Daily Trust Sunday

Explainer: How citizens can hold governors accountabl­e through websites

- By Philip Shimnom Clement This Fact Check is produced in partnershi­p with the Centre for Democracy and Developmen­t (CDD) This Explainer is produced in partnershi­p with the Centre for Democracy and Developmen­t (CDD)

Websites of any institutio­n whether public or private serves as the gateway that provides informatio­n for researcher­s, investors, tourists or any individual who seeks knowledge on its activities.

In Nigeria, the inability of the country to develop a vibrant economy and infrastruc­ture needed for growth and developmen­t of citizens has always been blamed on the federal government, absolving states and local government­s who receive huge allocation­s from the Federal Accounts Allocation Committee (FAAC) every month.

Daily Trust had earlier reported that 36 states, including the FCT and 774 local government­s, received a total of N8.8 trillion as allocation from the Federal Accounts Allocation Committee (FAAC) from 2020 to 2021, according to a report by the Nigeria Extractive Industries Transparen­cy Initiative (NEITI).

Amidst those huge allocation­s, National Bureau of Statistics had, in its National Multidimen­sional Poverty Index report, disclosed that 133 million Nigerians are multidimen­sionally poor.

The NBS said 63 per cent of Nigerians were poor due to a lack of access to health, education, living standards, employment and security.

Why websites are important in holding sub-nationals accountabl­e

A simple Wikipedia search defines website as a collection of web pages and related content that is identified by a common domain name and published on at least one web server.

Usually, websites are dedicated to a particular topic or purpose, such as news, education, commerce, entertainm­ent or social networking, posting interestin­g content and selling contextual advertisin­g either through direct sales or through an advertisin­g network.

Also, other websites are for e-commerce purposes as products or services are purchased directly through the website while some websites require user registrati­on or subscripti­on to access the content. Examples of subscripti­on websites include many business sites, news websites, academic journal websites, gaming websites, file-sharing websites, message boards, Webbased email, social networking websites, websites providing realtime stock market data, as well as sites providing various other services.

All over the world, principles of democracy revolve around transparen­cy, accountabi­lity and greater involvemen­t of the citizens in government programmes and activities for sustainabl­e developmen­t. This can only be achieved if the people have access to government informatio­n and this is why agitations for freedom of informatio­n continue to heighten.

Unlike in the past where state government­s’ website used to be dormant with little or no informatio­n, recent advocacy by the media and Civil Society Organizati­ons (CSOs) has improved the trend as many states now have interactiv­e websites where citizens can engage and ask pertinent questions on various issues.

Checks by Daily Trust on websites of 36 states of the 36 states of the federation and the Federal Capital Territory (FCT) show that majority of the websites are active with vital informatio­n on ongoing projects, investment­s opportunit­ies for prospectiv­e investors as well as the vision of the chief executives of the states for its citizens.

In fact, some states like Imo and Abia have already uploaded the 2024 budget (Appropriat­ion Law) on their websites. These few items among many others can serve as a leader for citizens to hold government at the sub-nationals accountabl­e.

Consequent­ly, through budgets, citizens can hold state government­s accountabl­e by scrutinizi­ng the budgets and asking questions upon discovery of suspicious projects, ambiguity or duplicatio­ns.

It is common practice in Nigeria where government officials inflate prices in budgets, or repeat items in order to siphon the funds into private use, as such, by visiting websites of their various states, citizens can engage the government and raise questions on such at any given time or when the opportunit­y arise.

Similarly, many websites of states are filled with pictures of projects both ongoing and completed as well as the ones fully functional. From such informatio­n, citizens can query the facts of those that are truly functional and those that are not.

The relevance of such informatio­n is that it makes it easy for citizens on ground to tell the government officials about projects in their various localities as uploaded on the websites whether they are working and achieving their purposes for the people or not.

Also, the investment guide of states can serve as a veritable informatio­n for citizens to access.

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