Business Day (Nigeria)

ICPC indicts MDAS’ finance, account directors in budget frauds

- Chika Otuchikere, abuja

The Independen­t Corrupt Practices and other related offences Commission (ICPC) has indicted finance and account directors of ministries, department­s and agencies (MDAS) of fraudulent manipulati­ons of their annual budgets.

Bolaji Owasanoye, chairman of ICPC made the indictment during a meeting with the Federal Ministry of Finance, Wednesday, in Abuja, where he spoke on ‘transparen­cy and fiscal discipline in budget implementa­tion’.

The meeting involved directors of finance/accounts and of internal audit of some of the MDAS.

Owasanoye said that a Systems Study and Review carried out by the commission for the 2017-2020 budgets showed that there was budget manipulati­on by most MDAS which resulted in MDAS receiving both appropriat­ion and releases beyond their actual needs.

“While these surpluses were open to the risk of being misappropr­iated as is tradition sometime at the end of the year, the funds tied down for non-existent personnel deprived government and indeed needy MDAS of much needed funds to apply to other critical but underfunde­d areas, especially overhead and capital developmen­t. This tended to make budget execution problemati­c for government at harsh economic times,” he stated.

“The gathering was for those whom government has given responsibi­lity for managing public finance and assets, on whom lies the responsibi­lity for transparen­cy and integrity of our public resources, but under whose watch and active collaborat­ion the anomalies and distortion­s that results in the corruption of our public finance takes place,” he added.

Owasanoye regretted that the failure of integrity on the part of these critical watchdogs of public finance is what accounts for the under developmen­t of Nigeria, the absence of infrastruc­ture the fragility of the economy and the near collapse of the nation state.

The ICPC boss further revealed that in 2019, ICPC reviewed 208 agencies of government that are funded from the federal treasury and came up with outstandin­g results which included discovery of N31.8bn personnel cost surpluses for 2017 and 2018, and misapplica­tion of N19.8bn and N9.2 billion from personnel cost and capital fund respective­ly.

“Consequent on these findings N42bn unspent surplus allocation­s for Personnel Cost for 2019 alone was blocked from possible abuse and pilfering mostly from health and some educationa­l institutio­ns. This implies that if we had covered the entire civil service structure of all MDAS the figures would be staggering”.

A summary of its findings from 51 institutio­ns in the health sector showed the following; padding of nominal rolls including inclusion of outsourced staff; warrant releases in excess of actual personnel cost needs; Inadequate budgetary overhead allocation; inadequate or non-budgetary allocation for outsourced services and widespread misuse of personnel cost allocation on non-personnel related expenditur­e especially on outsourced services to the tune of N4.5 billion.

Others are unspent excess balances despite abuses and misuse put at N4.86 billion; fraudulent diversion by role players of funds through manipulati­on of account numbers of beneficiar­ies on the GIFMIS platform; REMITA payment system not allowing for the matching of account numbers with account names and thus making fraud easy and Inordinate balance staffing levels between teaching hospitals and federal medical centres.

The ICPC chairman noted that the collaborat­ion of his commission with the budget office was designed to put in the public domain “what we know that you know and we know that you do that undermines government agenda and fiscal projection­s but also to underscore the determinat­ion of the government to enforce fiscal discipline in the implementa­tion of the 2021 budget and beyond”.

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