Tag: Senate

  • BREAKING: Senate to pass 2024 Budget today

    BREAKING: Senate to pass 2024 Budget today

    The Senate will today, Saturday, December 30, commence plenary by 1pm prompt to consider and pass the 2024 budget.

    The Senate had on Wednesday 21st December 2023 adjourned plenary till Friday 29th December to consider and pass the 2024 budget.

    However, in a statement by the Clerk to the Senate, Chinedu Akubueze a few days later, the date was shifted till Saturday 30th December 2023, at 10am.

    Akabueze in a new statement made available to newsmen on Saturday morning, said the plenary will now hold as from 1pm prompt.

    Read Also: By-election: LP pegs Senate form at N3.5m, Reps N2m, Assembly N500,000

    The leadership of the National Assembly had expressed its readiness to pass the 2024 budget before the end of 2023 in order to maintain the January – December budget cycle policy of the Federal Government.

    Akubueze’s terse statement titled: “Plenary sitting to commence at 1pm prompt”, reads in part: “This is to kindly inform Distinguished Senators that the plenary sitting of the Senate,  scheduled for Saturday, December 30th, 2023, will hold by 1pm prompt.”

  • BREAKING: Senate okays 11 Justices for Supreme Court

    BREAKING: Senate okays 11 Justices for Supreme Court

    The Senate on Thursday, December 21, confirmed the nomination of 11 Justices for appointment as Justices of Supreme Court.

    This followed the consideration of the report of the Senate Committee on Judiciary, Human Rights and Legal Matters that screened the Justices and the approval of its recommendations by the red chamber.

    The Chairman of the Committee, Senator Mohammed Monguno (APC – Borno North) presented the report.

    President Bola Ahmed Tinubu had on Wednesday asked the Senate to confirm the 11 nominees, who were recommended by the National Judicial Council to fill the vacant positions following death and resignation of some justices of the Supreme Court.

    The Supreme Court Justices- designate include Justice Haruna Tsammani (Northeast) who chaired the Presidential Election Petition Court, Justice Moore Adumein (South-South), Justice Jummai Sankey (North-Central), Justice Chidiebere Uwa (South-East) and Justice Chioma Nwosu-Iheme (South-East).

    Read Also: Supreme Court: Tinubu seeks Senate confirmation of 11 Justices

    The others Justice Obande Ogbuinya (South-East), Justice Stephen Adah (North-Central), Justice Habeeb Abiru (South-West), Justice Jamilu Tukur (Northwest), Justice Abubakar Umar (Northwest) and  Justice Mohammed Idris (North-Central).

    The appointment of the 11 Justices brings to 21 the number of Justices on the Supreme Court’s bench which hitherto had only 10 justices.

    The confirmation marks the first time in history that the Supreme Court would have its full complement of 21 justices, as stipulated by 1999 Constitution (As Amended).

    Details shortly…

  • JUST IN: Senate orders police to provide CAC registrar

    JUST IN: Senate orders police to provide CAC registrar

    The Senate has given the Inspector General of Police 24 hours to compel the Registrar-General of the Corporate Affairs Commission (CAC), Hussaini Ishaq Magaji, to appear before its Committee on Finance.

    During the budget defence meeting on Wednesday, December 20, Senator Sani Musa, who is the chairman of the Senate Committee on Finance, requested the appearance of the RG.

    This was due to disparities found in the income collection and spending by the Corporate Affairs Commission.

    The committee had already found the commission lacking during the MTEF/FP defence. However, Sen. Musa claims that the RG has rejected the committee’s summons for a third time, which he views as disrespectful to the committee.

    Read Also: Tinubu writes Senate, seeks confirmation of 11 nominees as Supreme Court justices

    He said: “You have your bookkeepers; you have your records and we asked you to go and tidy up and report back, but you never did.”

    The committee unanimously resolved that the Inspector General of Police compel his presence before the finance committee unfailingly on Thursday.

  • No allocation for population census in 2024 budget, says Senate panel

    No allocation for population census in 2024 budget, says Senate panel

    There is no allocation for the planned population and housing census scheduled for next year in the 2024 budget now being considered by the National Assembly, The Nation learnt on Tuesday, December 19.

    The chairman, Senate Committee on National Population Commission (NPC), Senator Abdul Ningi (PDP-Bauchi Central), disclosed this when he appeared before the National Assembly Joint Committee on Appropriations to submit his report.

    The Senate Committee on Industry, Trade and Investment also insisted that the N1billion allocated to the Ministry of Industry, Trade and Investment is not meant for Foriegn trips but to help attract investors into the country.

    Earlier, Ningi informed the joint appropriation committee that if the money for the census was not provided for in the budget, the country would loose about N200 billion which has been spent by the National Population Commission.

    He said that the NPC would appear tomorrow with their documentations to state how much they would  need for the conduct of 2024 population census.

    Ningi said: “They will appear tomorrow with proper documentation of how much they need. If we don’t get the money, the nation will loose, the people will loose.

    “The money spent for the preparation for the census will go down the drain and it is homogus amount of money, over N200 billion already spent that is my take.”

    Reacting to the development, the Chairman of the Joint National Assembly Committee on Appropriation, Senator Solomon Adeola, told the committee on NPC that the National Assembly would look for funds to cater for the 2024 population census in the budget.

    Read Also: The odds against 2023 population census

    He said: “The head of the NPC should appear in company with the Committee Chairman to tell them what was needed for the conduct of census which was scheduled to hold in the first quarter of next year.

    “Let me assure you that the country will not loose and we are going to work very closely with them to ensure that 25 per cent component is included and we must find away to accommodate it in this 2024 budget.

    “We will like the agency to appear along with the Chairman of the Committee, a synopsis of what is really going on about the issue of census and whatever the issues are, I can assure you that we will resolve it and the population census will come up by the first quarter of 2024.”

    Meanwhile, the joint committee on Appropriation on Tuesday backed the inclusion of the N1billion in the 2024 budget of the Federal Ministry of Industry, Trade and Investment.

    The committee gave its approval after receiving the report of the Joint National Assembly Committee on Industry, Trade and Investment on the Ministry’s 2024 budget.

    The chairman of the National Assembly Joint Committee on Appropriation, Senator Solomon Adeola, however said the lawmakers would carry out aggressive oversight to ensure that the fund was appropriately utilized.

    A member of the National Assembly standing committee oversighting the the ministry, Senator Adams Oshiomhole (APC-Edo North), had during the budget defence session, said the ministry planned to spend the money on foreign trips to Geneva next year.

    The Minister, Doris Uzoka-Anite, had issued a statement to explain that the N1billion was for the maintainance of the ministry’s desk office at the World Trade Centre in Geneva, Switzerland.

    However, the Vice Chairman of the National Assembly joint committee on Industry, Trade and Investment, Senator Sadiq Umar, told the Appropriation committee on Tuesday, that the money was actually meant to attract foreign investors across the world to Nigeria.

    Umar said: “The N1billion is not for foreign trips. It was meant to attract investors to Nigeria from all over the World.

    “We are beginning to think that we need to review our trade interest structuring in the country.

    “The government today, thinks that we need to strengthen the trade office here.

    “However, Mr Chairman, we think that as a committee, we are going to be working with the Minister, going forward, to see how they will make use of the foreign services in the best way possible because that is primarily the job of foreign services.

    “All the ministers, foreign affairs, ambassadors, their primary job is to be ambassadors for the country as far as trade is concerned.

    “So, we are working with the minister to see how this can be integrated and I will ensure that the trade offices in the foreign nations are functional.

    “They have the trade desks, they have capacity, they have the understanding, and of course, they have the resources to be able to attract investment into our country.”

    ReplyForwardAdd reaction
  • The Senate’s ‘most dependable, distinctive’ presiding officer

    The Senate’s ‘most dependable, distinctive’ presiding officer

    The phrase with the inverted comma in the headline was borrowed from the statement issued by former US President, George W. Bush, in his statement on the death of former US Secretary of State and National Security Adviser, Prof. Henry Kissinger, at the age of 100 late last month.

    The phrase aptly describes the rating of Dr. Abubakar Bukola Saraki, who turned 61 today in the history of Nigeria’s Senate. In the four action-filled years that Saraki spent as the President of the Eighth Senate of the Federal Republic of Nigeria, he appears to have set such a high standard that his predecessors and successors are judged by the achievements that his leadership recorded between 2015 and 2019.

    The period of the 8th Senate continues to evoke mixed feelings among two groups of Nigerians. The first is the Buharists who still feel aggrieved that Saraki prevented their group from exercising limitless, absolute, and uninhibited control. For this group, Saraki is loathed, undesirable, and intolerable.

    The second group are the ordinary Nigerians who yearn for a true democracy with the presidential system being practiced in its truest form. This latter group sees Saraki as a symbol of the real separation of powers as canvassed by Baron de Montesquieu in his book, Espirit de Lois (The Spirit of Laws), with the three branches – legislature, executive, and judiciary functioning as independent, but cooperating, arms of government whose individual focus is to better serve the electorate and the generality of the people.

    Saraki knew that in the manner he emerged as Senate President, he had no option but to pitch his tent with the latter group. It was clear to him that the establishment would continue to assail him and plot his fall from the top legislative chair. It was also clear to him that what could retain him in the seat was his close relationship with his colleagues with whom he could drive a legislative agenda that would serve the interests of the people. He was determined to convince the people that the legislature was the most representative of the people among the three arms of government.

    As Senate President, Saraki, in his trademark style of leaving any place he got to better than he met it, was convinced that the people were unnecessarily too distanced or detached from the legislature. He theorized that this gap must have been created because, among all the three arms of government, the legislature is the one with the least number of years of existence in our polity.

    With every military intervention in the nation’s political leadership, the legislature was suspended while the military governed with just the executive and judiciary arms of government. Thus, the legislature is often misunderstood. The people seem to have grown not only far from the institution, but they have become accustomed to being suspicious of all moves made by the law-making body and its members.

    Saraki’s strategy then was to introduce innovative ideas, interventions, and positive exchanges which constantly created avenues for engagement with the people. The 8th Senate in its Legislative Agenda chose to focus on three broad areas: Improving Livelihood, Improving Governance, and, Improving Business. Thus, the 8th Senate became the first to hold public hearings on the passage of the budget and held Roundtable dialogues on pressing national issues like security, drug abuse, illegal migration, and education reforms. These engagements were held outside the legislative complex. For example, the one on drug abuse was held in Kano while that on the issue of illegal migration was held in Benin, as well as that on security which was held at the Nigeria Air Force Conference Centre, Abuja.

    In the same way, the Senate under Saraki held meetings with stakeholders on education, youth unemployment, and health. Also, the Senate repositioned and restructured its committee on ethics, privileges, and public petitions such that it became a veritable mediator between members of the public whose rights were breached by government ministries, departments, and agencies as well as other private sector establishments. Most of the affected individuals who resorted to the Senate committee could not afford the cost and time needed for litigation in courts. The 8th Senate made sure its committee on the public petition was in a position to help such people seek redress and get justice. Till today, the 8th Senate under Saraki treated, investigated, and completed work on the highest number of petitions ever in the history of the Nigerian Senate.

    The 8th Senate also had passed landmark bills some of which were direct responses to the yearning of the people. Two instances that demonstrated how the Senate responded promptly with appropriate legislation to address issues plaguing the people were the Compulsory Treatment and Care of Victims of Gunshots Act and Sexual Harassment in Tertiary Educational Institutions Act. These two laws were a direct response to immediate situations that reflected ugly trends in society. Also, the passage of the North East Development Commission (NEDC) Act which was aimed at rebuilding, reconstructing, and rehabilitating the insurgency-ravaged zone of the country as the war waged on the people and their environment by the Boko Haram was creating refugees or displaced people in its wake.

    To further strengthen the security system in the country, the 8th Senate initiated the Police Trust Fund Act which was to help fund the activities of the police and equip the personnel. Also, the Police Reforms Bill was introduced to remove impediments in the way of creating modern policing system in the country.

    The Senate also tackled corruption through the passage of Bills like the Nigerian Financial Intelligence Agency Act to separate the former NFIU from the EFCC in compliance with international best practices, the Federal Audit Services Commission Act, the Whistleblowers Protection Bill, and the Witness Protection Programmes Bill.

    Read Also: Rivers crisis: loyalists blast Rep member for attacking Wike

    Specific Bills were also passed to help the recovery of the national economy. The same rejuvenation was done to the constitution which witnessed the lowering of age qualification for key public offices. That new provision was nicknamed the ‘Not Too Young To Run’ law. It was a law that excited the youth who now constitute a critical segment of the populace. Another constitutional amendment introduced by the 8th Senate granted Financial Autonomy to State Houses of Assembly and local government councils.

    The Buhari presidency refused to give assent to many of the bills. To the government, depriving their so-called ‘enemy’ of the credits for bringing about these lofty initiatives outweighed the benefits that the country could have gained from these laws.

    Yet, Saraki was able to rally his colleagues to work hard and get Nigerians to see the potential of having a strong legislative institution. The 8th Senate was one in which transparency, accountability, and openness were consciously promoted by the leadership. The details of the budget of the National Assembly became public during that era. Plenary proceedings were streamed live for the public. Key major confirmation hearings for nominees of the executive were aired live on television.

    It is for these and many reasons that the performance of Senate Presidents who came after Saraki has been measured with and against that of the 2015-2019 era. Also, that is why Saraki’s name featured in the run-up to the election of the two senate presidents after him. It is also the reason why serving senators and House of Representatives elected on the platform of different political parties continue to throng Saraki’s homes in Abuja and Lagos to consult and show solidarity with him. It is also the reason why he was one of the key speakers selected to share his experiences with the members of the 10th Senate at their recent retreat in Ikot Ekpene, Akwa Ibom State.

    You can now see why this 61-year-old Waziri of Ilorin, a grandfather and medical doctor is “the most dependable, distinctive”, distinguished, discerning, devoted, decisive, dogged, daring, disciplined, dedicated, and dazzling Senate President that our country has ever produced.

    Happy birthday, sir, as you turn 61 today. Many happy returns.

    •Olaniyonu is head of the Abubakar Bukola Saraki Media Office, Abuja

  • Senate challenges MDAs to exceed N18.3trn revenue benchmark for 2024

    Senate challenges MDAs to exceed N18.3trn revenue benchmark for 2024

    The Senate has called on revenue-generating agencies to exceed the revenue of N18.324 trillion target of the Federal Government for the 2024 fiscal year.

    President Bola Ahmed Tinubu had last month, presented a 2024 Appropriation Bill of N27.503trillion to the joint session of the National Assembly.

    The projected revenue target for the 2024 fiscal year in the Appropriation Bill is N18.324 trillion.

    In assessing  the preparedness of the agencies ahead of the task, the Senate Committee on Finance chaired by Senator  Mohammed Musa had separate interactive sessions with the revenue-generating agencies last week where he told them to strive to surpass the target revenue for next year.

    In one of such meetings with the Nigerian National Petroleum Company Limited (NNPCL), led by its Group Chief Executive Officer (GCEO), Mele Kyari, Musa urged the oil giant to surpass their revenue target.

    “It is heartwarming that based on your submission, NNPCL has within January and October this year, raked in N4.5trillion as revenue and remitted it into the federation account.

    “But being a fully commercialised company now, more of such are needed, particularly in the 2024 fiscal year.

    Read Also: Clark to CJN: correct grave anomalies in judiciary 

    “President Bola Tinubu on his part, in the budget presented to the National Assembly, clearly demonstrated that a deficit budget of N9.18trillion should be eased out for 2024 as against N13.4trillion used for such in the outgoing 2023 fiscal year.

    “This committee in particular and other relevant standing committees of both the Senate and the House of Representatives would through oversight activities and regular interface with revenue generating agencies, ensure that required revenues are generated to

    aid the full implementation of the proposals and projections made for the 2024 budget,” Musa said.

    The panel also interacted with agencies like the Federal Inland Revenue Service (FIRS), Nigeria Customs Service (NCS), Federal Airports Authority of Nigeria and Nigerian Ports Authority, among others.

    Also at the sidelines of the colloquium to mark the 61st birthday anniversary of the President of the Senate, Godswill Akpabio last Thursday, Musa told journalists that the N100 trillion annual budget proposed by the guest speaker Olisa Agbakoba (SAN), at the event for the 2025 fiscal year was achievable.

    “The suggested budget size for 2025 may look big but achievable if all the revenue-generating agencies work to block leakages in the system,” he said.

  • Senate challenges MDAs to exceed N18.3trn revenue benchmark for 2024

    Senate challenges MDAs to exceed N18.3trn revenue benchmark for 2024

    The Senate has called on revenue generating agencies to exceed the revenue of N18.324trillion target of the federal government for the 2024 fiscal year.

    The chairman, Senate Committee on Finance, Senator Mohammed Sani Musa (APC-Niger East) made this known. 

    President Bola Tinubu had last month, presented an 2024 Appropriation Bill of N27.503trillion to the joint session of the National Assembly.

    The projected revenue target for the 2024 fiscal year in the Appropriation Bill is N18.324trillion.

    In assessing the preparedness of the agencies ahead of the task, Senator Musa had separate interactive sessions with the revenue generating agencies last week where he told them to strive to surpass the target revenue for next year.

    In one of such meetings with the Nigerian National Petroleum Company Limited (NNPCL), led by its Group Chief Executive Officer (GCEO), Mele Kyari, Musa urged the oil giant to surpass their revenue target.

    He said: “It is heartwarming that based on your submission, NNPCL has within January and October  this year, raked in N4.5trillion as revenue and remitted it into federation account.

    “But being fully commercialised company now, more of such are needed, particularly in the 2024 fiscal year.

    “President Bola Tinubu on his part, in the budget presented to the National Assembly, clearly demonstrated that deficit budget of N9.18trillion should be eased out for 2024 as against N13.4trillion used for such in the outgoing 2023 fiscal year.

    “This committee in particular and other relevant standing committees of both the Senate and the House of Representatives would through oversight activities and regular interface with revenue generating agencies, ensure that required revenues are generated to

    aid full implementation of the proposals and projections made for the 2024 budget.”

    Also at the sidelines of colloquium to mark the 61st birthday anniversary of President of the Senate, Godswill Akpabio last Thursday, also told journalists that N100trillion budget proposed by the guest speaker at the event, Olisa Agbakoba (SAN), for the 2025 fiscal year was achievable.

    He added: “The suggested budget size for 2025 may look big but achievable if all the revenue generating agencies work

    to block leakages in the system.”

  • Senate seeks more investment in Sports after CAF Awards

    Senate seeks more investment in Sports after CAF Awards

    The Senate through its Committee on Sports Development has  called on the Federal Government  to invest more in sports  following the country’s   glorious showing at Monday’s Confederation of African Football (CAF Awards) where Nigeria carted  four main awards.

    The Chairman of the Committee, Senator Suleiman Kawu Sumaila, in a statement in Abuja, described the awards “as bold and big statements made on behalf of Nigeria by the winners.

     “It is a wakeup call for government to invest more in Sports and to pull the private sector more into it,” the statement noted.

    At the CAF Awards in Marakech in Morocco, Victor Osimhen won  the Men ‘s  Africa  Player of the Year Award while Asisat Oshoala won  women ‘s Africa Player of the Year Award, Chiamaka Nnadozie won the women’s  Best Goalkeeper of the Year  while the Super Falcons won the best Women ‘s National Team Award.

    Read Also: Senate to FG: CAF awards, wake-up call for more investment in sports

    The Committee   congratulated President Bola Tinubu, the Minister of Sports, Senator John Owan Enoh and the Nigeria Football Federation (NFF), on the feat recorded by Nigerians  at the Awards.

    Sumaila also described victories at  the CAF Awards as a new dawn for sports in the country under the Renewed Hope Agenda of President Tinubu.

    The statement  read inter alia : “By this clean sweep of awards by our son, Victor Osimhen, our daughters Asisat Oshoala, Chiamaka Nnadozie and the entire Super Falcons Team, we in the Senate Committee, will leverage  on the success for Nation building.

     “We stand to be corrected, no sector has done Nigeria this proud. No sector has brought Nigeria honour and glory more than sports. This is the more reason for the development of the sector in making it one of the strongest pillars for diversification of the Nation’s economy.”

    “We will not encourage the handshake policy of the past to be used for those who have done us the new honours but ensure that those who deserve to be rewarded are handsomely rewarded to serve as an encouragement for others to strive to be the best.”

  • 2024 Budget: Senate panel frowns at N1bn capital allocation for information ministry

    2024 Budget: Senate panel frowns at N1bn capital allocation for information ministry

    The Senate Committee on Information, on Tuesday, December 12, frowned at the N1 billion proposed for the Ministry of Information and National Orientation as capital allocation in the 2024 budget.

    The chairman of the Senate Committee on Information, Senator Kenneth Eze (APC-Ebonyi Central) made the assertion when the Minister of Information, Mohammed Idris Malagi, appeared before the committee to defend the ministry’s 2024 budget.

    Earlier, Idris had in his presentation before the committee informed the senators that the National values and attitudes re-orientation campaign under the aegis of the National Values Charter (NVC), would be launched in early 2024.

    He said: “The ministry desires to have a big national conversation around our values and attitudes re-orientation so that Nigeria will at least rediscover itself and reclaim some of those values that have been eroded over the years so that we can have a better country for all of us.

    “We also desire the launch of the National and International branding campaign for Nigeria to highlight and showcase Nigeria’s immense natural and cultural resources.

    “We are also going to convene and coordinate regular press briefings and media engagements for cabinet members and other senior government officials to avail Nigerians of what various ministries and agencies are doing so that Nigerians will be carried along on what the projects and programmes of government are.

    “We also intend to invest resources in modernising the Federal Government information and communication management and regulatory system across the agencies, for example, NAN, NTA, FRCN, etc.”

    He however added that the N1 billion earmarked for the Ministry as capital expenditure in 2024 would not be sufficient for implementation of the programmes.  

    Apparently impressed by the vision and programmes of the Minister, the Chairman of the Committee, Senator Kenneth Eze said the capital provisions in the 2024 budget were nothing to write home about for implementing such laudable visions.

    Read Also: JUST IN: Tinubu writes Senate seeking confirmation for 19 NPC commissioners

    Eze said: “This is not a budget that can be visible if we are telling our story as a country. There is no way we can go far. You have a great initiative on how you are going to transform the country in the area of information, I wonder how you are going to do that with this so little fund.

    “Information is a very sensitive ministry that should be taken seriously, and funded, and if we are talking about Renewed Hope Agenda, what we want as a country, Information should be at the forefront, it should be the image maker to sensitise the people, there is a widening gap between the government and information has to bridge this gap.

    “I looked around in the budget, I didn’t see Nigeria Press Council, and APCON, and other agencies. Is the government telling us that the agencies are being scrapped or that they can function without personnel? Who will pay their salary and just a few months ago, the DG and Executive Secretary were appointed. Hon Minister, this is a serious matter for the committee to look into and we shall surely do that.”

  • Senate unhappy with Information Ministry’s meager allocation for 2024

    Senate unhappy with Information Ministry’s meager allocation for 2024

    The Senate Committee on Information, has expressed reservation over meagre allocation for the Ministry of Information and National Orientation in the N27.5trillion 2024 budget.

    Sen. Kenneth Eze, the Committee’s Chairman, said this when the Minister of Information, Alhaji Mohammed Idris appeared for the 2024 budget defense on Tuesday in Abuja.

    ‘’This is not a budget that can be visible if we are telling our story as a country, there is no way we can go far, you have a great initiative on how you are going to transform the country in the area of information.

    “I wonder how you are going to do that with these little resources.

    “Information ministry is a very sensitive ministry that should be taken seriously and funded and if we are talking about the Renewed Hope Agenda that we want as a country, the information ministry should be at the forefront.

    ‘’It should be the image maker to sensitise the people, there is a widening gap between the government and there must be enough information to bridge in the gap,’’ he said.

    Eze added: “I looked around in the budget, I didn’t see the Nigeria Press Council, APCON and other agencies, is the government telling us that the agencies are being scraped, that they can function without personnel,?

    ‘’Who will pay their salary? just few months ago, new DGs and Executive Secretaries were appointed.

    ”Hon. Minister, this is serious matter for the committee to look into and we shall surely do that.’’

    Read Also: JUST IN: Tinubu writes Senate seeking confirmation for 19 NPC commissioners

    The Minister had informed the senators that national values and attitudes re-orientation campaign under the aegis of National Values Charter (NVC), would be launched in 2024.

    “It is the desire of the ministry to have a big national conversation around our values and attitudes re-orientation, so that Nigeria will at least rediscover itself and reclaim some of those values that had been eroded over the years, so we can have a better country for all of us.

    ‘’We also desired the launch of the national and international branding campaign for Nigeria to highlight and showcase its immense natural and cultural resources.

    ‘’We are also going to convene regular series of press briefings and media engagements for cabinet members and other senior government officials to avail Nigerians of what various ministries and agencies are doing, so that Nigerians will be carried along on what and what are the projects and programmes of the government.

    ‘’We also intend to invest resources in modernising the government information and communication management and regulatory system across the agencies like News Agency of Nigeria (NAN), Nigeria Television Authority(NTA) and Federal Radio Corporation of Nigeria(FRCN),’’ he said.

    He added that the N1billion allocated for the Ministry as capital expenditure in 2024, was not sufficient for the implementation of the programmes.

    (NAN)