Daily Trust Sunday

Explainer: What you should know about contract awards in Nigeria

- By Faruk Shuaibu

The Federal Executive Council (FEC) is the highest body that approves/awards contracts in Nigeria and its stamp on a contract signals an authority for contractor­s to smile to the bank.

According to the Bureau of Public Procuremen­t (BPP) the council, which is headed by the President, the Vice President and ministers, usually gives the nod to contracts that exceed over N500 million, though, the amount varies on the kind of activity to be procured.

Threshold, is the parlance used to determine who has authority over contract approval with a certain financial bracket. In an approved revised thresholds for service-wide applicatio­n, the hierarchy of award goes as follows: FEC; Ministeria­l Tenders Board; Parastatal Tenders Board; Accounting Officer: Permanent Secretary and Accounting Officer Director General/CEO, with each having its threshold on what it can and not approve.

However, the listing of FEC as an approving body by BPP is contentiou­s. An activist and human rights lawyer, Femi Falan declared that the act of awarding contracts by FEC is unconstitu­tional as there is no law that gave it such responsibi­lity.

According to him, “the Federal Executive Council has no power to award contracts as it is done on a weekly basis, that is the duty exclusivel­y conferred on the public procuremen­t bureau to be supervised by the National Council on Public Procuremen­t (NCPP). But since 2007, successive regimes have failed to constitute the council, it is an [sic] elevenmemb­er council which has five government representa­tives and six profession­als who are part-time members of the body. For a regime that loudly proclaims to be fighting corruption, that body ought to be constitute­d instead of the weekly awards of contracts… there is no provision for the federal executive council to award contracts.”

What the laws on contract say

The Public Procuremen­t Act 2007 contains laws that regulate contract award/ approval in the country. The act came up as there was no clear law regulating the public procuremen­t process, leading to shoddy deals and corruption in the procuremen­t process. In

the award of contracts, there was no transparen­cy and accountabi­lity to the citizenry. With the secrecy, Olusola et al. stated that a report by the World Bank Country Procuremen­t Assessment Report (CPAR) disclosed that Nigeria was losing an average of $10 Billion (Ten Billion United states dollars) annually due to various abuses associated with public procuremen­t and contract awards.

2007 finally saw the assent on the bill that sought reform on procuremen­t process and it saw the establishm­ent of the Bureau of Public Procuremen­t. The preamble of the act says the act is “to establish the National Council on Public Procuremen­t and the Bureau of Public Procuremen­t as the regulatory authoritie­s responsibl­e for the monitoring and oversight of public procuremen­t, harmonizin­g the existing government policies and practices by regulating, setting standards and developing the legal framework and profession­al capacity for public procuremen­t in Nigeria.”

With the new regulation, it was hoped that the regulatory institutio­n will be given unfettered power to carry out its activities but as noted by Falana, NCPP which was supposed to oversee and monitor the bureau is however yet to be inaugurate­d 11 years after.

Part 1, section 2 of the act detailed the functions of the council, which is to “consider, approve and amend the monetary and prior review thresholds for the applicatio­n of the provisions of this Act by procuring entities ; consider and approve policies on public procuremen­t; approve the appointmen­t of the Directors of the Bureau; receive and consider, for approval, the audited accounts of the Bureau of Public Procuremen­t; and approve changes in the procuremen­t process to adapt to improvemen­ts in modern technology; give such other directives and perform such other functions as may be necessary to achieve the objectives of this Act.

The compositio­n of the council was fashioned out to ensure accountabi­lity as the onus was rest not rest on the government alone as members were drawn from the private sector for transparen­cy and sturdy perusal of contracts.

Who is responsibl­e for procuremen­t?

Section 17 of the act stated that “Subject to the monetary and prior review thresholds for procuremen­ts in this Act as may from time to time be determined by the Council, the following shall be the approving authority for the conduct of public procuremen­t; in the case of: (i) a government agency, parastatal, or corporatio­n, a Parastatal­s Tenders Board; and (ii) a ministry or extraminis­terial entity, the Ministeria­l Tender Board.

The parastatal tenders’ board is headed the Director General or CEO while the ministeria­l tenders’ board is headed by Permanent Secretarya­nd both double as the Accounting Officers to approve contracts in their threshold. However, their power is subject to the approval of the NCPP, through the BPP.

With the NCPP yet to be inaugurate­d, FEC usurped its power as to the void created by the federal government refusal to obey the law it passed into law with its consent.

Martins Oloja, a columnist with The Guardian wrote that when he confronted former President Jonathan’s spokespers­on, Dr. Rueben Abati, on the legality of FEC’s action, he retorted, “What would you want the FEC to do after inaugurati­on of the Council.” His remarks shows that the act of not inaugurati­ng the council is deliberate to give FEC an authority that is not bestowed on it by law.

In an opinion piece Ebuka Nwankwo opined that not

constituti­ng the NCPP, BPP has been turned into a rubber stamp institutio­n.

According to him, “this is a major flaw in the fight against corruption. The NCPP is best suited to make guidelines concerning projects that are supposed to be given special procuremen­t status.Also, by not inaugurati­ng the NCPP, the President exposes his ministers to corruption. Presently, ministers, in conjunctio­n with the unsupervis­ed BPP, formulate all kinds of policies governing procuremen­t. This shouldn’t be.”

He added that the noninaugur­ation of the NCPP would always be a major distractio­n to current ministers, as they are likely to spend a lot of effort attending to contracts. And this is on the premise that they are not there because of contracts.

What FEC does

In the revised thresholds for service-wide applicatio­n BPP says it issues “No Objection” to award/ FEC approves. It lists the contract as starting from N100 million and above for Goods; N500 million and above for Works; N100 million and above for non-consultant services and N100 million and above for consultant services.

Prof. Wahab Egbewole (Former Chairman, Nigerian Bar Associatio­n, Ilorin branch) said “after the obliterati­on of Tenders Board within the Federal Civil Service and with the advent of the Bureau for Public Procuremen­t, that leadership has been given to them and since the FEC is actually presided over by the President, I think they can award contracts and they should be able to award contracts because at the end of the day, the only way the government can run is through such a procedure.”

“Whether we like it or not, we must give them a level of trust that they actually represent us because we are the ones that gave our mandate to the President to appoint ministers to be members of FEC. Do not forget that these ministers have passed through Senate screening as it were, which on its own is also an indication that somehow legitimate power has been given to them.”

On if external forces reign on the federal government to eventually inaugurate the council, A lawyer, Giwa Victor said contracts approved by FEC would be rendered void and not illegal as the body has been institutio­nalised to carry out the task it is not asked to by law.

 ??  ?? BPP DG, Mamman Ahmadu
BPP DG, Mamman Ahmadu

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Nigeria