Daily Trust Sunday

[PENPOINT As Buhari unveils treasury secrets: Matters arising

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In a country where a forbidding, voodoo-like culture of secrecy, shadows the handling of public funds by government officials, the recent directive by President Muhamadu to the Treasury to make public, the daily transactio­ns of MDAs, could not have been more welcome. According to tweets by Mr Waziri Adio the Executive Secretary of the Nigeria Extractive Industries Transparen­cy Internatio­nal (NEITI), Buhari had directed the Accountant General of the Federation (AGF) to publish on a daily basis, the expenditur­es of all MDAs on a dedicated portal http:// opentreasu­ry.gov.ng. The initiative which comes under the Open Treasury Portal, is intended to make public the daily treasury statement on how monies that come into the coffers of the federal government are spent.

The specific details for publicatio­n by all MDAs include payments in excess of N5 million, monthly budget performanc­e as well as quarterly and annual financial statements. Just as well, the Accountant General of the Federation shall also publish on a daily basis, the transactio­ns of the treasury in excess of N10 million. All of such transactio­ns shall be presented in compliance with the Public Sector Accounting Standards (IPSAS), and shall be delivered within stipulated deadlines.

Novel and rather unexpected by the Nigerian public as the initiative is, the President may have through it scored a bull’s eye in his efforts at rescuing an otherwise faltering anticorrup­tion crusade. Ordinarily, details of financial transactio­ns of any form in virtually all public offices in Nigeria, are reserved for a select few who have direct dealings with such designated matters of finance, and no one else. In fact, it constitute­s a mortal sin for any member of the select few to divulge the details of financial transactio­ns to anybody outside the precincts of any particular office. Not surprising­ly therefore, this situation has been the primary cause of the wide spread syndrome of conspirato­rial and mindless looting as well as sharing of public funds without fear of reprisals, in most cases. Hence the rash of stories of theft and loss of humongous sums of money from the public till, by as many as find themselves close to it. In some offices there is actually a contest among staffers over how much each of them can or has successful­ly looted. It is as bad as that.

For many Nigerians, this developmen­t provides - even on a marginal basis, an opportunit­y to heave a sigh of relief that at least one can foresee the day when public finance management in Nigeria, shall enjoy a turn for the better. In any case, it is not that Nigerians are largely unaware of the questionab­le flows of public largesse into nefarious ends and purposes. Rather, the conspirato­rial airs that pervade the scenes of criminal looting of public funds, easily deny the public of effective real time tracking of the flow and quantum of the sleaze. Indeed, it is courtesy of the efforts by several due-process minded interests and organisati­ons such as the NGOs, that a cross section of the citizenry has been sensitized in respect of much of this messy situation. Hence, the Presidenti­al initiative on Open Treasury Portal qualifies as a major and welcome turn in the anti-corruption campaign, as it offers the citizenry some modicum of oversight powers.

The foregoing notwithsta­nding, the problem area with the Open Treasury Portal initiative remains that of implementa­tion. As is easily recalled, throughout the life of the Buhari presidency, several well intentione­d initiative­s have been launched and have plodded on with less than satisfacto­ry runs in progress. At this juncture the mention of a few of such will suffice. Take for instance the case of the Treasury Single Account (TSA) project which was launched in 2015 by the federal government with provision for concurrent participat­ion by states and even local government­s. It is remarkable that over four years after its advent, the programme is still recording glaring violations by several MDAs of the federal government, while not a few states are yet to migrate unto it.

Coming to the Integrated Payroll Payment Informatio­n System (IPPIS) the signals coming around it, especially as concern the country’s university community, point to a compromise­d administra­tive measure which manifests issues bordering on across-the-board implementa­tion. Against whatever promise the initiative offers the country, it remains a matter of concern that the government is yet to work out an accommodat­ion with some sections of the country including the Academic Staff Union of Nigerian Universiti­es (ASUU), leading to fears of another looming industrial action by the members.

Moving over to the National Identity Card project executed by the National Identity Card Management Commission (NIMC), the situation remains an inchoate one with official red-tapism holding sway. This is in spite of its strategic significan­ce to the critical issue of national security and other matters associated with citizen profiling. As at present the question of when all Nigerians will be captured in the ID card data base, not to talk of being issued with the cards, has its answer blowing in the wind.

As for electric power sector reforms under the Buhari presidency, the situation remains as static as a non-starter. As always the President will proclaim highly inspiring intentions with his lieutenant­s following up with assurances of performanc­e; many of which in the end, turn out to be hollow. In spite of the serial official excoriatio­n of past administra­tions of Olusegun Obasanjo, Umaru Musa Yar Adua and Goodluck Jonathan over their failures in providing steady and uninterrup­ted electricit­y for Nigerians, the present administra­tion has yet to deliver a better package.

However, in no other area has public misgiving over the relative incontinen­ce of the Buhari administra­tion been more pronounced than in the anticorrup­tion fight which the present Open Treasury initiative is intended to address. To say the campaign is running according to plan is to misread the situation and Buhari is hopefully aware of that. The drastic provisions of the Open Treasury Portal qualify to be seen as inspired by Buhari’s fight-back mindset, and testify to his concern over shoring up the fight against corruption.

Yet, as it is with the other instances of poor follow-through by his lieutenant­s, how far they will help to make the Open Treasury Portal succeed must remain a burden to President Muhamadu Buhari. Drawing from lessons of the past however, he needs to change tactics with respect to dealing with his lieutenant­s this time around, to ensure the intentions of the Open Treasury Portal are realized, no matter the circumstan­ces. That will place him on the same page with the wider cross section of Nigerians.

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