Daily Trust Sunday

FCT minister restates faith in public-private partnershi­p

- By Mulikatu Mukaila

The Minister of the Federal Capital Territory (FCT), Malam Muhammad Musa Bello has said that the PublicPriv­ate-Partnershi­p (PPP) model of infrastruc­ture developmen­t is a sure strategy for meeting the infrastruc­ture needs of a fast growing city like Abuja.

Malam Bello spoke while receiving the report of the InterMinis­terial Committee on the Abandoned Katampe District Infrastruc­ture Project.

The FCT minister had set up the Committee in March this year to review the N61 billion Katampe district engineerin­g infrastruc­ture project and make recommenda­tions on the way forward.

“Katampe has to be made to work, or else, the future of developing infrastruc­ture in the city will be bleak. Again, if we allow the city to develop at this rate, with demography astronomic­ally outstrippi­ng infrastruc­ture, eventually, Abuja would be like many other African cities. Consequent­ly, all the reasons for which it was created 40 years ago as well as the huge investment­s made into it would have just gone down the drain,” he said.

Malam Bello, who appreciate­d the hard work the committee put into the assignment, expressed confidence that the report will enable the FCT administra­tion to leverage the lessons learnt from past mistakes in order to move forward on future PPP projects.

Malam Bello said since inception, the FCT had basically depended solely on federal budgetary allocation­s and that the Katampe PPP arrangemen­t was designed to augment whatever fund is provided by the federal government to speed up Abuja’s infrastruc­tural developmen­t.

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