The total police budget for
the elections stands at N30.5bn; the Office of the National Security Adviser,
N4.2bn; the Department of State Services, N12.2bn; NSCDC, N3.5bn and the
Nigeria Immigration Service, N2.6bn.
The Nigeria Security and
Civil Defence Corps will need N310m to feed and administer drugs to dogs that
will be deployed in states for the 2019 elections.
The Nigeria Police Force
will also require N7m to feed 50 horses that would be used for patrol during
the elections which will take place between February 16 and March 2, 2019.
The information is
contained in the 2018 virement proposal sent to the National Assembly for the
2019 general election by President Muhammadu Buhari.
The total police budget for
the elections stands at N30.5bn; the Office of the National Security Adviser,
N4.2bn; the Department of State Services, N12.2bn; NSCDC, N3.5bn and the
Nigeria Immigration Service, N2.6bn.
Buhari, in a letter he
wrote to the National Assembly on Tuesday, requested a total virement of
N228.8bn, largely allocated to new projects “inserted” in the 2018 by the
National Assembly to offset part of the proposed cost of funding the 2019
general elections.
The balance of N242bn
needed to fund the 2019 elections will be captured in next year’s budget.
According to the details of
the 2018 virement request the President submitted to the National Assembly, the
NSCDC needs N1.2bn this year to prepare for the elections.
The virement request reads,
“Medical and general expenses for dogs, N143,782,000; feeding of dogs:
N166,315,000.
“Hiring of speedboats:
N499,500,000; welfare packages (contingency of N7,000 per state and FCT)
N259m; accommodation allowances for monitors:
N185,000,000.”
According to the virement
document, police election budget this year stands at N679m, with N7.7m
earmarked for feeding of horses and N100m for printing of non-security
materials.
The police also asked for
N87.5m for the maintenance of aircraft and N407m for maintenance of the
vehicles to be used for election monitoring.
The budget states in part,
“Feeding of 50 horses: N7, 719, 454; maintenance of existing vehicles for 2019
elections for the period of 20 days: N407, 400, 000.”
Immigration wants N126m to
print name tags
In the virement details,
the NIS also requested N126m for printing name tags for its personnel that
would be involved in the elections while N166m was requested for pre-election
training.
The DSS, in the virement
request would need N2.9bn to prepare for the polls this year.
The DSS requested N2.2bn
for local election and travel allowances while N100m was earmarked for
perception management involving stakeholders, political parties and
traditional/religious leaders.
About N120m was budgeted
for fuelling generators during the elections which will last for 21 days while
N100m was set aside for post-election investigations.
In the N1.6bn virement
details, the ONSA requested N250m for a national election crisis response
exercise involving all security agencies and relevant ministries, departments
and agencies.
About N200m was budgeted
for the deployment of equipment including satellites while N130m was earmarked
for election monitoring.
In his letter which was
sent to both chambers of the National Assembly, the President said the figures
had been subjected to “the usual budget evaluation.”
The breakdown of INEC’s
budget was, however, not stated in the proposal sent to the National Assembly.
2019: We will need one million
workers – INEC
Speaking with one of our
correspondents recently, however, the INEC National Commissioner in charge of
Voter Education and Publicity, Prince Solomon Soyebi, had said the commission
would require the services of at least one million workers comprising ad hoc
workers and INEC employees.
He had also stated that
they would all be insured.
Soyebi had stated, “We
conduct our elections with many officials. Next year it may be close to a
million people. What I want to assure you is that most of the work we do is
done by a variety of staff most of whom are ad hoc. INEC has a staff strength
of over 16,000.
N’Assembly must scrutinise
INEC, others before approving virement – SERAP, CD
But two civil society
organisations, the Socio-Economic Right and Accountability Project and the
Campaign for Democracy, have said the National Assembly must not grant the
N229bn virement brought forward by Buhari without seeking clarifications from
INEC, the police and other agencies which the funds are earmarked for.
The SERAP Director,
Adetokunbo Mumuni, said the agencies to share the virement must be invited by
the legislature to justify the appropriation before it would be granted.
Mumuni said, “What is
important is for the Senate and the House of Representatives to invite INEC and
the other agencies to seek clarifications on the sums in the virement.
“The President has said
that this money is meant for INEC and to meet the security needs towards the
elections. So the next question is that let us confirm from INEC and the
security agencies whether such amounts of money are what they submitted to the
Presidency.
“Basically, nothing must be
done to frustrate the 2019 electoral process. Whatever is needed to ensure a
free, fair and credible election must be provided. But what we kick against is
the attempt to use the elections to meet other deliberate fraudulent purposes
and intentions.”
Also, the CD President,
Usman Abdul, said, “The Senate has a duty to embark on a total scrutiny of the
funds before approval. This is to ascertain that there is no misappropriation.
The National Assembly must cut down unnecessary expenses to ensure that our
funds do not end up in political campaigns for 2019.”
Group urges NASS to veto
Buhari on budget time frame bill
Meanwhile, the Centre for
Social Justice has called on the National Assembly to exercise its powers by
recalling the bill on the amendment to Sections 81 and 121 of the 1999
constitution which stipulates the time frame for budgets.
The Lead Director, Centre
for Social Justice, Eze Onyekpere, said this during a chat with journalists in
Abuja.
He said that the bill had
been transmitted by the National Assembly to Buhari for over a month, adding
that the delay in assenting to the document was an indication that the
President was unwilling for it to become a law.
The constitution amendment
bill proposes that instead of the old order, where the President and governors
present the budget estimates at any time in each financial year, they would now
be bound to present same not later than 90 days to the end of the financial
year.
The essence of the
amendment is to give the legislature adequate time to examine, vet and approve
the budget before the end of the presentation year and the beginning of the New
Year.
The amendment also proposes
a new subsection 1 (a) to the two sections by giving a timeline to the national
and state Houses of Assembly to pass the budget for the incoming year before
the end of the commencement of the next financial year.
Essentially, budgets will
no longer be presented late or approved late like it had happened in the last
three years.
The budget will now be
ready on or before January 1 of every year.
Onyekpere wondered why a
bill that should have checked the incessant delays in the country’s budgeting
process had yet to be assented to by the President despite receiving
Parliamentary approval.
He said, “If the NASS had
given the executive a timeline without prescribing one for itself, the
President may have had a defence for his refusal to assent.
“It could have been argued
that both the executive and legislature need to regulate themselves by
submitting to a constitutional timeline.
“And it would be considered
improper for legislators to exempt themselves from the time frame. In this
case, no reasonable person can fathom a reason that makes sense in the company
of reasonable Nigerians.”
On how the issue should be
resolved, Onyekpere said the lawmakers should veto the president by approving
the bill so that it could become law.
He said, “The constitution
is clear and requires no further elaboration. It is now up to NASS to exercise
its powers for the peace, order and good government of Nigeria and override the
presidential veto without any further delay.
“Any other course of action
will be a great disservice to the long suffering people of Nigeria.
“Nigerians do not expect
that the executive-legislative rift should get in the way of such clear headed
amendments.
“There must be irreducible
minimum levels of cooperation between the two arms of government, no matter the
situation; otherwise the government will need to throw in the towel and call
for fresh elections under the doctrine of necessity.”

No comments:
Post a Comment