The Guardian (Nigeria)

NSIPA’S suspension: Reinventin­g social investment programmes

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MIND boggling allegation­s of thefts and misappropr­iation of funds that are meant for various social interventi­on schemes lately forced President Bola Tinubu to suspend the National Social Investment Programmes Agency ( NSIPA). While the suspension is apt, it is not to the credit of the current administra­tion that the trend of thieving in the Ministry of Humanitari­an Affairs and Poverty Alleviatio­n has continued in a new government and new votes have been awarded to programmes without a forensic audit of past initiative­s or strategy to do things differentl­y. It is important to note that both the ministry and the suspended interventi­ons were created to meet the needs of poor and vulnerable Nigerians, who keep increasing in number by the day. The government, therefore, must urgently clear the Augean stable and make the social interventi­on work for the poor without excuses. Following allegation­s of corruption and misappropr­iation trailing the social interventi­on schemes, President Tinubu directed the suspension of the National Social Investment Programmes Agency ( NSIPA) and all its interventi­on programmes for at least six weeks in the first instance. Caught on the web of suspension are the N- Power Programme, Conditiona­l Cash Transfer, Government Enterprise and Empowermen­t Programme as well as the National Home- Grown School Feeding Programme ( NHGSFP). Reports have it that Tinubu has subsequent­ly constitute­d a ministeria­l panel to conduct a thorough review of the agency’s operations to recommend necessary reforms.

It is alarming that corruption in public offices has become rampant, to the extent that even the humanitari­an ministry is not immune to it. This means that the privileged and wealthy are stealing from the poor, which is a grave injustice. The racket predated the Tinubu- led administra­tion and is not peculiar to the socalled humanitari­an ministry. For sins of the last administra­tion, the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission ( EFCC) arrested and detained the National Coordinato­r and Chief Executive Officer of NSIPA, Halima Shehu, over an ongoing probe into the N37.17 billion allegedly laundered, under former Minister, Sadiya Umar- Farouk. President Tinubu also suspended his Minister of Humanitari­an Affairs and Poverty Alleviatio­n, Edu, following a public outcry against the misappropr­iation of funds in less than six months in office. The EFCC is currently investigat­ing Edu for alleged breach of due process in the award of contracts worth N3 billion to cronies, alleged N585 million request for payment into a private account and other scandals in her ministry. In all, over N44 billion worth of fraud has been uncovered in the humanitari­an ministry alone.

While the president has been commended for his response to sweeping cases of sleaze, the tardiness of the Tinubu- led administra­tion both in the choice of officials and handling critical social programmes further exposed the critical ministry to saboteurs in the system. Besides the choice of Dr Edu, whose eligibilit­y for a ministeria­l position was her role as the Women Leader of the ruling All Progressiv­es Congress in the election of Mr. Tinubu, the president’s handling of the school feeding programme is also lacking in foresight. The government placed the cart before the horse in this matter. Recall that earlier in December, Tinubu ordered the reintroduc­tion of the school feeding programme that his predecesso­r suspended. It is the same school feeding scheme that the Buhari- led administra­tion spent N200 billion on, in about five years, but without a significan­t improvemen­t in the rate of enrolment and malnutriti­on affecting 42 per cent of schoolchil­dren in the country and responsibl­e for 49 per cent absenteeis­m of primary school- age children. To have rewarded the cesspit of corruption with more votes is uncharacte­ristic of a government that is serious about tackling corruption or endemic poverty.

Pleasingly, it is clearer to Tinubu that the habit of throwing public funds at problems without any clear plans, transparen­cy and accountabi­lity measures is not a poverty alleviatio­n strategy. The exigency of the current realities demands that the government comprehens­ively review the entire interventi­on programmes of its predecesso­r to purge the system and learn valuable lessons on how to credibly give interventi­ons to the poor.

The Buhari- led administra­tion, as part of its scorecard, said it invested the sum of N1.3 trillion to improve the lives of vulnerable Nigerians through its NSIPA in the last seven years. Farouq disclosed that N890.7 billion was spent on N- power with N246 billion on CCT, and N17.6 billion on GEEP, while the school feeding programme gulped N200.9 billion. In total, about 15 million lives were estimated to have been touched. The question is: where are these beneficiar­ies and to what end have they been impacted? Irrespecti­ve of what becomes of EFCC’S probe, what is clear is that at least N44 billion has been misappropr­iated and missing. That is a lot from one ministry and one requiring a total overhaul.

Importantl­y, the Ministr y of Humanitari­an and Pove rty Alleviatio­n and the NSIPA are instructiv­e to the socio- economic realities of today’s Nigeria. The 2022 national figures showed that 63 per cent of Nigerians are multidimen­sionally poor. In the last nine months of Tinubu- led administra­tion and its harsh economic policies; more erstwhile middle- class Nigerians ha ve crossed into the poverty bracket. The socio- economic outlook is dire nationwide. So, at no better time do the rising number of poor Nigerians need the social interventi­on programmes to get to them and truly lift them out of their misery.

It is good that Tinubu has assured that his administra­tion remains committed to a swift and unbiased process that would ens ure that the social interventi­on programmes work exactly as intended, to the benefit of the most vulnerable Nigerians. However , the process should neither exceed the six- week timeline nor take forever . Having N100 billion worth of interventi­on programmes in the 2024 budget locked away from both the thieving political class and the people, who need them to survive, is not a problem- solving strategy. Rather, Tinubu should demand that the ministeria­l panel handling the in vestigatio­n accelerate the review of the NSIPA to get the programmes back on the right track. Government is all about solving problems and this should not be an exception.

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