Jonathan |
An examination of the 2013 budget proposals submitted to the
National Assembly by President Goodluck Jonathan showed that the FG made a
provision of at least N178.79bn for government bodies recommended for abolition
next year.
Out of the N178.79bn, the government budgeted N122.28m for
recurrent expenditure and N56.51bn for capital expenditure.
The Presidential Committee on the Restructuring and
Rationalisation of FG Parastatals, Commissions and Agencies, headed by a former
Head of Service, Mr. Steve Oronsaye, was constituted by Jonathan in August 2011
“to cut the waste and high cost of governance in the country.”
The committee, which submitted its report on April 16, 2012
to the President, proposed the abolition of 38 agencies, merger of another 52
and reversion of 14 agencies to departments in the relevant ministries.
In receiving the over 800-page document, Jonathan had given
an assurance to Nigerians that a White Paper committee would be set up
immediately would be given two months to deliberate on it and come up with a
final submission.
However, on April 18, a White Paper Committee headed by the
Attorney-General and Minister of Justice, Mr. Mohammed Bello Adoke (SAN), was
set up to review the recommendations of the Oronsaye Committee.
Members of the panel are the Minister of Land and Housing
Ms. Ama Pepple, Head of Civil Service of the Federation, Alhaji Isa Bello Sali;
Minister of Labour and Productivity; Chief Emeka Wogu; Minister of
Communications Technology, Mrs. Omobola Johnson; and Minister of National
Planning Commission, Dr. Shamsudeen Usman.
Others are Permanent Secretary in the Ministry of Power,
Mrs. A. J. Awosika, BPE Director-General, Emeka Eze, Senior Special Assistant
Economic Matters to the President, Dr. Ochi C. Achinivu, and a Permanent
Secretary in the General Services Office of the Secretary to the Government of
Federation, Mr. Femi Olayisade (who is the secretary).
The committee was given 60 days to submit its
recommendations.
Although the Oronsaye Committee proposed the merger of the
major anti-graft agencies – the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission, the
Independent Corrupt Practices and Other Related Offences Commission and Code of
Conduct Bureau – for the Anti-Corruption Tribunal, the agencies got N9.388bn,
N4.47bn and N3.01bn respectively in the 2013 budget proposals.
The Federal Road Safety Corps, which is also recommended for
scrapping (with a suggested transference of its responsibilities to the Highway
Department of the Federal Ministry of Works and the Police), got an allocation
of N30.718bn for the 2013 fiscal year.
Similarly, the National Hajj Commission and the Nigerian
Christian Board were allocated funds in the 2013 budget proposals in spite of
the recommendations of the committee that the two bodies be scrapped.
“Issues of pilgrimage are individual religious affairs,
which could be undertaken without government sponsorship,” said the report in
recommending the abolition of the two bodies.
While the NHC received N724.46m, its Christian counterpart,
the NCPC, got N634m for 2013.
The National Poverty Eradication Programme, the Small and
Medium Scale Enterprises and the National Directorate of Employment got a vote
of N3.34bn, N1.5bn, and N5.4bn respectively.
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