Tag: UN

  • UN names Fowler on tax experts panel 

    UN names Fowler on tax experts panel 

    United Nations (UN) Secretary-General Antonio Guteress has named Executive Chairman of Federal Inland Revenue Service (FIRS) Tunde Fowler as a member of the International Experts Committee on Tax Matters.

    The committee has 25 members.

    Fowler’s appointment was conveyed by Mr. Bolaji Akinremi, Minister Plenipotentiary of Nigeria Permanent Mission, New York, in a mail to the FIRS.

    It said: “I have great joy to inform you that the UN Secretary-General, H.E Antonio Guteress, has appointed Mr. Babatunde Fowler as one of the 25 members of the prestigious International Experts Committee on Tax Matters for a four-year tenure to commence at the inauguration ceremony in Geneva on 1 October 2017. In addition to the notification of the appointment by the SG to the UN Economic Council already placed on the website of the Council, individual letters of appointment would be addressed to the appointee and the appointee is to formally accept the nomination through a letter of acceptance addressed to the UNSG through the Nigeria Permanent Mission New York. Please, express the heartfelt congratulations of the Permanent Representative of Nigeria to the UN, Ambassador Tijjani Muhammad-Bande, to Mr. Williams Babatunde Fowler on his appointment and a warm wish for a successful tenure”.

    Fowler, who is also the Chairman of the African Tax Administration, Forum, (ATAF) and the Joint Tax Board (JTB), was Chairman, Lagos Internal Revenue Service (LIRS). His sterling performance in Lagos led to a sharp rise in Internally Generated Revenue (IGR) from an average of N3.6 billion monthly, as at January 2006, to an average of over N23 billion monthly as at June 2015.

    Despite a challenging economy, with oil at under $50 per dollars for most part of 2016 and a sliding purchasing power, Fowler led FIRS to realise over N3.303 trillion in 2016.

    With Fowler’s leadership, the FIRS got the ATAF Award for the best Innovation in Africa, with the FIRS e-Stamp Duty solution, while the Chartered Institute of Taxation, Ghana, (CITG) honoured Fowler as a fellow of the institute.

    FIRS introduced six payment solutions: e-Registration), e-Stamp Duty, e-tax pay, Remita), e-Receipt, e-filing and e-Tax Clearance Certificate e-TCC- to make tax payment easy as ABC, anytime, anywhere.

  • UN calls for more global commitment to SDGs

    UN calls for more global commitment to SDGs

    UN Deputy Secretary-General Amina Mohammed has called for escalated efforts by Nations for the implementation of the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) to ensure that the 2030 deadline is met.

    Mohammad, who made the remarks at an informal UN General Assembly meeting on taking stock of SDG actions, warned that the current pace of progress was insufficient.

    “The SDGs have jumped from the General Assembly Hall to communities across the world and are taking hold among policy-makers and in global public awareness.

    “However, our assessment clearly shows that the pace of progress is insufficient,” she added, noting also that progress has been uneven between the sexes, and among people of different ages and constituencies.

    She particularly said that the persistence of poverty remained the main challenge and that tackling gender equality and the use of new technologies should be leveraged to tackle this issue.

    She also highlighted the importance of the Paris Agreement on Climate Change to the success of the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development.

    Mohammed also underscored the potential of the 2030 Agenda for a more prosperous and peaceful world and said that its success depends on the active engagement of all actors for people, peace, prosperity and a healthy planet.

    “My simple appeal today to all of you is to stay engaged, help us keep the ambition high, and work with us in this collective endeavour for a better future for all,” she said.

    Peter Thomson, the President of the General Assembly, also spoke of the importance of collaboration and the deployment of resources, expertise and technology on a greater scale to realise SDGs.

    Thomson said: “Potentially, we have reserves of them sufficient to well exceed the goals before us.

    “Thus, it is a matter of deployment, of marshalling our forces, both morally and practically, to undertake the tasks at hand in a spirit of inclusivity and universality.”

    He recalled the work done over the last year to advance each of the 17 Goals, in particular, building momentum across the SDGs.

    Thomson called for strengthening the UN capacity to convene, engage and create coalitions for collective action across the means of implementation.

    He sais that this includes partnerships with the private sector, employing technological advances and leveraging the potential of public and private financing to support achieving the goals.

    He urged greater efforts to deliver on the promise of the 2030 Agenda, adding that “we now need a shift in gears.

    “It is time to crank it up a notch, for time is not on our side. We have the resources, the ideas, the technology and the motivation.

    “Add leadership, courage and an unwavering commitment to progress and we will reach our 2030 destination with goals fulfilled,” he added.

  • Cholera spreads through IDPs camps in Nigeria – UN

    Cholera spreads through IDPs camps in Nigeria – UN

    Cholera is spreading fast through Internally Displaced Persons (IDPs) camps in Borno State, the United Nations said on Wednesday.

    Most deaths were recorded in Muna Garage camp on the outskirts of state capital Maiduguri, the epicentre of the insurgency that had also destabilised neighbouring Cameroon, Chad and Niger.

    A UN report said more than 530 suspected cases of cholera had been registered by Tuesday – more than three times the number reported five days earlier.

    At least 23 people had died, it added, up from 11 reported on August 31.

    The outbreak began late last month and aid workers had already warned that Nigeria’s rainy season could spread disease in already unsanitary displacement camps, Reuters reported.

    About 1.8 million people have abandoned their homes because of violence or food shortages during the conflict, UN agencies said.

    “As well as Muna Garage, the nearby camps of Custom House, Ruwan Zafi and Bolori II also had cholera cases, and there were reports of outbreaks in the areas of Moguno and Dikwa, northeast and east of Maiduguri,” UN added.

     

     

  • UN: Nigeria, others seek greater tax role

    Nigeria and other developing countries’ increasing demand for involvement in setting global tax norms is propelling the United Nations (UN) to consider expanding its tax experts committee and giving more control to smaller nations, a UN official said.

    Being involved in the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD’s) Global Forum on Transparency and Exchange of Information for Tax Purposes and Inclusive Framework is useful to developing countries, “but it won’t be enough,” Michael Lennard, chief of the United Nations’ international tax cooperation unit, said during an August 31 video conference at the International Fiscal Association (IFA) congress in Rio de Janeiro.

    The growing demand for participation in global tax matters “will cause some disruptions” within the OECD and the UN. “Eventually, the UN will have to consider, ‘is 25 members enough?’ “ Lennard said about the organisation’s 25-member committee of tax experts.

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    The Committee of Experts on International Cooperation in Tax Matters—a subsidiary body of the UN Economic and Social Council—helps promote international cooperation among tax authorities and makes recommendations on emerging tax issues.

    The nations represented in the committee are: Colombia, Djibouti, India, Zambia, Nigeria, Japan, Poland, Ghana, Vietnam, Thailand, Jamaica, Kenya, New Zealand, Argentina, Brazil, the Netherlands, Switzerland, Russia, Canada, Liberia, Germany, Ecuador, Sweden, China, and Singapore.

    Although countries such as India, Brazil and China “will always have a very important role, a lot of smaller countries will demand roles and want their experiences reflected,” Lennard said.

    Lennard said setting the norm will be slower than what people have seen in the past because of a larger number of countries involved. A slower pace will be beneficial to ensure consistency, which will ultimately be good for businesses, he said.

    “There’s nothing worse than countries signing up for something but not implementing it in practice,” Lennard said. “We have to try to get the balance between fast norm-setting and norms that are sticky—norms that will be seen as having ownership through the wider world.”

    Source taxation approach is another reason for increasing involvement of developing countries, Lennard said. The approach, which is followed more in the UN model tax treaty than in the OECD model, is becoming more attractive to developed countries, he continued.

    “We’ll see some conversation between developed and developing countries, which is good,” he said. “It’s good to not have the whole divide between the two.”

    Further, withholding taxes will become important and useful for developing countries to get the revenue they need for development, according to Lennard. Still, a broader discussion will be needed on how to maintain evolving tax systems that meet those revenue requirements but are still fair to tax planners, he said.

    “I think that’s an important discussion that has been avoided,” Lennard said. “Hopefully we can have good withholding tax systems for all.”

    ‘Not a spaghetti bowl’

    Lennard also said he’s optimistic about the future and the creation of sound policy choices.

    “With the support of governments, of business, of NGOs, of academics, we can actually end up with global tax norms, which are not chaotic, not a spaghetti bowl, but are actually effective in recognising the legitimate realities and different stages of governments between countries,” Lennard said.

    In October, the UN expects to publish a new version of the UN transfer pricing manual and a new handbook on extractive industries, Tatiana Falcao, formerly part of the UN’s tax experts committee, said during the panel.

    New projects will be influenced by the practices of developing countries, Falcao said. These projects include guidance on capacity development, carbon taxation, and dispute resolution.

    The tax committee expects to have two new projects implemented in the “very recent future” regarding dispute resolution and how countries can solve issues without resorting to arbitration, with “extensive reference to the use of litigation,” Falcao said.

    The first dispute resolution guide will be geared toward countries that have “almost no experience” with mutual agreement procedures, while the second guide will be a revision to MAP guidance for countries with prior experience, she said.

  • Natural disasters affect 41 million people in Bangladesh, India, Nepal

    Natural disasters affect 41 million people in Bangladesh, India, Nepal

    The UN on Thursday said at least 41 million people in Bangladesh, India and Nepal have been directly affected by flooding and landslides from the monsoon rains that begun in June.

    The monsoon, according to the UN, might continue until October.

    It said that over 1,700 people have died in catastrophic floods in India, Nepal, Bangladesh and Pakistan as torrential rains pound swathes of South Asia during its worst monsoon season in more than a decade.

    Estimates from the National Disaster Management Authority (NDMA) and reports showed that more than 1,300 people, mostly villagers died since the beginning of the rainy season in India alone.

    The eastern Indian state of Bihar is the worst-affected with more than 500 deaths, as major rivers in spate caused large-scale inundation affecting hundreds of villages across 21 districts.

    The country’s financial capital, Mumbai was slashed by heavy rains on Tuesday that claimed over 30 lives, including several from a building collapse on Thursday which officials said was caused by the intense downpour.

    “In neighbouring Pakistan, heavy rains caused a massive deluge in the port city of Karachi on Thursday, killing at least a dozen people.

    “The overall death toll for the season stood at more than 100, Nepal was also experiencing heavy floods which have claimed 159 lives so far,’’ NDMA said.

    The country’s eastern hills and plains along the border with India were severely affected.

    In Bangladesh, 141 people have died after floodwaters from upstream rivers from Indian hills swelled Bangladeshi river systems.

    “Tens of thousands of homes, as well as schools and hospitals, have been destroyed leaving people displaced and homeless,’’ the UN said.

    According to Jagan Chapagain, Undersecretary General for Programmes and Operations at the International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies said “this is the worst flooding that parts of South Asia have seen in decades.

    “Entire communities have been cut off, and the only way to get aid to some of these villages is by boat and many are running out of food.”

    Floodwaters also become a breeding ground for diseases such as diarrhoea and malaria, aid agencies have warned.

    The death toll across the region could rise as conditions could deteriorate in the coming days with more rain forecast.

  • Nigeria urges safety for UN peacekeepers

    Nigeria urges safety for UN peacekeepers

    Nigeria has stressed the need to ensure that all UN peacekeepers deployed to troubled spots globally were safe in the course of discharging their duties.

    Nigeria’s Permanent Representative to the UN, Prof. Tijjani Bande, stated this at the Security Council ‘Open Debate on the UN Peacekeeping Operations: their potential contributions to the overarching goal of sustaining peace’.

    “We wish to reiterate that, in view of the significant role of peacekeepers, it is imperative for all concerned to make efforts to ensure the safety of all peacekeepers,” Bande said.

    According to him, peacekeeping is one of the veritable tools at the disposal of the UN for performing one of its three critical founding objectives.

    “The doctrine of prevention in peacekeeping operations is not just about stopping conflicts from happening or from escalating; it is about continued engagement, from the early signs of conflict to the post-recovery phase.

    “Peace keeping and peace building have thus become so interwoven that they may be considered simultaneously at each conflict phase.

    “Even where there is yet no need for the deployment of force, the threat of force, as a deterrent, may dissuade parties from abandoning an existing peace process.

    “There is need to recognize that no two conflicts are the same, so a one-size-fits-all approach would always be misleading,” he said.

    The Nigerian envoy pointed out the analytical framework for a peacekeeping mandate needed to be unique to the conflict and to its environment only.

    He said an effective collaboration with regional arrangements in the drafting of peacekeeping mandates would be invaluable, considering the obvious advantages that such regional bodies have, including deeper insight on the conflict.

    The environment, the people and their culture and sensitivities, as well as the history of similar situations also play their parts, he said

    Bande also frowned at a situation where peace agreements were drafted in foreign capitals by people who did not have complete knowledge of all the factors responsible for the conflicts.

    The Nigerian ambassador said: “A critical element in Sustaining Peace is the opportunity for reconciliation.

    “Peace initiatives that allow stakeholders to freely initiate and conclude negotiations based on ‘give and take’ concessions, are most likely to attain enduring levels of compromise and stability.

    “A situation where parties are encouraged to sign peace Agreements drafted in foreign capitals, with presumed knowledge of the issues, and of solutions that are presumably suitable and acceptable to the parties, may not achieve the desired results.”

    Bande said a very important component of the Sustaining Peace agenda was the engagement of the civil society.

    “In the past, restriction of peace negotiations to armed parties have proven to be fatally flawed as those parties may have limited, short-sighted political objectives that do not lead to a sustained peace.

    “The involvement of youths, women, religious and community leaders have intrinsic value that supports peace on a continued basis,” he said.

    NAN reports that Nigeria is the world’s 14th largest troops contributing nation to UN peacekeeping operations.

    According to the latest data published by the United Nations Peacekeeping, Nigeria contributed a total of 2, 170 peacekeeping personnel in 2016.

    According to the report, Nigeria ranks eighth in Africa after Ethiopia, Burkina Faso – 3,036, Egypt – 2,889, Ghana – 2,972, Rwanda – 6,146, Senegal – 3,617 and Tanzania – 2,341.

    The report showed that as at Aug. 31, 2016, Nigeria had provided 403 policemen, 46 military experts and 1,721 troops, out of which 232 were females.

    According to the data, the largest contributors to UN peacekeeping missions are Ethiopia with 8,326, India with 7,471 personnel and Pakistan which contributed 7,161.

    Jamaica, Guinea-Bissau, Mozambique, Latvia, and the former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia, contributed the least with one each.

  • UN: Netanyahu bows hot as secretary-general makes first regional trip

    UN: Netanyahu bows hot as secretary-general makes first regional trip

    Israeli Prime Minister, Benjamin Netanyahu, issued a scathing criticism of the UN on Monday as the Secretary-General, Antonio Guterres, began his first visit to the country.

    At the opening remarks of Netanyahu’s meeting with the UN chief, the prime minister accused the UN of failing to prevent arms shipments to the Shiite militant group Hezbollah in Lebanon.

    He added, that Iran is seeking to open a front against Israel on the Lebanese and Syrian borders.

    “[Iran] is also building sites to produce precision-guided missiles towards that end in both Syria and in Lebanon.

    “This is something Israel cannot accept. This is something the UN should not accept,” Netanyahu said, without offering specifics.

    Iran and Hezbollah are fighting alongside Syrian President ‘s government in the Syrian civil war, which has killed hundreds of thousands.

    The prime minister added that he believes the UN has an “absurd obsession” with his country.

  • Post UNLEASHLAB2017: Why the 17 SDGs matter to you

    Post UNLEASHLAB2017: Why the 17 SDGs matter to you

    The relentless energy of 1000 great young innovators who were engaged by UNLEASH to proffer scalable solutions to the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), especially to meet the 2030 deadline of the United Nations (UN), evokes the words of Vincent Van Gogh, a Dutch painter who lived between 1853 and 1890, and said: “Great things are done by a series of small things brought together”.

    Till date, the efforts by member states of the United Nations (UN) and a few private individuals only seem to have succeeded in scratching the surface of the problem because energy wasn’t synchronized towards achieving the 17 Sustainable Development Goals and it might not achieve it before the set deadline of 2030.

    To further confirm this, Camilla Bruckner, Director at the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP), Nordic Representative Office noted that it is the first time in history that all countries are represented for one goal.

    She clearly made this known while addressing the diverse audience from 129 countries, stressing that the goal is to achieve the 17 SDGs before the deadline of the year 2030.

    Bruckner noted that nations depend on one another emphasising that “we must work together to achieve these goals”, she said.

    In his remarks at the closing ceremony of UNLEASH at Aarhus in Denmark, Anders Don, Chief Executive Officer (CEO) and Partner, Delloite, Denmark identified trust, courage, co-creation and diversity of thoughts as factors that can “allow us to change the world”.

    Furthermore, strong words of motivation were also spoken by Trisha Shetty, Founder and CEO, SheSays from India, who noted that beyond the fact that there is a problem, “we have a plan. The plan is the SDG and we must follow it through.

    “We have to be resilient in order to achieve our goals. Also, we will treat the SDGs as social development goals and use them to seek results from leaders. We will hold them accountable.

    “The problem looks complex but the solutions don’t have to be. What is important is that the solutions shall be localised and implemented.”

    It is fascinating, however, to note that what this implies is that everyone’s skills, resources as well as failure experiences are required to achieve the desired solutions to save our planet and ultimately, save ourselves. At the moment, if there are about 30million children growing up poor in the world’s richest countries, then, the fate of the children growing poorly in developing countries is only better imagined.

    Reports have it that there are more than 700 million people still living in extreme poverty and cannot afford to have the most basic needs like health, education, and access to water and sanitation. A number of people living in Southern Asia and Sub-Saharan Africa live on less than US$1.90 a day, which is about 70% of the global total. Countries like China, India, Indonesia and Nigeria, are home to about half of the global poor.

     

    In another development, about 44% of the member states of the World Health Organisation (WHO) has reported less than 0ne physician per 1000 population, thereby leading to the death of approximately 830 pregnant women due to preventable causes related to pregnancy and childbirth.

    Therefore, between 2017 and 2030, to be able to reduce this staggering figure to 70 per 100,000 live birth, as planned by the UN, it is no more a matter of ‘I’m not poor. Why should I care about other people’s economic situation’ because our well- being is linked to each other.

    Global reports have shown that the growing inequality is detrimental to economic growth and it damages social unity, increasing political and social tensions and (in some circumstances) driving instability and conflicts.

    It is in this effort that Flemming Besenbacher, through UNLEASH has engaged young persons because Youths’ active engagement in policy-making can make a difference in addressing poverty. This is because their rights are promoted and their voices should be heard. By so doing, inter-generational knowledge is shared and that innovation and critical thinking are encouraged to support transformational change in people’s lives and communities.

    In a presentation at the UN Headquarters in New York City, United States of America, the message to lawmakers and governments includes that they can help create an enabling environment to generate productive employment and job opportunities for the poor and the marginalized, adding that they could formulate strategies and fiscal policies that stimulate pro-poor growth, and reduce poverty.

    It further stated that Private Sector workers, being an engine of economic growth, have a major role to play in determining whether the growth it creates is inclusive and hence contributes to poverty reduction. The UN stressed that the Sector could promote economic opportunities for the poor, focusing on segments of the economy where most of the poor are active, namely on micro and small enterprises and those operating in the informal sector.

    If you are part of the science and academic community, note that Science provides the foundation for new and sustainable approaches, solutions and technologies to tackle the challenges of reducing poverty and achieving sustainable development. The academic and education community has a major role in increasing the awareness about the impact of poverty.

    One of the great challenges of our time is eradicating hunger and malnutrition. Not only do the consequences of not enough – or the wrong–food cause suffering and poor health, they also slow progress in many other areas of development like education and employment.

    The World Health Organisation reports that every day, too many men and women across the globe struggle to feed their children a nutritious meal. In a world where we produce enough food to feed everyone, 795 million people – one in nine – still go to bed on an empty stomach each night. Even more – one in three – suffer from some form of malnutrition.

    Hunger can positively impact our economies, health, education, equality and social development. It’s a key piece of building a better future for everyone. Additionally, with hunger limiting human development, we will not be able to achieve the other sustainable development goals such as education, health and gender equality.

    Healthwise, major progress has been made in several areas, including in child and maternal health as well as in addressing HIV/AIDS, malaria and other diseases. Maternal mortality has fallen by almost 50 percent since 1990, measles vaccines have averted nearly 15.6 million deaths since 2000 and 13.6 million people were able to access antiretroviral therapy by the end of 2014.

    Ultimately, to save this planet, everyone is needed in whatever capacity is available. The rich man’s physical cash and the poor man’s physical efforts are highly essential. As investors pump in money, implementers and beneficiaries too might take up the personal responsibility not to waste or destroy infrastructures for the greater good of all.

    Also, it will be primarily the responsibility of countries. Reviews of progress will need to be undertaken regularly in each country, involving civil society, business and representatives of various interest groups. At the regional level, countries will share experiences and tackle common issues, while on an annual basis, at the United Nations, the High-Level Political Forum on Sustainable Development (HLPF),  they will take stock of progress at the global level, identifying gaps and emerging issues, and recommending corrective action.

  • World Humanitarian Day: UN aid chief urges protection of aid workers

    World Humanitarian Day: UN aid chief urges protection of aid workers

    The UN Under-Secretary-General for Humanitarian Affairs, Stephen O’Brien, has called for the protection of aid workers, saying it is “paramount” for the continued delivery of aid to victims.

    O’Brien, who is also the UN Emergency Relief Coordinator, stated this on the occassion of the 2017 World Humanitarian Day.

    As conflicts around the world continued to take a massive toll on people’s lives, he  stressed the importance of ensuring that the brave men and women who risked their lives to help those in need were not themselves a target.

    “The protection of aid workers is paramount,” O’Brien said for the Day observed annually on Aug. 19 to pay tribute to aid workers who risked their lives in humanitarian service, and rally support for people affected by crises worldwide.

    “It was designated by the General Assembly to coincide with the date of the 2003 bombing of the UN headquarters in Baghdad, Iraq, in which 22 staff lost their lives.

    “This year, humanitarian partners are coming together under the #NotATarget Campaign to highlight the need to protect civilians caught in conflict, including humanitarian and medical workers.

    “World Humanitarian Day is an opportunity for us to focus on protecting humanitarian aid workers, particularly in the medical field,” O’Brien noted.

    Currently, he said, humanitarian workers are operating in 40 countries across the world, often for many years, despite insufferable difficulties.

    “People put themselves at great risk to reach people in need, in some of the most dangerous environments, in protracted crises around the world,” he stated, noting that just recently, seven Syrian volunteer rescuers, known as White Helmets, were killed.

    O’Brien acknowledged that such incidents were becoming too commonplace saying “my heart grieves for the family and friends of those brave people who gave the ultimate sacrifice to help others”.

    In spite of the difficulties and dangers, O’Brien stated that humanitarian work was moving forward “at every point.”

    “Member States, humanitarian aid workers, coordinators of humanitarian relief – all of us continue to supply strength, determination, courage and conviction.

    “There is no higher international public good than seeking to save the lives and protect the civilians caught up in crisis,” he said.

    The #NotATarget campaign follows the launch earlier this year of the UN Secretary-General’s report on protection of civilians, in which he called for enhanced respect for international humanitarian and human rights law, and protection of civilians.

    According to the report, those most in need of urgent humanitarian assistance and protection are civilians in urban areas, children, targets of sexual violence, humanitarian workers, health workers, and forcibly displaced people.

    O’Brien said that making a difference on the ground required “physical will and relationships with players in all the various places” to get the necessary access to those in need.

    “We are in the business of trying to protect civilians. We are trying to put in place the right balance. To do this, we must make sure that the perpetrators of violence are held accountable for their actions.

    “It is important that everyone adheres to agreed international norms, laws and principles, to make sure that people are held to account,” he stressed.

  • NASS says no more delayed salaries, underfunding in foreign missions

    NASS says no more delayed salaries, underfunding in foreign missions

    The Senate and House of Representatives Committees on Foreign Affairs have said that the era of non-payment of workers’ salaries at Nigerian foreign missions, was over.

    The committees, led by the Chairperson of the Senate Committee, Sen. Monsurat Sunmonu, stated this during a fact-finding mission to the Permanent Mission of Nigeria to the UN in New York.

    Sunmonu regretted the condition of the members of staff and the infrastructure decay at the missions, but noted that things had improved from their previous state.

    “What we had last year was not the same thing as what you’re having right now and this is just the beginning; wouldn’t rest until the best is achieved.”

    She commended the leadership of the Senate and House of Representatives for their cooperation saying “if we haven’t got their support, all our hopes and efforts would have been shattered”.

    “We also thank Baba, Mr President – Muhammadu Buhari – and we pray to the Lord Almighty to bring him back safely because of the vision that he has for Nigeria.

    “God was just giving him that grace and we are looking forward to his return and we know that God will answer our prayer,” she said.

    Sunmonu noted that the July salaries of the foreign missions had been paid and assured that monthly salaries would now be paid before the middle of the month.

    “Your salaries have been paid up till July. Today, we are going to phone the Minister, and I will tell him that he should just please try and buckle up.

    “I can tell you that the reason that there was some delay is because of the transition, the Permanent Secretary just left, he needs to handover to somebody.

    “The representative of the Ministry has been cooperating with us, although if the executive doesn’t cooperate with the legislature is a problem.

    “We can have marriage of convenience, as long as we are getting things done. That’s the most important. But this week, by God’s grace, you would have received your alert.”

    The Deputy Chairman of the Committee, Sen. Shaaba Lafiaji, assured the mission officials that the committees were doing their best to protect their interests and that of the country.

    “We are out there working and doing everything possible to protect your interest out here and protect the interest of the country as a whole.

    “The Chairperson has consistently insisted that the budget that is meant for all the missions should directly go to them and she succeeded in doing that because she stood firm.

    “Before then, budgets are lumped together, sent to the Ministry and the Ministry chose and picked and those of you that are out there were always the worse for it.

    “We know what you’re going through; we know what sacrifices you’re making; remember you’re making these sacrifices for your country; don’t give up, continue to stand strong for Nigeria.”

    Vice-Chairman of the House of Representatives Committee, Ibrahim Dutse, said the fact-finding mission was in line with relevant provisions for the House to oversight at the end of every appropriation.

    “Whatever we appropriate to any agency, organization, or department, we need to see exactly what was done with the funds. That’s why we’re in New York, London, Geneva and Washington.

    “We came here to check the appropriations we made last year and we are pleased to note that your Mission has complied substantially with most of the appropriated funds.

    “The funds were actually assigned for the purposes they were appropriated. So I want to thank the Ambassador and the ministry that things are getting to normal in our missions.”

    A member of the House of Representatives Committee, Mukaila Kassim, expressed happiness that things had improved at the foreign missions through the efforts of the two legislative committees.

    “I want to tell you that we won’t stop until we see that everything gets to normal. We will make sure that we are there. I know to get there is not easy.

    “Even the British system that has been set up for several years, they are still saying that ‘we’re getting there’. So definitely, we’re getting there and we will get there.”

    The Deputy Permanent Representative at the Mission, Amb. Samson Itegboje, praised the committee members for their visit.

    Itegboje, however, pointed out that the mission and the workers had continued to endure and work under difficult conditions in the overall interests of the country.