Tag: Osinbajo

  • Buhari begins short vacation, hands over to Osinbajo

    Buhari begins short vacation, hands over to Osinbajo

    President Muhammadu Buhari yesterday proceeded  on a  six-day vacation, handing over his official responsibilities to Vice PresidentYemi Osinbajo.

    The President’s  Special Adviser on Media and Publicity, Femi Adesina, said Buhari will be away for five days.

    The President has dispatched a formal notice of his vacation to the Senate President and the Speaker of the House of Representatives in line with Section 145 (1) of the 1999 Constitution.

    The President departed the country on Tuesday for France after a two day visit to Ogun State where he commissioned several projects to mark the 40th anniversary of the state’s creation.

    While in France,he addressed  a special session of the European Union Parliament.

    He later moved to London to participate in the ‘Supporting Syria and region’ conference.

    In a speech at the London conference, President Buhari applauded the initiative to protect the people of Syria from the vicious war.

    He joined the world in condemning the violence and abuse of human rights and sheer destruction of lives and property.

    He said that Nigeria shares the same experience with Syria following the experience from Boko Haram insurgency and therefore feels the pains the people of Syria feel.

    He urged all the parties to engage in peaceful talks as only a political agreement would bring the tragedy to an end.

    Also at the conference were leaders from across the globe.

  • Osinbajo, CJN for law firm’s inauguration

    Vice-President Yemi Osinbajo (SAN), Chief Justice of Nigeria (CJN) Mahmud  Mohammed; House of Representatives Speaker Yakubu Dogara  and Deputy Senate President Ike Ekweremadu are among dignitaries expected at the launch of J-K Gadzama LLP,  the corporate law office of Chief Joseph–Kyari Gadzama (SAN).

    It will hold on February 9 in Garki II, Abuja. The firm will also mark its silver jubilee. Prof Fidelis Oditah  (QC, SAN) will give a keynote speech.

     

  • Osinbajo’s wife praises Airtel for supporting less privileged

    Osinbajo’s wife praises Airtel for supporting less privileged

    The wife of the Vice President, Mrs. Dolapo Osinbajo, has commended Airtel Nigeria for supporting the less privileged in Nigeria through the Airtel Touching Lives platform.

    Mrs Osinbajo, who was the Special Guest of honour at the premiere of Season 2 of Airtel Touching Lives, noted that Airtel Touching Lives programme has positively touched the lives of many Nigerians.

    “Support for those suffering and underprivileged should not be left in the hands of Airtel alone. It is the responsibility of us all. I was particularly touched by the Season 1 story of the Chime family whose children suffered various forms of physical disabilities. It shows that more attention and concern need to be shown to the less privileged people who are part of the society.

    The Managing Director/Chief Executive Officer of Airtel, Segun Ogunsanya, urged Nigerians to join efforts in supporting humanitarian causes.

  • Osinbajo queries BPE chief on N1.5b ‘curious’ contracts

    Osinbajo queries BPE chief on N1.5b ‘curious’ contracts

    Agency: ex-director’s petition frivolous

    Disturbed by the alleged N1.45billion legal and consultancy fees scandal in the Bureau of Public Enterprises(BPE), Vice President Yemi Osinbajo has queried the Director-General of the agency, Benjamin Dikki, on the award of such contracts.

    The controversial contracts include a curious N950million job for the liquidation of the Power Holding Company of Nigeria(PHCN) when the company had seized to exist and N500million as consultancy fees to a government department.

    The DG is also expected to clarify the alleged payment of N27,188,232,208:20billion as premium for group life and group personal accident insurance for former staff of the defunct Power Holding Company of Nigeria(PHCN).

    Another issue is the alleged diversion of N455,266,618;23 meant for the payment of retirement benefits to entertainment allowance for the staff.

    The query followed a petition to the Office of the Vice President by a former director of the BPE, Ibrahim Muhammad Kashim.

    Kashim said the N950million contract for the winding up of PHCN was unnecessary because PHCN was already a “shell” company.

    Before the action of the Vice President, the Bureau of Public Procurement (BPP) had asked the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) to probe the contracts.

    The contracts were awarded contrary to the advice of the immediate past Attorney-General of the Federation, Mr. Mohammed Bello Adoke (SAN) and the BPP, it was learnt.

    The BPP requested the EFCC to investigate the payment scandal in a June 27, 2015 letter to the anti-graft agency.

    But a fresh petition by the ex-BPE director to the Office of the Vice President sparked the Presidency’s interest.

    A letter by the Office of the Vice President to the ex-director reads in part: “I am directed to acknowledge with thanks, the receipt of your letter dated 3rd November 2015 on the above stated subject.

    “His Excellency, Prof. Yemi Osinbajo, SAN, GCON, Vice President, Federal Republic of Nigeria has further directed that the said document be forwarded to Director-General, Bureau of Public Enterprises (BPE) for his due consideration and response.

    “Please accept the assurances of His Excellency, the Vice President’s warm regards.”

    Earlier in his petition, Kashim said there was rot in the BPE which should be investigated by the Vice President, who is the Chairman of the National Council on Privatisation(NCP).

    He said: “Your Excellency, the former DG Miss Bolanle Onagoruwa, was removed partly because she refused to accept the appointment of a prominent PDP lawyer to wind up PHCN for an amount exceeding N1.5bn. ( When the proposal was sent to her, I was one of the Directors she confided in.)

    “ As lawyers, we reckoned that it was unthinkable, more so as all the assets of PHCN had been transferred through a presidential order to the Discos and Gencos while all the liabilities were to be handled by Nigeria Electricity Liability Management Company ( NEMLCO). PHCN is therefore a shell company.

    “Immediately after her removal, the current DG established a committee that awarded the assignment to the preferred law firm. I publicly expressed my disagreement. The DG sent for me and solicited for my support as it was from our bosses. I maintained my position, as a result of which the matter was never tabled at, or brought to the management committee for deliberation and approval before going to NCP.

    “ I still maintain that PHCN was a shell company that had no assets and or liabilities. Winding up a shell company surely cannot be done for close to a billion naira. It was fraudulent.

    Regarding the payment of over N27billion for insurance premium, the ex-director said at the time, PHCN had no more staff.

    He added: “The DG one day invited me to his office. He informed me of a memo that would be sent to Management Committee for its consideration and approval. He suggested that we should pass it, since I was the one that usually chaired such meetings. It was to approve for transmission to the chairman of NCP the payment of N27,188,232,208:20 billionas premium to Great Nigeria Insurance Plc for group life and group personal accident insurance for PHCN staff. I told him it cannot pass, for even a law 101 student knows the cliche ‘No premium No cover’.

    “And in any case at that time PHCN had no staff. However, I learnt later that the same paper came to BPE with all the necessary approvals, and I believe the money was paid.”

    On retirement benefits, Kashim alleged that the amount approved for BPE staff was converted to Entertainment Allowance.

    He said: “ One of the items approved by the NCP was Terminal Benefits for exiting staff. It was to take effect from 2015. For that purpose NCP approved for inclusion into 2015 national budget the sum of N455,266,618:23. The staff due to retire in 2015 are:(1)Ibrahim Muhammad Kashim(Director), (2)Hajiya Fati Abubakar (Director);and (3) Afolabi Mathew(Deputy Director).

    “ The amount approved by the NCP as terminal benefit was meant only for three of us retiring in 2015. It meant that BPE should in 2015 seek NCP’s approval for staff retiring in 2016. (As a matter of fact there will be only one retiring staff in 2016).

    “The DG by these acts has wrongly converted our terminal benefits to pay management staff entertainment allowances. This he did to calm the restiveness of the management staff as he had completely spent the internally generated revenue on his weekly trips to Zuru in Kebbi State to campaign for a political party (in deed he  even bought a pilot vehicle fitted with a siren to facilitate the trips).

    “Let the DG BPE Mr. Benjamin Ezra Dikki tell Nigerians by publicising the minutes of meetings where in those matters were presented to the management committee of the BPE and that it deliberated and recommended to the NCP for approval in line with the extant law. The BPE is the secretariat of the NCP. Matters going to NCP have to be discussed and approved by the management committee. Why none of the payments in question came before the committee was because I objected to it, so the DG went elsewhere and got the memos approved after which he disbursed the money. And it was my stance that made the DG in an attempt to pay me back, to circumvent NCPs approval that amended the BPE Staff Condition of Service, just to ensure that I don’t get my terminal benefits.

    “Not only that, he equally converted the approved sum for retiring staff in 2015 to be converted into recurrent management staff entertainment allowance.”

    In its defence, the BPE said its ex-director lied and misled the public in his petition to the Vice President.

    The BPE, in a statement by its Head, Public Communications, Alex E. Okoh, said: “Kashim lied when he stated,  “….. The former DG Ms Bolanle Onagoruwa was removed partly because she has refused to accept the appointment of a prominent PDP lawyer to wind up PHCN for an amount  exceeding N1.5billion… immediately after her removal the current DG established a committee that awarded the assignment to the preferred law firm.”

    “The fact is that the National Council on Privatisation at its 3rd Meeting of 2013 held on Thursday May 9, 2013 had approved the engagement of Messrs J K Gadzama as the consultant for winding up of PHCN.  Benjamin Ezra Dikki was appointed acting DG on 27th November, 2013, over six months later.”

    On insurance premium, the BPE added: “The provision of Group Life Insurance Policy for employees is mandatory and compulsory under Section 4(1) (5&6) of the Pension Reform Act 2004. The maxim of no premium no cover does not apply here where the law explicitly provides, ‘Every employer shall maintain Group Life Insurance Policy in favour of each employee for a minimum of three times the total annual emoluments of the employee and premium shall be paid not later than the date of commencement of the cover’.

    “Thus, PHCN Successor Companies as employers of labour before privatisation were mandated by law to provide these classes of insurance to its employee in compliance with the Pension Act.

    “It was established that there was an Insurance Policy between GNIP and PHCN.  Premiums were outstanding  for year 2011/2012 amounting to N13,607,151,141.10 and renewable for the year 2012/2013 at the sums of N13,581,080,774.10, totalling  N27,188,232,208.20 for which payment was outstanding.  PHCN had already filed claims with GNIP for 267 staff that died in active service for compensation to the relations/widows of the deceased.

    “GNIP did not pay the claim because PHCN did not pay premiums due for 2011/2012 and 2012/2013. PHCN submitted these claims to the Implementation Committee set up by the National Council on Privatisation for the processing of entitlements to PHCN Staff  that  then made representations to the then Minister of Power.

    “The Minister of Power presented the matter to the Vice President in a memo dated 23/12/2013.   It was subsequently presented to and approved by the National Council on Privatisation at its 3rd meeting held on August 4th, 2014, for payment.  BPE transferred the sum to the Office of the Accountant General of the Federation for further action.

    “As mentioned earlier, at a special meeting held, on January 12, 2013 the NCP set up an Implementation Committee, chaired by the Minister of State for Power to handle the processing and payment of entitlements of PHCN Staff based on the approvals given at the same meeting.

    “This Implementation Committee chaired by a Minister comprised of representatives of various Ministries and Agencies, was superior to BPE management.  Thus no single one of the forty tranches of payments to PHCN Staff ever came to the BPE management for consideration.

    “It is in compliance to the same process that the Insurance premium payment did not have to come to BPE management as insinuated by Ibrahim Kashim.

    “Once the implementation Committee processed and verified PHCN Staff entitlements, it advised BPE and BPE remitted the relevant sums to the office of Accountant General of the Federation that effected payments as appropriate.”

    The BPE denied allegation of diversion of retirement benefits of BPE staff including the entitlements of Kashim.

    It said: “The Bureau in its desire to ameliorate the plight of its former staff who retired and the financial dislocation they went through before they could access payments from their RSA, decided to explore the provision of Section 4(4) (a) on the Pension Act which gives employers the discretion to make additional payments of benefits to its retiring employees.

    “It was intended to provide a cushion of funding for retiring staff pending when they were able to process and access their RSA’s.  Consequently, the National Council on Privatisation approval was sought to create terminal benefits for the Bureau’s staff who are retiring.

    “This was, however, subject to the approval of the Salaries and Wages Commission, the body that has the statutory powers to approve Salaries and Allowance of Public Servants.  The Salaries and Wages Commission declined approval of the Terminal Benefits on the grounds that the Bureau cannot be singled out of the entire Public Service for such special treatment.  Once the Salaries and Wages Commission does not approve the benefits, such cannot be included in the budget template and be funded.

    “By the provisions of the Pension Act and the determination of the Salaries and Wages Commission, there is no terminal benefit payable to Mallam Ibrahim M Kashim or any staff.

    “We wish to emphasise that all retirement benefits are paid by PENCOM in line with the Pension Act and all the ex-director’s records have been forwarded to PENCOM for payment. He has been advised to follow up with PENCOM for payment.”

  • Buhari, Osinbajo, others lay wreaths for fallen heroes

    Buhari, Osinbajo, others lay wreaths for fallen heroes

    President Muhammadu Buhari and Vice President Yemi Osinbajo yesterday led other top government officials and service chiefs to lay wreaths in honour of soldiers who died in service in Nigeria and in international assignments.

    January 15 every year is dedicated to remembering and appreciating surviving Nigerian military men who have retired from active service.

    It was the first time President Buhari as the Commander-in-Chief of the Armed Forces would lay wreath in a democratic setting.

    Buhari was clad in white babanriga, white cap and black shoes.

    The wreath-laying ceremony at the National Arcade in the Three Arms Zone in Abuja came after over a month that the 2016 Armed Forces Remembrance Day emblem and Appeal Fund was launched by the President.

    The brief ceremony started at 10 am when President Buhari arrived the National Arcade and inspected the guard of honour.

    Muslim and Christian officers prayed for the departed souls and the nation.

    Vice President Osinbajo, Senate President Bukola Saraki, House of Representatives Speaker Yakubu Dogara, Chief Justice of Nigeria (CJN) Mahmud Mohammed and the Minister of Defence Dan Ali Mansur were among top government officials who also laid wreaths.

    Others include Federal Capital Territory (FCT) Minister Mohammed Bello; Chief of Defence Staff, Gen Gabriel Olonisakin, who led the service chiefs; the Inspector-General of Police (IGP), Solomon Arase and National Chairman of the Nigerian Legion, Col. Micah Gaya (rtd.)

    Gun salute immediately followed the wreath-laying ceremony.

    President Buhari then signed the register and led the dignitaries to release white pigeons at the no-speech-making ceremony.

    The President then inspected a military surveillance vehicle where he saw and spoke with troops at the war front in Borno State.

    He told the troops that everything was being done to support them to win the war against the insurgents.

    He said: “We have just concluded the parade. It was a successful one and I am very pleased with this innovation, which I did not know about before. It’s quite impressive and a morale booster,

    “I congratulate you indeed. Well, I hope you are able to cope in spite of the weather there. It is dusty, it is cold, and from the report I have been receiving, I am very impressed and congratulate you for your best in the circumstances.

    “Thank you very much indeed.”

    The President told the Theatre Commander of the operation Dole in Maiduguri, Maj-Gen. Hassan Umoru: “Please tell the troops that we are quite concerned here about their performance and the rest of the nation, and I hope they are in touch with their respective families back at home.”

    President Buhari added: “I assure you that the government is doing its best to ensure that they are provided with the best that is possible in terms of military hardware and efficiency in logistics and pay your allowances so that your families will be happy back in the barracks. Thank you very much indeed.”

    The troops then gave the President three happy cheers.

    President Buhari also spoke to the Air Component Commander of the operations on the King Air Beach Aircraft who was airborne and briefing the President on areas fully captured by the troops.

    It was beamed live on the Eagle Mobile Command post both in video and audio versions.

    The National Chairman of the All Progressives Congress (APC), John Odigie-Oyegun and other top government officials, including cabinet members, attended the ceremony.

  • Buhari, Osinbajo, others lay wreaths for fallen heroes

    Buhari, Osinbajo, others lay wreaths for fallen heroes

    President Muhammadu Buhari and Vice President Yemi Osinbajo on Friday led other top government officials and service chiefs to lay wreaths in honour of soldiers who died in service in Nigeria and during international assignments.

    Every January 15th is dedicated for remembrance of military men and women who died in active service.

    The occasion is also use to appreciate surviving military personnel who had retired from active service.

    Friday’s event was Buhari’s first since his election as President in March last year.

    At the event, the President wore white Babanriga, white cap and black shoes to match.

    The wreaths-laying ceremony at the National Arcade in the Three Arms Zone in Abuja took place few weeks that the 2016 Armed Forces Remembrance Day emblem and Appeal Fund was launched by the President.

    The brief ceremony started at 10.00am when President Buhari arrived the National Arcade and inspected the guard of honour.

    Muslim and Christian officers prayed for the departed souls and the nation.

    Vice President Osinbajo, Senate President Bukola Saraki, Speaker of the House of Representatives, Yakubu Dogara, Chief Justice of Nigeria (CJN), Mahmud Mohammed and Minister of Defence, Dan Ali Mansur, were among top government officials who also laid wreaths.

     

     

  • Osinbajo, Soludo disagree on 2016 budget

    Osinbajo, Soludo disagree on 2016 budget

    Vice President Yemi Osinbajo and former Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) Governor Chukwuma Soludo disagreed yesterday on the efficacy of Budget 2016 to tackle the economic challenges facing the country.

    They spoke in Abuja at the Daily Trust Dialogue with the theme: 50 years since 1966: Is Nigeria rising?

     Other speakers at the event are Gen. Martin Luther Agwai, a former Chief of Defence Staff and a scholar; Dr. Mairo Mandara.

    Osinbajo said he and President Muhammadu Buhari are prepared to serve with their integrity intact than any desire to make money in government.

    He admitted that the nation is passing through a critical and interesting period, but that they remain committed to taking the nation to the next level of social, political and economic development.

    Soludo said among others that the 2016 budget represented a missed opportunity for the government to set new standards for a post-oil economy. He urged the government to take bold steps to make changes happen.

    Soludo expressed fears for the nation by 2050, saying Nigeria has underperformed despite earning over one trillion dollars from oil over the years. He regretted that the money earned from oil has only kept the looting elite united and organised while the nation is now the fifth among states classified as failed states.

    He said the budget was designed for sharing and consumption regarding the nation’s oil wealth and not necessarily for the development of the country’s dysfunctional system.

    He expressed regret that the nation had been taking 10 steps forward and 11 steps backward, urging leaders to rise to the challenge posed by the fact that the period of oil boom is over.

    Soludo said Nigeria has the potential to rise, but that it depends largely on the choices made by the leadership. He expected this year’s budget to be more innovative to defeat our old, bad ideas.

    He said the budget had historic 37 per cent deficit to make recurrent expenditure higher than total revenue, pointing out that it was not the way to go for a government with change as its mantra.

    “To craft the new agenda, we must defeat the old agenda. We cannot make progress in the country with the tools and agenda of the old,” Soludo said, adding that the party is over, following the fall in the price of crude oil globally.

    He said the government needs a coherent economic plan as well as the right political architecture, stressing that anything less than this would mean that the leaders are building on a quicksand.

    Soludo said 35 per cent of Nigeria’s land is under threat of desertification which would affect agriculture, stressing that 11 to 12 states in the same zone are facing the problem of Boko Haram. He said there would be a lot of migration by 2050 if oil and gas,agriculture and solid minerals have limited impacts on employment and urged the federal government to begin to take steps to improve manufacturing and skill acquisition for Nigerians.

    Soludo added that Nigerians need skills and where to use them and praised the administration for the priliminary steps it has taken to dismantle some of the things that strangulate the economy in the past few months.

    But Osinbajo said the Buhari administration is determined to fix the  justice system to end impunity and corruption.

    He said: “Everybody escapes justice in Nigeria, whether it is the poor or the rich. As of today, we have  12,000 convicted persons in our various prisons across the country in a country of 170 million people. The United States of America with a population of 300 million people have 2.2 million convicted persons in various prisons. With this figure, it is either Nigerians are peace loving or something is wrong with our system.”

    The Vice President said far from being a budget based on compassion the 2016 budget was designed to address the plight of over 120 million Nigerians who have been alienated from governance and living below poverty level.

    “The budget is about the economic survival of these people, and if we don’t do it, we are only postponing the doomsday. The planned recruitment of 500,000 teachers would fill a huge gap in our education system, it would put people to work and further improve our education system,” the Vice President said.

    He said technical and vocational education, conditional cash transfer, small and medium scale enterprises, agriculture, especially erosion and desertification, use of improved seedlings and private sector involvement are all captured in the budget for the country’s growth.

    The Vice President also stated that the Federal Government was not by-passing manufacturing as some of the steps it would take would boost the sector, irrespective of the fact that its WTO agreements would be affected. Nigeria, he said, has no choice but to take such step.

    Osinbajo said the Federal Government decided to increase the coverage of VAT from 20 percent of the economy rather than increase its rate to 10 per cent, stressing that regardless of the size of the budget, the good thing is that it would engender growth.

  • Osinbajo, Soludo disagree on 2016 budget

    Osinbajo, Soludo disagree on 2016 budget

    Vice President Yemi Osinbajo on Thursday said President Muhammadu Buhari and himself are prepared to serve with their integrity intact than to pursue any desire to make money in government.

    He admitted that the nation was passing through a critical and interesting period, saying they remain committed to take the nation to the next level of social, political and economic development.

    Osinbajo made the remarks at the NAF Conference Centre, Abuja, while responding to lectures delivered by Gen. Martin Luther Agwai, Dr. Mairo Mandara and Prof. Charles Soludo during this year’s edition of the Daily Trust Dialogue with the theme: “ 50 years since 1966: Is Nigeria Rising?”

    Prof. Soludo, who was the last resource person to speak, said among others that the 2016 budget represented a missed opportunity for the government to set new standards for a post oil economy, urging the government to take bold and audacious steps to make changes happen.

    However, Dr. Mandara held the audience spelt bound when she insisted that Nigeria needs a self-definition of her own political identity that would address social justice, inequality, women status, health, education and poverty.

    She urged the nation’s leaders to lead by example and place more emphasis on merit rather than surrounding themselves only with people from their ethnic background at the detriment of quality service and commitment to the growth and development of Nigeria.

    But Gen. Agwai averred that Nigeria is not rising in terms of development since it could not match its population growth of 175 million people and other potentials with qualitative development in education, transportation, agriculture, health, political stability, good governance and security.

    But the Vice President, who insisted on staying until the key note speakers made their remarks, said the present administration is taking holistic approach in tackling the nation’s myriad of problems, stressing that President Buhari and himself had a duty to put in their best and deliver a nation with the capacity to grow and develop.

     

  • N5b earmarked for Osinbajo, Saraki, Dogara’s official residences

    N5b earmarked for Osinbajo, Saraki, Dogara’s official residences

    • N3b for re-building of bombed UN complex
    • N3.9b equipment for State House Health Centre

    Combined N5billion is planned to be spent this year by government on providing official residences for Vice President Yemi Osinbajo,Senate President Bukola Saraki and House of Representatives Speaker Yakubu Dogara.

    A separate N3, 024, 182, 305 is earmarked for the reconstruction of the United Nations building in Abuja which was attacked by Boko Haram a few years ago while other sums are budgeted  for the  provision of other facilities in the bombed complex.

    Details of the Federal Capital Territory Authority (FCTA) budget obtained by The Nation on Sunday   showed that the agency proposes to expend N108, 300, 451 on the first part of design and construction of a residence for the Vice President.

    A bigger sum of N3, 145, 185, 569 is set aside for “design and construction of the Vice President’s residence, ADC residence, Security quarters, site clearing and earthworks, road works, street lighting, outstanding liability, drainages.”

    N502.5m is allocated for “site clearance and earthworks, outstanding liabilities, general items and miscellaneous works” at the Senate President’s complex and N200, 694, 435 for “consultancy payments and outstanding liabilities” in respect of the building.

    The FCTA is also scheduled to spend N1, 035, 652, 770 on the construction of the official residence for House of Representatives Speaker Dogara who currently lives in his private house in Abuja.

    Besides, the FCTA will spend N437, 090, 600 on  the purchase of residential accommodation for World Health Organisation (WHO) senior staff  in addition to N3, 024, 182, 305 for the reconstruction of the United Nations building in Abuja which was attacked by Boko Haram a few years ago.

    It was also gathered that the State House Medical Centre (SHMC) will be provided with an equipment costing N3. 9 billion in the New Year, according to the 2016 budget estimates.

    A total of N3, 219, 555 is earmarked for the procurement of the unnamed medical equipment.

    A separate N308m is to be spent on the construction of a new VIP wing at the State House Medical Centre in Abuja while the extension of the Dental Wing in the SHMC is projected to gulp N27m.

    Besides, the upgrading of wired and wireless network at the State House’ medical facility will cost N29m besides the N114m budget for the general cost of upgrading of the State House’  internet infrastructure.

    Also in the budget is the planned purchase of audio-visual equipment for presidential coverage estimated to cost N50 million.

    Meanwhile, the National Assembly is yet to make public details of its planned expenditure for the New Year contrary to a promise by Senate President Saraki to do so.

    Between 2011 and 2015, the National Assembly’s budgetary allocation always hovered around N150 billion per year but the breakdown was never made public.

    “Details of 2016 Budget will be made available and open for public debate and scrutiny”, Saraki had stated in one of his recent tweets.

  • NEPC briefs Osinbajo on non-oil export plan

    NEPC briefs Osinbajo on non-oil export plan

    The Executive Director/CEO, Nigeria Export Promotion Council (NEPC), Olusegun Awolowo, yesterday briefed the Vice President, Prof Yemi Osinbajo, on its plans to boost non-oil exports.

    He briefed the Vice President when he visited him in his office at the Presidential Villa, Abuja. He said the visit was to get the Vice President to buy into NEPC’s new plan  tagged-Zero Oil Plan.

    Speaking with State House correspondents at the end of the meeting, he said: “This is a plan that we think will really help Nigeria out of the doldrums we now face; we are facing a drop of revenue of over $30 billion. Our revenue on oil has fallen from $70billion to almost $40 billion; that alone can kill a country if we are not careful.

    “We are the apex agency for the promotion of non-oil products in Nigeria. So we have come up with this Zero Oil Plan which we are getting the stakeholders’ buy-in all over, and which our Minister will formally come and present to Mr President.”