Tag: FEC

  • FEC approves N1.5bn for advertising

    FEC approves N1.5bn for advertising

    The Federal Executive Council ( FEC ) on Wednesday approved N1.5 billion for advertising campaign for nine months in radio, television, online and newspapers.

    The Minister of Finance, Kemi Adeosun, briefed State House correspondents at the end of FEC meeting in Abuja.

    She was with the Minister of Information, Lai Mohammed and Minister of Water Resources, Suleiman Adamu, at the briefing.

    She said: “I presented a memo on the voluntary Asset Declaration Bill for approval of N1.5b to cover advertising campaign for nine months, for radio, television, online and newspapers including center spread.”

    The minister said she also briefed FEC, chaired by Vice President Yemi Osinbajo, on the progress made by the government under the tax amnesty.

    She added: “And it has been very well received. We have people who are ready to declare and pay. We sent out over 500 letters under the first batch, but there are thousands of Nigerians being targeted but the first 500 letters have gone out.

    “We have started to get responses back and many people are asking for time to pay. Most of the governors have agreed to give more time for people to make arrangements for payments. This is indeed a very good news for Nigeria as it will help reduce over reliance on oil. It will improve our tax revenue so that whether oil prices are high or low, we will be able to provide basic services for our people.

    “Very high net worth people are now being brought into the tax revenue profile. We hope to exceed the target that has been set.”

     

     

  • FEC moves to stop $9 million yearly  mining loss

    FEC moves to stop $9 million yearly mining loss

    The Federal Executive Council (FEC) meeting chaired by President Muhammadu Buhari on Wednesday approved moves to check illegal mining in the country.

    The measure will stop yearly exportation of illegally mined $9 million gold and tin among other minerals.

    The Minister of Mines and Steel, Kayode Fayemi, disclosed this to State House reporters at the end of the meeting.

    As a starting point, he said that the Federal Executive Council on Wednesday approved purchase of 50 Toyota Hilux vans for surveillance task force across the country.

    This, he said, will boost mining and steel contribution to the Gross Domestic Product (GDP).

    Read Also: FEC approves N236m for completion of Katsina dam

  • Malami, Oyo-Ita attend FEC, Danbazzau absent

    Malami, Oyo-Ita attend FEC, Danbazzau absent

    Some cabinet members linked to the recall to service of the former Chairman of the Presidential Task Force on Pension Reforms, Abdulrasheed Maina, attended the Federal Executive Council ( FEC ) meeting on Thursday.
    Maina, who was on the run for alleged N2 billion scam, got back into service without the knowledge of President Muhammadu Buhari.
    The President, on Monday had ordered disengagement of Maina from service and immediate investigation of how he was recalled.
    Those linked to the recall who attended FEC on Wednesday included the Attorney General of the Federation and Minister of Justice, Abubakar Malami.
    Malami, who arrived the Council chamber around 10:53 a.m had discussions with the Minister of Information, Lai Mohammed and the Minister of Education, Adamu Adamu, before the rendition of the National anthem.
    The Head of the Civil Service of the Federation, Mrs. Winifred Oyo-Ita, who was also linked to the issue, arrived the Council chamber around 10:54 a.m.
    But the Minister of Interior, Abdulrahman Danbazzau, whose Ministry Maina was posted to, was absent when the FEC meeting started on Thursday.
    The meeting commenced when President Buhari arrived the Council Chamber around 11 a.m.

    BREAKING: Police, DSS seal off venue of PANDEF’s Assembly in Port Harcourt

  • Nigeria to reduce membership of international organizations

    Nigeria to reduce membership of international organizations

    The Federal Executive Council (FEC) on Wednesday gave a presidential committee two weeks to conclude arrangements towards scaling down Nigeria’s membership of international organizations.

    Briefing State House correspondents at the end of the FEC meeting presided over by President Muhammadu Buhari, the Minister of Finance, Kemi Adeosun, said the FEC had proposed reduction of Nigeria’s membership of international organizations from 310 to 220.

    Adeosun was accompanied to the briefing by the Minister of Foreign Affairs, Geoffrey Onyeama, and the Senior Special Assistant on Media and Publicity to the President, Garba Shehu.

    According to her, ministers have been asked to go back and review Nigeria’s membership of the organizations so that final report can be presented to FEC in the next two weeks.

    Stressing that Nigeria has been paying $70 million annually on membership subscriptions, she said there was no need allowing subscription to accumulate in organizations that are not important to Nigeria’s developmental aspirations.

    The new move, she said, was to prevent Nigeria from being embarrassed as the subscription arrears have continued to rise.

    She said: “I’m briefing on a memo that was extensively discussed during FEC meeting. The Council deliberated on recommendations of an inter-ministerial working committee on the status of Nigeria’s membership of international organizations and associated financial obligations.

    “Basically Nigeria is a member of 310 international organizations and a committee was set up to review the rationale of our continued membership of such large number of organizations, particularly in the light of the fact that in many cases we are not actually paying our financial obligations and subscriptions which is causing some embarrassment to Nigeria and our image abroad.

    “In particular, it was discussed that there are some commitments made to international organizations by former presidents which were not cash backed.

    “So when our delegations turn up at those organizations we become very embarrassed. So that was what drove the committee.”

    “The committee made some recommendations, that out of the 310 organizations, 220 organizations should be retained and the rest we should withdraw membership from.

    “But council directed that more work needed to be done, particularly there was a dispute as to the figure of how much is owed. The committee had a figure of about $120 million but we heard from Ministry of Finance and other ministries that is far more than that. Our subscriptions are in arrears in several major organizations.”

     

  • Alhassan turns ‘star attraction’ at FEC meeting

    Alhassan turns ‘star attraction’ at FEC meeting

    The Minister of Women Affairs, Aisha Alhassan, was the cynosure of all eyes at the Federal Executive Council (FEC) meeting on Wednesday.

    Alhassan had last week told the BBC Hausa Service that she would support former Vice President Atiku Abubakar if the latter declares his intention to vie for the presidency in 2019.

    She had maintained that she would not support President Muhammadu Buhari if he decides to run for presidential elections in 2019.

    The minister, who arrived few minutes to the commencement of the meeting, went round the hall to exchange pleasantries with some of her colleagues who were already seated in the chamber.

    Photo journalists had a field day taking her shots as she moved round the hall.

    Before entering the Council Chamber, she went to greet the Minister of Mines and Steel, Kayode Fayemi, who was standing with the President’s Chief of Staff, Abba Kyari and the Permanent Secretary, Jalil Arabi.

    When Alhassan entered the chamber, she moved to other side of the hall and exchanged pleasantries with her colleagues, probably because many of the seats on her side of the hall were still empty.

    Among those she greeted were the Minister of State for Health, Dr. Osagie Ehanire, Minister of State for Budget and National Planning, Zainab Ahmed and Minister of Foreign Affairs, Geoffrey Onyeama.

    Others were the Acting Secretary to the Government of the Federation (SGF), Habibat Lawal, Minister of Budget and National Planning, Udoma Udo Udoma and Minister of Finance, Kemi Adeosun.

    She then turned back and headed to her seat.

    Alhassan later stood up and approached Vice President Yemi Osinbajo’s seat and had a brief chat with him.

    She later returned to her seat and continued to chat with the Minister of Water Resources, Suleiman Adamu, who sat beside her.

    The meeting started when President Muhammadu Buhari entered the Council Chamber at 11:00 a.m.

  • Botched FEC, fickle apologia

    Botched FEC, fickle apologia

    It is bad enough that the cabinet meeting is postponed again, the excuses rankle

    IT is trite to state that the Presidency is the number one office in the land, and indeed more trite to suggest that the weekly Federal Executive Council (FEC) meeting chaired by the president is the most important parley of all. This meeting by the president and members of his cabinet and any other person(s) who may be so summoned is a regular forum of the executive arm where all important matters of state are thrashed.

    From executive bills and directives to policy papers and job tenders, not a pothole may be filled if the FEC does not meet, discuss and approve. This is how important and crucial this meeting could be in the life of a country.

    But several times in the life of the President Muhammadu Buhari’s administration, this meeting had been botched. At the outset, after a few missed schedules, the presidency had declared that FEC needed not be regular but would be at the behest of the president. This had caused uproar among Nigerians who understand the dire implication of that decision.

    To hold FEC meetings at the whims of one man, even if he may be the president, is to run a country on an ad-hoc basis. The FEC meeting must be scheduled and structured and must work like the best Swiss clock. In fact, how the FEC works is perhaps the first marker of how a country is run.

    This is why we are peeved that the FEC meeting, the most organic tool of governance and administration of a country is seemingly being handled in a rather lackadaisical manner in the current dispensation. Wednesday’s miss of the cabinet meeting, the second since President Buhari returned from a 104-day medical leave in Britain August 19, has again set the country abuzz as to what ails the president and the question of capacity.

    Recall that three consecutive weeks in April, 2017, the president did not attend the FEC meeting.

    However, it is not as much the cancellation or postponement of the meetings that draws the ire of the populace as the crass apologia dished out to the world from the presidency.

    When the president did not show up on April 12, 2017, information minister, Alhaji Lai Mohammed, had dismissed critics who worried about the president’s health. He had announced that the president had other issues to attend to. Having checked the agenda, the president delegated Vice President Yemi Osinbajo.

    The following week, April 19, 2017, the FEC meeting was botched once again and the excuse: “Staff of the council secretariat resumed on Tuesday after the Easter holidays, there was no time to prepare and circulate memos to ministers…”

    “By practice, the ministers receive council memos two to three days ahead..”

    Yet again last week, the holiday excuse popped up. According to the minister, this time: “the two-day public holidays declared for the Eid-el-Kabir celebrations left little or no time to prepare for the weekly meeting.” Could it be that the presidency forgot it had given this excuse last Easter to the chagrin of the populace, or is it that they couldn’t just care what message is conveyed to the world?

    Recall that the president has only had one meeting (last week) in over three months. A FEC meeting was also called off the week he returned from UK on account of rodents breaching the president’s office and damaging cables.

    There are a few critical points that must be raised here. First, the  excuses streaming from the presidency are downright infantile and odious to right-thinking people. These excuses are disgraceful and portray the presidency, nay, Nigeria as an unserious country.

    The second point is that the president does not have to attend all meetings; he could brief the vice president and delegate him to preside.

    In normal times, the challenges of running the most populous country in Africa could be quite daunting; now in time of economic downturn, it is doubly so. Need we point out that the president needs all the mental and physical energy he can muster as well as concentrated presence of mind to steer the Nigerian ship? His ailment and absences are already telling on the administration and polity. For instance, critical outstanding appointments are not made yet; inter-agency rivalry and even the recent rumpus in the presidency with a sitting minister rebelling openly are sad auguries.

    We say once again that it is trite to note that each missed FEC meeting betokens a pile of untreated files, missed opportunities, missed targets and delayed, if not stunted development. Deep introspection is necessary now.

  • No FEC meeting this week – Lai Mohammed

    No FEC meeting this week – Lai Mohammed

    The Minister of Information and Culture, Alhaji Lai Mohammed, said on Tuesday the weekly Federal Executive Council (FEC) meeting has been postponed due to inadequate time to prepare the documents for the meeting.

    The minister stated this in a statement issued in Kano by his Special Adviser, Mr. Segun Adeyemi.

    He said the two-day public holiday declared for the Eid el-Kabir celebration left little or no time to prepare for the weekly meeting.

    NAN

     

  • Buhari’s Mambila power project set to take off

    Buhari’s Mambila power project set to take off

    Wednesday, August 30th approval by the Federal Executive Council, FEC for the award of the contract for the engineering, procurement and construction of the 3050 MW Mambila Hydro Electric Power Project reflects President Muhammadu Buhari’s strong commitment to the development of infrastructure in the country.

    After more than 40 years on the drawing boards, the FEC approval for the award of the contract to a consortium of three Chinese Companies, Messrs CGCC-SINOHYDRO-CGOCC Joint Venture represents a milestone in the journey for the realisation of the country’s long-standing dream.

    The landmark infrastructure project will cost the country the sum of US5,792,497,062.00 inclusive of taxes, environment utilization, works, as well as project land acquisition and compensation to about 100,000 people who will be resettled.

    Read Also: Obsolete equipment hindering power distribution, says Fashola

    From 2015 when he took power from the Jonathan-led, Peoples Democratic Party, PDP administration, President Muhammadu Buhari has, in addition to the successful prosecution of the costly war against terrorism and economic sabotage, unleashed a slew of infrastructure projects that would change the face of the country. These projects include railway, roads, airports, housing and agriculture among many others.

    The specific case of Mambilla presents an interesting story, given the many years it has taken to leave the drawing boards.

    As far back as 1972, a preliminary study was carried out by Moto Columbus, and confirmed by an indigenous water resources consultancy, Diyam Consultant led by distinguished Nigerian engineer, the late Malam Salihi Ilyasu which recommended the construction of a hydropower project with a rated capacity of 3,960 MW.

    Check Out: ‘How to move power sector forward

    From then till now, various governments made efforts, or to put it in a better way, pretended to be committed to actualising the project. Nothing came out of it. Sham attempts to develop the project on Build-Operate-Transfer, BOT also failed to achieve the commencement of construction.

    A government revocation of a BOT approved by a former President through an anticipatory approval led to a protracted litigation that stalled the project.

    In 2011, the then administration approved the award of contract for consultancy services for the detailed design and project management and supervision of a revised power output of 2,600 Mambila Hydro Electric Power project at the sum of USD 37,220,068,72.

    The major breakthrough in the execution of this project was achieved when President Muhammadu Buhari initiated discussions at the level of the President of the Peoples Republic of China in the course of his State Visit to that country.

    One of the achievements of the visit was the bilateral agreement between the two governments to cooperate on the project and in particular, for the Peoples Republic of China to prioritise Chinese financing of the Mambilla Hydro-Electric Power Project using Chinese contractors.

    The formation of the Joint Venture by the three companies, CGCC, SINOHYDRO and CGCOC under the guidance of the Chinese authorizes at the request of our government was significant in breaking the deadlock caused by litigation. It also ended needless competitor wrangling.

    Following this development, a series of meetings took place to reduce the cost of the project from the projected USD 6.62 billion to the now agreed sUm of USD 5,729,497,062.00.

    The importance of this project is being counted in its capacity to transform the communities in Taraba State and beyond that, the country as a whole.

    To quote the Minister of Power, Works and Housing, Governor Babatunde Raji Fashola speaking on the Mambila project, “it will have a transformational effect on all of Nigeria’s socio-economic development.

    Read Also: Fashola to probe alleged inflation of Gencos’ invoice

    During its construction and upon completion, and subsequent operation, it will have considerable positive impact on electricity supply nationwide, productivity, employment, tourism, technology transfer, rural development, irrigation, agriculture and food production in the area and beyond.”

    This show-piece infrastructure project by the Muhammadu Buhari administration will therefore chart a new course of prosperity in Taraba, the North-East and the entire country. It will no doubt help the country’s infrastructure. After construction, it will be the biggest single power project in the country.

    Considering what this landmark infrastructure project means to the country’s economy, sociology and politics, it is hard to fathom why the past administrations delayed the Mambilla power project inordinately.

    Although blame for this is shared by governments over this 40-year period, the ones to take the bigger share are the governments during which tenure the oil sector boomed with oil prices as high as US$120.

    That period in question, especially the one preceding President Muhammadu Buhari’s second coming was one of missed opportunities and misplaced priorities. The long overdue investments in power and transport needed to unlock the economy were ignored. Nigeria earned unprecedented Dollar revenues.

    But there is nothing to show for the revenues earned. No major capital project was completed, neither power generation, road development, rail or agriculture benefitted from the windfall earnings. Rather, the administration presided over the diversion of oil revenues on a such a massive scale.

    President Muhammadu Buhari on the other hand has a positive and prosperous vision for Nigeria. A nation in which the natural talent and hard work of the people is being supported by an enabling environment of infrastructural development and policy reforms that will develop a firm future for our nation.

  • FG restructures debt profile

    FG restructures debt profile

    To borrow less in naira, more in foreign currencies

    The Federal Executive Council (FEC) on Wednesday approved moves to restructure Nigeria’s debt profile by borrowing less in naira but more in foreign currencies.

    The Minister of Finance, Kemi Adeosun, briefed State House correspondents at the end of FEC meeting.

    She said the government is also refinancing treasury bills.

    Adeosun said:  “The memo that I presented was approved by council as part of efforts to restructure our debt portfolio. We got an approval in June to restructure our debt profile. We will borrow less in naira and more in foreign currency because it’s cheaper and we want to prevent crowding out of the private sector. We want to create room for the private sector so that they can borrow and create more jobs.

    “So as part of that, we sought approval and that was granted for us to refinance treasury bills.  We will finance treasury bills as treasury bills mature. We will be financing them in dollars and up to $3 billion worth of treasury bills will be refinanced into dollars.

    “As the naira treasury bills mature, we will be issuing dollar instrument. We are not increasing our borrowings, but simply restructuring. Instead of owing naira we will be owing dollars and the advantage to that one is cost reduction. The average rate we borrow internationally doesn’t exceed 7 per cent. Our treasury bills were paying between 13.6 and 18.5 per cent.”

     

     

  • FEC okays N20.6 billion for road contracts

    FEC okays N20.6 billion for road contracts

    THE Federal Executive Council (FEC) yesterday approved N20.6 billion for road contracts in Plateau and Kwara states.

    Minister of Power, Works and Housing Babatunde Fashola briefed State House correspondents at the end of the FEC meeting chaired by Acting President Yemi Osinbajo at the Presidential Villa, Abuja.

    He was with Minister of Information Lai Mohammed, Minister of Trade and Investment Okechukwu Enelamah and the Minister of Science and Technology Ogbonnaya Onu.

    The two roads, he said, are N10.4 billion for the reconstruction of Pankshin-Balank-Yalen-Salak-Gindiri road in Plateau State and N10.2 billion for reconstruction of Sharre-Patigi road in Kwara State.

    He said: “The other memorandum was in respect to inherited liabilities from the old power ministry, where a judgment of N119 billion had been signed against the Federal Government as a result of acts of officials of government, who varied the presidential approval without seeking further directive from him and then awarded the contract on that basis.

    “So, the party who was the beneficiary of that contract, which they subsequently sought to withdraw, went to court and got a judgment.”

    Onu said that the council approved a policy to encourage technological advancement in Nigeria.

    The initiative, he said, would help Nigerian firms to produce what the country needs as it will boost foreign investment in Science, Technology and Engineering from where local content could be developed.

    The minister said through the policy, technology transfer will be facilitated with more taxes to be paid to government and wealth creation for the country and people.

    Onu said FEC agreed that, henceforth, whoever wanted to practice any profession in Engineering, Science and Technology, Medicine, Accountancy, Quantity Surveyors and others must be certified by appropriate professional bodies in Nigeria.

    He said the measure was very important in building the nation’s local capacity, adding that there were so many areas that the fiscal policy had covered.

    According to him, the aim is that in the next 10 years, Nigerian firms shall be in a position to carry out very complex jobs, especially the ones that they do not presently have the expertise to do.

    He said the country would for now rely on foreign companies for such jobs, but when they arrive they have to work with Nigerian firms, who would understudy them from project conception to inauguration.

    The minister explained that it was the only way that the country could acquire the necessary technology to build local capacity.

    Onu hoped that in 20 years, Nigerian firms should be competing with the best in the world.

    He said FEC has accepted to declare a state of emergency on Science and Technology because the Economic Recovery and Growth Plan 2017 to 2020 recognised the cardinal place of science and technology in driving the recovery and growth plan.

    Enelamah said FEC approved a memorandum that was presented to amend the list of pioneer industries and products that will enjoy pioneer status.

    This, according to him, is line with the ease of doing business policy of government.