coastal communities and higher institutions.

    He urged such persons to register their names and submit their profiles to his office. He gave March 20 and April 5 as the period for such registration.

    “Government is therefore, calling on cult members to take advantage of this window of opportunity created to turn a new leaf and do something meaningful with their lives.

    “To demonstrate government’s commitment to this project, His Excellency, Henry Seriake Dickson, Governor of Bayelsa state, will meet with all repentant cultists at a later date to discuss and arrange for proper security of their lives as well as ways to engage and empower them”, he said.

    Following the approach described by many people as “carrot and stick”, 11,000 of the youths from the eight local government areas of the state, converged at the Banquet Hall, Yenagoa, to formally take oaths denouncing cultism.

    The youths who wore white T-shirts, symbolising peace, took the oaths administered on them by the Attorney-General and Commissioner for Justice, Chief Francis Egele in the presence of other government representatives led by Governor Dickson.

    Dickson, who was happy at the development, informed the youths that the government had earmarked N1bn as soft loans for young entrepreneurs.

    He said the government had concluded plans to hold a youth summit in the state to identify their problems. He said the youths would undergo training on skill acquisitions after their verifications.

    Addressing them he said, “If we do not help to build you all, then our future will not be assured. You are all aware of what our restoration government is doing; building schools, roads, hospitals, investing in security and making our state safe, talking to people to come here to invest so that we can create jobs for you.

    “All of these will come to nothing, if we don’t equip you with the skills that you need to partake in the economy to protect our future.

    “This exercise is not the end but the beginning; by the time my team concludes the verification exercise, which will be detailed, local government by local government, when we are through with all of these, we are going to engage you in a special youth empowerment programme. A total of 10,000 youths will be engaged.”

    He said the beneficiaries would be trained in agriculture, traffic management and the special surveillance system.

    Also the Commissioner for Youths Development, Mr. Akpoebide Alamieyeseigha urged the youths to embrace the vocational programmes initiated by the government.

    Following the reintegration programme of the government for the repentant cultists, he said anybody caught indulging in criminal activities would henceforth be penalised in accordance with the law.

    A petty trader who identified herself as Preye Ezekiel believes that the efforts of the governor are yielding dividends citing the existing peace in the state.

    She, however, asks Dickson to sustain the peace by creating jobs for the youths. “We cannot develop without peace. Let us encourage the governor, who has shown uncommon determination to secure our lives”, she said.

     

  • Court to Sylva: Stop distracting Dickson

    Court to Sylva: Stop distracting Dickson

    The former governor of Bayelsa State, Mr. Timipre Sylva, has been ordered to stop his endless litigations against the incumbent governor of the state, Mr. Seriake Dickson.

    The Federal High Court gave the order on Wednesday in Yengaoa, the state capital.

    The court made the declaration while ruling on a preliminary objection filed by Dickson and the Peoples Democratic Party challenging the jurisdiction of the court to hear Sylva’s suit.

    Sylva had through his lead lawyer, Mr. Robert Clarke (SAN) filed a fresh matter in the court seeking to be declared the valid candidate of PDP for the February 2012 governorship election which Dickson won.

    But the court presided over by Justice Lambo Akande stopped Sylva from further challenging the election that brought Dickson to office.

    Akande, who ruled that “there must be an end to litigation”, declared that the lower court would not entertain a matter that had been clearly decided upon and struck out by the Supreme Court.

    He said it amounted to judicial rascality for Sylva and his lawyers to bring such matter that had been rested by the wise justices of the apex court before the lower court.

    Akande minced no words as he maintained that it would be ridiculous and a journey in futility for him to toe a different path from the decision of the apex court.

    “It is an abuse of the court process for the plaintiff (Sylva) to approach this court on a matter already decided by the Supreme Court. I shall not encourage any journey in futility,” he said.

    In a judgment that lasted for over an hour, Akande traced the history of the matter and concluded that Sylva lacked locus standi on the issue.

     

  • ‘I have no problems with Dickson’

    The former Chief of Staff to Bayelsa State Governor Seriake Dickson, Dikivie Ikiogha, yesterday denied having problems with his boss.

    Ikiogha, who spoke in Yenagoa, said his redeployment to the state’s liaison office in Abuja was done in good faith.

    The transfer of Ikiogha to Abuja had led to speculations that he was out of favour with Dickson, leading to the conclusion that the move was designed to humiliate him.

    The governor replaced Ikiogha with former Commissioner for Science and Technology Mrs. Didi Waltson-Jack.

    But Ikiogha said the governor simply transferred him to Abuja to play his role as chief of staff at the state’s liaison office.

    He said the redeployment did not come to him as a surprise as he was duly consulted before the announcement.

    Ikiogha said his relationship with his boss was cordial, describing his new assignment in Abuja as a challenge.

     

  • Gov Dickson holds monthly transparency briefing

    Gov Dickson holds monthly transparency briefing

    Bayelsa State Government has declared a total sum of N29.5bn as balance in its coffers after statutory deductions and capital payments as at the end of May.

    Addressing the media on the income and expenditure profile of the state for the months of April and May 2013, at its monthly Transparency Briefing in Yenagoa, the Commissioner for Finance, Mr. Duate Iyabi announced N24.6bn as total inflow from the Federation Account for May.

    Giving a breakdown of the figure, he explained that, the amount was made up of Statutory Allocation of N2.7bn, Derivation fund was N12.4bn, SURE-P came to N1bn, Excess Crude N4.6bn, Augumentation of N2.9bn and NNPC Refund of N233m.

    On deductions, Mr. Iyabi explained that, the sum of N1.2bn was deducted for bond repayment, N11.1m for the servicing of foreign loans, refund on Derivation Indices for 2010 gulped N392m, while N41m went for commercial agricultural credit scheme refund.

    The commissioner who announced an all time high IGR of N1.3bn, noted that total inflow after FAAC Deductions amounted to N22.3bn.

    Commenting on the outflows, Mr. Iyabi said N3.9bn was spent on the payment of civil servants’ salaries while that of political appointees stood at N503.7m.

    He also gave N3bn as bank loan repayments, with overheads accounting for N1bn, monthly standing approvals gulped N298m, as well as Capital Payments of N3.9bn.

    For the month of April, the Commissioner stated that N19.5bn was received as gross inflow comprising statutory allocation of N2.1bn, Derivation N11bn, VAT N599m, SURE-P N1.7bn, Augmentation took N3bn and N233m went for NNPC refunds.

    Total deductions for the month, according to Mr. Iyabi, amounted to N2.4bn, which included refund of Domestic Excess crude savings of N709m, Refund of overpayment of revised 13% derivation indices accounted for N187m leaving a Net FAAC Inflow of N17.7bn.

    Governor Seriake Dickson also presented a draft of N1.7bn to representatives of the Huawei Technologies Ltd for the Bayelsa State Safe City and Safe State security surveillance Project, which is aimed at boosting security in the state.

    The Governor, who re-assured investors of their safety, explained that with the contract awarded to one of the world’s leading ICT and security firms, state-of the-art security infrastructure would be deployed in all the nooks and crannies of the state.