Tag: payment

  • EFCC probes clues in payment of N1b to ‘ghost’ workers

    EFCC probes clues in payment of N1b to ‘ghost’ workers

    Detectives are probing fresh clues on the alleged diversion of public funds to pay 23,000 ghost workers.

    The Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) was shocked to discover that most of the slush accounts used for the pay fraud have either irregular Bank Verification Number (BVN) or no BVN at all, it was learnt yesterday.

    The fresh clue raises the suspicious that the pay fraud cases may be more than the N1billion so far uncovered by the EFCC.

    Some civil servants were said to have fled from their duty posts following the smashing of the syndicate behind the ghost workers.

    More workers might be picked up in the next few days by the anti-graft agency, a source close to the investigation said.

    A top source in EFCC said: “The fact that the commission’s investigation revealed additional 200 ghost workers indicates that the size of the scam could be more than what the ministry reported. The amount involved is certainly more than N1 billion.

    “The latest clues at our disposal have shown that more civil servants were involved in the IPPIS scandal. We are analysing all these fresh clues.

    “We are also on the trail of most of the culprits and their accomplices outside the civil service.”

    “It is amazing how the members of the syndicate were able to penetrate the banks to perpetrate the fraud,” the source added, adding:

    “It is apparent that members of the syndicate were working in collaboration with some staff of one or two banks.

    “We are, however, conducting due diligence on all the accounts to sift the wheat from the chaff. In fact, some of the accounts made available by the Ministry of Finance do not belong to ghost workers. We will not allow the innocent to suffer.”

    The EFCC has released on bail Ronke Usman, one of those implicated in the alleged ghost workers fraud.

    She has been granted bail pending the conclusion of the investigation. But her husband, Dayo Usman Aliyu, is still being detained.”

    The Minister of Finance, Mrs Kemi Adeosun recently summoned the managing director of a first generation bank over the alleged complicity of the bank in the payment of salaries to 23,000 ghost workers on the payroll of the Federal Government.

    Also, the Minister asked the Director General of Pension Commission, Ms Chinelo Anohu-Amazu, to appear before a probe panel in her ministry on how Pension Funds Administrators(PFAs)  allegedly generated fake PFA numbers for the “ghost workers”.

    After the initial probe by the ministry, the Minister handed over the case to the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC).

    In its preliminary findings, the EFCC smashed a nine-man syndicate behind N1billion salary fraud for 599 ghost workers.

    The anti-graft agency also arrested  the couple said to be members of the syndicate.

    The couple work in the office of  the Accountant-General of the Federation, where gaps in the Integrated Personnel Payroll Information System(IPPIS) were exploited.

    Another suspected member of the syndicate, Bede Anyanwu, who is an accountant with the Federal Ministry of Environment, was quizzed and released on administrative bail.

  • ‘We ’ll unmask those behind MTN N50b payment’

    The Senate Committee on Communications yesterday affirmed its resolve to unmask those behind the payment of N50 billion by the Mobile Telecommunication Network (MTN).

    Its Chairman, Senator Gilbert Nnaji, said the committee was interested in knowing why MTN was directed to pay the money into a recovery account, instead of rooting it through the Nigeria Communications Commission (NCC).

    He said the committee’s stance became necessary following reports that the matter was literally laid to rest due to the absence of the Attorney General and Minister of Justice, Abubakar Malami, at its hearing last Thursday.

    The NCC, last October, imposed a fine of N1.04 trillion on MTN for contravening the directive on deactivation of 5.2 million unregistered subscribers.

    MTN was, however, reported to have paid N50 billion into government coffers as part of a deal to resolve the matter.

    Nnaji said most committee members saw Malami’s action in relation to the controversial N50 billion payment by MTN, as “not only at variance with the anti-corruption stance of the Federal Government, but an attempt to undermine Nigeria’s integrity and subject it to ridicule to impress South Africa.”

    He insisted that no sentiments would deter the committee from unmasking those behind the “national embarrassment”.

    The chairman said unravelling circumstances surrounding the deal became necessary due to the public outcry it continued to generate.

    Nnaji noted that the committee queried the intentions of the attorney-general “in unilaterally opening a new account with a name that had no correlation with the issue at hand and ordering MTN to credit same despite the Treasury Single Account (TSA).

    He said the committee’s believed that “if there were no ulterior motives, the Ministry of Justice could have gone through streamlined processes of, among others, rooting the money through NCC with sufficient notice to the Ministry of Communications instead of sidelining the major stakeholders and circumventing extant laws guiding public financial administration”.

    The senator said: “This is one transaction that has generated public suspicion, compelling the committee to invite relevant stakeholders to this meeting for adequate clarifications.

    “Issues from the foregoing are: into which account did MTN pay the N50 billion and which government agency acknowledged the payment?

    “If MTN actually paid, why did it disregard payment into NCC’s coffers as statutorily obliged?

    “If MTN paid into CBN’s recovery account, on whose directive did the network do so and what legal right does CBN have to lodge the money in a recovery account?”

    MTN’s Managing Director Ferdinand Moolman told the committee that as part of the service provider’s commitment to out-of-court settlement, the firm received a directive from the Justice Minister to lodge the money into the CBN-domicilled recovery account, which it complied with on February 24.

    In their separate responses at the session, Minister of Communications Adebayo Shittu and NCC Executive Vice Chairman Prof. Umar Dambata said they knew nothing about the payment and could not give any insight to the terms and basis of negotiations leading to the payment.

    The Accountant-General of the Federation Mr. Ahmed Idris, in acknowledging the payment, said he was directed to create the account with the name as suggested by the Minister of Justice.

    The CBN, represented by Mohammed A. Yakub, explained that as Federal Government’s banker, it acted merely in deference to a request from government agencies.

    The attorney-general of the federation was not at the hearing, as he was said to have travelled abroad.

    He was represented by the Director of Civil Litigation, Dayo Akpata, who said the matter was still in court and that as the chief law officer as well as a party in the case, the attorney general took the action in good faith.

    But this did not go down well with the committee, who dismissed the defence as “frivolous, face-saving and unacceptable”.

    The meeting was adjourned to two weeks to enable the attorney general to appear before the committee and explain to form the content of the committee’s report.

  • Stanbic IBTC offers school fees payment solutions

    Stanbic IBTC offers school fees payment solutions

    As schools reopen for another term, Stanbic IBTC Bank, a member of Stanbic IBTC Holdings, has again reassured parents and guardians of the bank’s readiness to help offset the financial burden of paying their children/wards fees through its school fees payment solutions.

    The bank said it has a bouquet of educational products and payment solutions such as the school fees facility, Short Term Loans, Salary Advance (SALAD) for salaried workers and its payment cards that parents can easily access and use to pay the school fees of the wards of account holders.

    According to the bank, the prepaid cards are available to load pocket money for children/wards while the credit cards, which currently offer a 55-day interest moratorium, can be used to seamlessly pay school fees. The school fees payment solutions underline the importance the financial institution attaches to education, it added.

    Executive Director, Personal and Business Banking, Stanbic IBTC, Babatunde Macaulay, said the development of the educational products is the bank’s way of showing that it cares about its customers as well as the educational development of their wards. According to him, the bank understands that education is the bedrock of personal and societal growth and development. “At Stanbic IBTC, we are attuned to the needs of our customers and we regularly strive to provide innovative financial and payment solutions tailored to those needs,” Macaulay said.

    “Stanbic IBTC, he added, “will continue to develop products and services to support the attainment of quality education. The school fees loan is a fast, simple and convenient way by which customers can meet their short term financial obligations to educate their children. And the repayment terms are very convenient.”

    Other benefits of the school fees loans, according to Macaulay, include low interest rates, access to a revolving line of credit, flexible repayment terms, and the opportunity to access credit up to 100 per cent of the customer’s income. With schools resuming for a new term, the school fees loans will help to alleviate the financial burden parents and guardians may face in paying school fees.

  • IMF boss to stand trial over $438m payment

    IMF boss to stand trial over $438m payment

    The International Monetary Fund (IMF) chief Christine Lagarde is to stand trial in France for alleged negligence over a $438 million payment to a businessman in 2008.

    She was the Finance Minister in President Nicolas Sarkozy’s government at the time of the compensation award to Bernard Tapie for the sale of a firm.

    Tapie supported  Sarkozy in the 2007 presidential election. Ms. Lagarde’s lawyer described the court’s decision as “incomprehensible”, and said the IMF boss would appeal.

    In a statement, she said she had “always acted in this affair in the interest of the state and in respect of the law.” Tapie was once a majority shareholder in sports goods company, Adidas, but sold it in 1993 in order to become a Cabinet minister in Francois Mitterrand’s Socialist government.

    He sued the Credit Lyonnais Bank over the handling of the sale, alleging that the partly state-owned bank had defrauded him by deliberately undervaluing the company. His case was later referred by Ms. Lagarde to a three-member arbitration panel, which awarded the compensation.

    A French court has ruled that Bernard Tapie should pay back the $438 with interest. Investigators suspected that he was granted a deal in return for his support for Sarkozy. Earlier this month, a French court ruled that Tapie was not entitled to any compensation for that sale and should pay back the €404m with interest.

    France’s Court of Justice of the Republic (CJR) decided that Ms. Lagarde, 59, should be tried on the charge of “negligence by a person in position of public authority” over the compensation case.

    A court spokesman later confirmed the decision. If convicted, she could be sentenced to one year in prison. French media said the CJR investigation magistrates declined to follow the recommendation of another court which last year decided not to pursue the case. “It’s incomprehensible,” Ms Lagarde’s lawyer Yves Repiquet told iTele. “I will recommend Mrs Lagarde appeal against this decision.”

    A spokesman for France’s attorney general said Ms Lagarde would have five days to appeal, once the court decision is made public today or Monday.

    Meanwhile, IMF spokesman, Gerry Rice, said the organisation – which represents 188 member nations, “continues to express its confidence in the Managing Director’s ability to effectively carry out her duties”.

  • HIV&AIDS: Infected Nigerians raise voice against new payment regime

    HIV&AIDS: Infected Nigerians raise voice against new payment regime

    Working with the theme ‘Getting to Zero,’ the world penultimate week commemorated this year’s World  AIDS Day with a lot of fanfare. The weeklong event however leaves a sour taste in the mouth of people living with the virus in Nigeria, as they continue to battle the newly introduced charges. Gboyega Alaka x-rays the situation.

    No man can think clearly when his fists are clenched.” – George Jean Nathan

    The above quote by the late George Jean Nathan, one-time leading American critic and publisher, best describes Tina Nnamdi (not real name), a Nigerian HIV positive patient’s recent resolve to go haywire and grant as many men as ask her for sex, free express sex without recourse to condom. Put more directly, Tina has resolved to spread the deadly virus in her bloodstream to as many men as make overtures to her, and her reason is frustration; basic animal frustration. Tina can no longer access her regular dosage of anti-retroviral drugs (ARV), with which she keeps the virus at bay, and by implication she is staring death in the face. Her frustration has grown increasingly since October 2014, when the Nigerian health authorities unilaterally took the damning decision to compel HIV positive patients to pay a certain amount of money for their regular bi-annual tests, known among patients as ‘bleeding’.

    Patients say the test is crucial to accessing the drugs, which they admit are still free, but conditioned upon paying for and first going through the test. Tina’s situation is further aggravated by the fact that she has no helper – no husband, no job, and she literally survives on society’s benevolence. Meeting up with the compulsory pittance fee of N12,000 a year is therefore an uphill task, the concession that she can pay twice notwithstanding.

    Hers is a typical case of an angry being, desperate to survive, who has lost all sense of clear reasoning. In her angst, she can be likened to a boko haram suicide bomber, willing to take as many people as cross her way down the abyss with her.

    Threat to the Zero target.

    The theme for this year’s World AIDS Day commemoration, which was observed globally, penultimate week, was: Getting to Zero. It was marked with all seriousness and fervour by the relevant government agencies, various networking associations of people living with HIV and civil society organisations in Nigeria. With all intents and purposes, this target may not be an impossible one afterall, considering the level of success recorded against the virus across the world in recent years. The reality of attaining the zero target is further underlined by the declaration by the National Agency for the Control of AIDS (NACA) last week, that Nigeria has been able to reduce the spread of the virus by up to 35 per cent. Even as many stakeholders have disputed this statistics long before it came out as a deception, the truth is that people like Tina, who probably run into tens of thousands, if not millions, stand as a threat to this target, and to any level of progress being recorded against the spread of the virus.

    For a country sincere and willing to tackle the spread of the virus head-long, many have argued that rather than introduce any kind of fees whatsoever, the government should have endeavoured to get rid of other existing encumbrances in the way of the patients and their drugs. For years, most HIV-positive patients accessed the ARV drugs free of any kind of charge, and this was responsible for stemming the astronomical rise in the number of infections and a seeming demystification of the virus, as it seems to have taken off its toga of a death sentence in the eye of the people.

    Grimmer than NACA

    In July 2015, the United Nations Programme on HIV/AIDS (UNAIDS) declared in a report that the global spread of HIV/AIDS has reduced. The report coincided with the organisation’s Nigerian Country Director, Bilali Camara’s statement that Nigeria is amongst the countries that have been able to reverse their HIV trend. Exactly a year before, the organisation had painted a grim picture of the state of affairs in the country, sending jitters through the spine. That report presented Nigeria, South Africa and Uganda as the countries with the highest rate of infection/spread in sub-Saharan Africa, with cumulative growth rate put at about 48%. That report also showed Nigeria as the country with the highest HIV/AIDS mortality rate, as well as the country with the unenviable burden of one third of all new infections amongst children in the 20 worst hit countries in sub-Saharan Africa.

    While it may also appear that Nigeria does not lead from the rear, since South Africa is the unwilling occupant of that unenviable saddle, with a whopping 12.2% portion of its population to Nigeria’s 3.2 percent, the huge difference in population strength (S.A is 52.98 million, while Nigeria is over 170 million), means that Nigeria and not South Africa, has more to worry about.

    The big question activist, Steve Borishade therefore asked in his essay, ‘A Tale Of Anguish: The True Story Of The HIV/AIDS Situation In Nigeria’ is, “what measures (that) were put in place that could and had ensured that Nigeria is able to reverse the spread of HIV/AIDS in just one year like Bilali asserted? And when Nigerian officials go to town claiming that the country has met some MDG goals, especially pointing at successes in HIV/AIDS, should we not ask how and what those are?”

    If the country recorded marginal success when all People Living with HIV/AIDs (PLWHAs) had access to free treatment in all government facilities in the country, does it not then defeat logic that it would record significant success in just one year after fees were introduced?

    Evelyn, one of the attendants at a press conference organised by the Lagos Network Forum on HIV And AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria to intimate the public about the predicament of people living with HIV said the whole 35% reduction success rate being bandied is a ploy to douse the noise the networks have been making and make mincemeat of their complaints.

    Others have also argued that it is to justify the huge funds and investment that the government have expended on the project till date.

    A long way to go

    Fred Adegboye, a journalist with The Nation newspaper, argued that as insignificant as the amount being charged may seem, the reality is that many of the people living with HIV are not able to afford the fees. “In my centre at the University College Hospital, UCH, Ibadan, they say the drugs remain free, but we have to pay N6,000 for each chemistry test before we get them. We do two chemistry tests per year, so the fee amounts to N12,000; but the reality is that many people cannot afford it and that is our agitation. To make matters worse, some people always have to travel long distance to access their drugs, because they fear that they could be stigmatised if they chose a dispensing centre near their homes. So we have lots of people who travel from Lagos to University College Hospital UCH, Ibadan, where I access my drugs on a regular basis to collect their drugs; and by the time you add their transport fare to it, you find that it becomes way too high for most of us. I for one can afford it because I have a job, but many do not have a job and rely on goodwill of people around them, which is not guaranteed. In fact the last time I went for my bleeding, even I could not afford the N6,000 but I went anyway and gave them the N5,000 that I had on me. To tell the truth, I was ready to raise all hell should they reject it, but thankfully they collected it. So, if I who has a job could run into such difficulty, then you may begin to understand the problem other people are facing.

    Azeez Aladeyelu, an HIV/AIDS activist, state co-ordinator of CISHAN (Civil Society Consultative Network on HIV/AIDS in Nigeria (CiSHAN) said although the authorities have explained that the fees is a running cost, he said the networks have been protesting the decision, going as far as South Africa to embarrass the then health minister last year, in order to force the government to rescind the decision. He said the donor agencies are still supplying the drugs and have only pulled out partly in the area of funding of running costs, and wondered why the Nigerian government cannot shoulder that responsibility for her people. He said those having problems accessing their drugs should endeavour to reach-out to their support groups, so they could know their problems and how to help them.

    He carpeted a situation whereby the private sector is standing aloof, while things are going wrong, forgetting that when the population is depleted the labour force that it depends on will also be affected. “Even if these corporations pull their meagre donations together or commit a part of their CSR budget to the service of our people, it would go a long way. But if you approach them, their excuses have always been ‘we have our workplace policy; we can only attend to people in our organization.’ They may even tell you that you should have approached them before and that they have mapped out their spending for the year. Meanwhile, when Ebola came, nobody prepared for it yet, we saw how everybody, the government and private sectors, pulled their resources together. Nobody made excuses.”

    Aladeyelu however said the network has resolved to continue crying out about their predicament until somebody listens. He also expressed optimism that the new government would be a listening one that would help ameliorate their problem.

    A spurning government

    One of the panellists at the press conference and a representative of NEPHWAN said it is amazing that the government is no longer serious about HIV/AIDS issues, suggesting that the networks look the way of the private organizations. He said NEPHWAN has taken it upon itself to encourage strict adherence to the drug, adding that sometimes, the organization goes as far as raising money for those who cannot afford the charges. He said the organization and other networks are not relenting in their efforts to draw attention to their situation and that they’ve organised rallies and demonstrations at major city centres and offices to draw government and public attention to the new problem. He said it is just unfortunate that the government doesn’t seem to want to hear anything about HIV/AIDS anymore.

    He said, “There was a place we went to last year to create awareness on the newly introduced fee; but while we were at it, somebody from the government office came out and started shouting us down and asking, ‘Is HIV the only disease we have in the country? What about tuberculosis? What about malaria? Why are they not coming out to make so much noise?’ She said there are thousands of people who suffer from cancer and who are not making as much noise as we’re making. But we replied her that that may be because they don’t have organisations articulating and channelling their case like ours. Now that we have come out, we need help, please help us.”

    He said former President Obasanjo helped people living with HIV/AIDS by providing free treatment for them, but the current situation spells danger as the country may be retrogressing to the pre-Obasanjo years.

    Evelyn said it is a shame that Nigeria still records high rate of infection and AIDS-related deaths. Citing how Kenya was able to turn around a precarious situation, she said it is a sign of unseriousness on the part of the nation’s policymakers. “The authorities there realised that the infection rate was rising because their men were not using condoms at brothels, so they made a law that any man who goes to a brothel and refuses to use a condom should be penalised. From that moment, they started adhering to the new rule and the rate dropped from 12% to 4%.

    Victoria Mba also echoed the efforts being put in to impress on the government to take off the new charges and said there has been no positive response yet.  But when asked if indeed casualties are being recorded in the case of people who are not able to afford the charges and access the drugs, she said, “Though we have always had AIDS-related deaths, we have not been able to gather information to that effect in Lagos, although we hear of such cases outside Lagos.

     

  • Chattel offers weekly land payment

    As Nigeria’s housing deficit up to 17 million? There are fears that this figure, which has been bandied about for years may not be true. Ascertaining the actual figure will require empirical checks or survey, say experts.

    Towards this end, an estate firm, Chattel Reality and Investment Company, has introduced a land scheme to eradicate land ownership problems in Lagos State.

    The scheme, on a site and service basis, with access roads, drainage, recreation centre and so on, would see more Nigerians owning land with ease under the payment model. It will avail the public the opportunity to pay N2, 500 for land purchased weekly if they so desire. One of the schemes with which the firm intends to achieve its plan is the Palms Villa Estate in Ibeju-Lekki and Ikorodu.

    Aside the 10 per cent discount offer on all land payment plans, the company is spreading payment options for purchased land up to four years. This, it says, is to give all low income earners an opportunity to be landlords in Lagos. For instance, to own a plot of land at Chattel Reality’s Palms Villa Estate in Ikorodu, an intending buyer can pay as low as N22,000 or N83,000 monthly for land in the Palms Villa Estate in Ibeju Lekki.

    Its Managing Director, Mr. Ifeanyi Okafor, explained that such initiative is one of the company’s strategies to get more Nigerians to invest in properties and own their own houses. “We must as a matter of urgency always look for incentives to encourage people to own their homes. Things are pretty difficult at the moment and many people might not be able to afford a huge sum of money to purchase a land not to talk of building a house. So for us, we are more interested in empowering people and helping them to achieve their dreams of becoming a landlord,” he explained.

    Okafor further disclosed that its site and service is a strategic plan and that in three years, the company would begin housing development. In five years, he said his firm would have provided 20, 000 Nigerians with opportunity to own their property.

    Chattel Realty and Investment Company Limited is an innovative real estate development company that engages in the development of master-planned housing estates. The company’s objective is to provide cutting-edge real estate solutions to the huge Nigerian real estate market, which yearns for affordable housing as well as other real estate investment products.

  • Chattel offers weekly land payment

    as Nigeria’s housing deficit up to 17 million? There are fears that this figure, which has been bandied about for years may not be true. Ascertaining the actual figure will require empirical checks or survey, say experts.

    Towards this end, an estate firm, Chattel Reality and Investment Company, has introduced a land scheme to eradicate land ownership problems in Lagos State.

    The scheme, on a site and service basis, with access roads, drainage, recreation centre and so on, would see more Nigerians owning land with ease under the payment model. It will avail the public the opportunity to pay N2, 500 for land purchased weekly if they so desire. One of the schemes with which the firm intends to achieve its plan is the Palms Villa Estate in Ibeju Lekki and Ikorodu.

    Aside from the 10 per cent discount offer on all land payment plans, the company is spreading payment options for purchased land up to four years. This, it says, is to give all low income earners an opportunity to be landlords in Lagos. For instance, to own a plot of land at Chattel Reality’s Palms Villa Estate in Ikorodu, an intending buyer can pay as low as N22,000 or N83,000 monthly for land in the Palms Villa Estate in Ibeju Lekki.

    Its Managing Director, Mr. Ifeanyi Okafor, explained that such initiative is one of the company’s strategies to get more Nigerians to invest in properties and own their own houses. “We must as a matter of urgency always look for incentives to encourage people to own their homes. Things are pretty difficult at the moment and many people might not be able to afford a huge sum of money to purchase a land not to talk of building a house. So for us, we are more interested in empowering people and helping them to achieve their dreams of becoming a landlord,” he explained.

    Okafor further disclosed that its site and service is a strategic plan and that in three years, the company would begin housing development. In five years, he said, his firm would have provided 20, 000 Nigerians with opportunity to own their property.

    Chattel Realty and Investment Company Limited is an innovative real estate development company that engages in the development of master-planned housing estates. The company’s objective is to provide cutting-edge real estate solutions to the huge Nigerian real estate market, which yearns for affordable housing as well as other real estate investment products.

  • Konga launches new payment solution

    Konga launches new payment solution

    As online shopping gains more momentum and in anticipation of increased patronage with Christmas season just round the corner, Konga.com, Nigeria’s largest online mall, has unveiled an innovative payment solution called KongaPay that will make shopping easier for both merchant and buyers while building more customer confidence.

    Introducing the new payment system to media men recently, at the Protea Hotel, Ikeja, Mr. JR Kanu, Associate Director,  Payment and Digital Goods at Konga.com, explained that the new payment system works in tandem with Nigerian banks to give customers full control of their money while transacting online. Mr. Kanu who led the team that launched KongaPay further stated that the payment solution has an escrow system that holds money paid for an order until the transaction is completed to the satisfaction of the customer.

    Explaining what prompted the introduction of KongaPay, he said it was mainly due to the challenges consumers were having, making payments and getting refunds after cancellations. “With KongaPay, even after making payment, a customer can cancel by pressing the cancel button and the payment is instantly refunded as long as the goods had not been shipped and not in the custody of the buyer. If they are in her custody, then she will get her refunds when the goods are back with the merchant.

    “Furthermore,” he added, “one notable thing about KongaPay is its simplicity and seamless integration with Nigerian banks. Not only have we eliminated the inconvenience of constantly pulling out a debit card or bank token to complete a transaction, we have also integrated refunds at the click of a button while maintaining the highest security standards.”

    Kanu explained that all KongaPay transactions require two keys for transaction verification. First is the 4-digit pin, a numeric password created at the point of registration. Like all passwords, this is private and should never be shared. Secondly, the bank sends a one-time-password (OTP) via SMS or email. This OTP is only sent to the customer’s registered mobile number, the mobile number used by the customer’s bank and the customers BVN. KongaPay allows anyone with a bank account and a registered mobile phone number to use the application without necessarily signing up for internet banking.

    Vice President Marketing, Konga.com, Gabriel Gab-Umoden, explained the significance of KongaPay to online shoppers. He stated that “KongaPay is set to be a game changer in terms of providing online shoppers a platform they can trust. This trust will be built on theguarantee of fast returns and refunds for orders paid for with KongaPay.”

    Speaking on Konga’s general strategy for satisfying customers, Gab-Umoden said, “We have discovered that if our value proposition is right, people will use our platform. This drives our commitment to always have the right mix of products, at the right prices, with excellent support services to complement our digital capacity.” As an added benefit, Gab-Umoden revealed that all items on Konga.com receive a 5% discount if paid for with KongaPay. For now, this discount continues indefinitely.

    KongaPay is the first non-banking platform in Nigeria to plug in to the Bank Verification Number (BVN).

    On what the online market place has done to address some of the challenges like late deliveries, receiving  wrong orders which some consumers experienced during last festive years, the Vice President Marketing assured customers that those challenges were being managed as the company has improved on its logistics and uncommitted merchants weeded out.

    “We have beefed up our logistics. Previously, we were taking about seven days to deliver goods to people outside the state but now it’s been reduced to about five days. Our customer service officers work 24/7. We are ready for the festive season,” he enthused confidently.

    Speaking to The Nation, he explained that from time to time seminars and training workshops are organised to educate merchants and delivery men on the need for good customer service, citing the recent Konga Sellers Summit held at Eko Hotels as an example.

    “Returns and refunds have significantly reduced and we are continuously working to find out even better ways of satisfying our customers.”

    Explaining further on how sellers on the Konga.com platform are disciplined and irresponsible ones weeded out, Olatomiwa Akande, Head, Public Relations and Brand Management, Konga.com, said that the platform displays the history of sellers and reviews from other shoppers who have interacted with the seller.

    “If a seller gets many bad reviews, the person will be suspended and sellers with good reviews will naturally attract buyers. Besides, buyers and intending ones can have direct chat and conversation with sellers and other buyers,” said Olatomiwa, adding that sellers that supply fake products to customers are automatically taken off the platform.

  • Judicial commission seeks clarification on N60m payment

    The Justice Elizabeth Kpojime Judicial Commission of Inquiry  has ordered the Benue State Ministry of Finance to provide clarification on the N60 million given to the Federal Ministry of Internal Affairs on February 20, 2013 under the caption ‘Handling Charges. It also directed the Ministry and office of the Attorney-General as well as Head of Service of the state to ensure that all documents contained in the summons issued to them are submitted to the Commission at its next sitting.

    Chairman of the Judicial Commission, Justice Kpojime gave the directives at last Friday’s sitting following the verbal application for additional time by the permanent secretary, ministry of finance Mrs Ruth Ijir and the permanent secretary, office of the head of service, Mr Joseph Oko, who appeared before the Commission. Justice Kpojime also ordered the affected witnesses to provide evidence of directives for the disbursement of funds as contained in the documents they had submitted. She said it was necessary that every witness to the Commission tenders all documents listed in the summons demanding the appearance of the witness.

    Presenting some of the requested documents, two of the witnesses, the permanent secretary, ministry of finance, Mrs Ruth Ijir and Mr Gabriel Ameh, an assistant director, office of the accountant general of the state who were led in evidence by the lead counsel to the Commission, Mike Agber, made varying submissions on the appropriation of funds in the period under review.

    Mrs Ijir tendered documents, which were the statement of Zenith Bank account operated by the state government between the first of June, 2007 and 30th June, 2015. Other documents submitted by the permanent secretary were details of withdrawals from the sale of Benue State government shares in Zenith Bank amounting to N5.3 billion; details of the payment for the contract of biometric registration of workers; details of beneficiaries of the state taxi scheme, as well as the N1 billion Central Bank loan to Benue state on agriculture credit scheme.

    Mrs Ijir, however, said details of those who bought bank shares in Zenith Bank could be obtained from the Benue State Investment and Property Company, BIPC. Similarly, Mrs Ijir said details of bonds taken by the state government could be obtained from the office of the attorney-general of the state.

    Another issue on which the Commission sought clarification was the expenditure on foreign and local trips by the immediate past Governor. Responding, Mrs Ijir promised to submit during the sitting of the commission, details of the expenditure on foreign trips undertaken by the former Governor as disbursed by the ministry of finance.

    Earlier in his witness, the assistant director, office of accountant general, Mr Gabriel Ameh had submitted documents on the dispatch register for the disbursement of funds to ministries, departments and agencies of the state. He also tendered documents on approvals for the N13 billion loan obtained by the state government during the previous administration. Other documents he submitted were on SURE-P funds, the N1 billion CBN agric loan, N500 million emergency funds for flood management in the state as well as approval for the sale of state shares and remittances.

    When the lead counsel to the Commission raised the point that the memo sent to it by the accountant general’s office indicated that the indebtedness of the state as at May 2015 stood at N120 billion, Mr Ameh however said he could not confirm the figures until he was given more time to go through the financial records once again.

    Members of the Commission demanded further clarification on the disparity in the figures contained in the documents tendered by the ministry of finance and the office of the attorney-general which in according to the records of the finance ministry, showed that total receipts of the state government in 2012 were N4.4 billion while records from the accountant-general’s office indicated that total receipts for the same year stood at N9 billion. Disparity was also observed in year 2013 which showed total receipts as N3 billion according to finance ministry’s records while evidence from the accountant-general’s office put total receipts for the same year at N6.6 billion.

    The last witness to appear before the Commission for the day was the Head of Service, Adaikwu Inwata whose presentation was brief giving way for the permanent secretary administration, office of the Head of Service, Mr Joseph Oko who promised to furnish the Commission with details of SURE-P funds in its next sitting. The Judicial Commission of Inquiry adjourned its sitting to the 28th of September this year.

     

  • Oyo stops payment of WAEC fees

    The Oyo State Government yesterday announced stoppage of payment of the Senior Secondary Certificate Examination (SSCE) for public school pupils in the state.

    The decision is among the measures taken to address the poor performance of students in the public examinations being conducted by the West African Examination Council (WARC) and National Examination Council (NECO).

    Head of Service Mr Soji Eniade, in a statement yesterday, pointed out that the measure would enhance quality education in the public school system.

    Consequently, each pupil us to pay N3,000 as Education Development Levy per session.

    The statement entitled: “Efforts of Oyo state government to Address Poor Performance of Students in Public Secondary Schools”, said: “Government has stopped further payment of WAEC registration fees with effect from 2015/2016 academic session. This is as a result of poor financial status of the state government coupled with the lackadaisical attitude of parents and students to promotion of quality education”.

    On the education levy, the HOS said, “A sum of N3,000 only will be paid per student on annual basis as Education Development Levy. Payment would be in three equal installments of N1,00” per term. Fund gathered would be utilized to complement government’s effort in the improvement of infrastructure in public secondary schools”.

    Aside the financial aspect of the repositioning, the government said there would be enforcement of 80 per cent attendance of pupils in schools; cancellation of automatic promotions; re-invigoration of extra-mural classes, as well as establishment of zonal education monitoring committees to bring a halt to truancy among students, “

    The release noted that government has perfected arrangements to partner with stakeholders in the management of public schools.