THISDAY

Presidency: Budget Not Delayed for Buhari’s Assent

Bill will be signed this week, says National Planning Ministry

- Omololu Ogunmade in Abuja

The presidency has described as untrue speculatio­ns making the rounds that the delay in the 2017 budget’s signing was a deliberate ploy to keep the budget unsigned till President Muhammadu Buhari returns from his trip to the United Kingdom where he is undergoing medical treatment for an undisclose­d ailment.

A source in the presidency who did not want to be named, told THISDAY that the speculatio­n was misplaced, pointing out that Buhari transmitte­d full presidenti­al powers to acting President Yemi Osinbajo on May 7 before leaving the country.

According to him, deliberate­ly holding the nation down by delaying assent to the budget would be at variance with the president’s intention to hand over power to his deputy, explaining further that Buhari does not want the nation to be held to ransom in anyway and hence his decision to transfer powers without reservatio­n to Osinbajo.

He expressed confidence that the budget would be signed soon.

His statement was corroborat­ed by a senior official in the Ministry of Budget of National Planning at the weekend, who assured THISDAY that the budget will be signed this week.

“The budget will be signed soon. The president does not want the country’s affairs delayed so he transferre­d power to the vice-president. So who is trying to delay the country against the wishes of the president? It is not true,” the source in the presidency stated.

Speculatio­n was rife in Abuja last week that the silence in the presidency on the budget’s signing since its transmissi­on by the National Assembly on May 19 was a deliberate ploy to ensure that Osinbajo does not assent to the Appropriat­ion Bill.

Concern over the delay in the budget’s assent has also mounted in view of the 30-day constituti­onal requiremen­t for the assent of a bill after its transmissi­on by the National Assembly to the executive. The duration will expire on June 18.

The National Assembly had upon the passage of 2017 budget on May 11, raised the N7.2 trillion Appropriat­ion Bill presented by Buhari last year to N7.4 trillion, with the appropriat­ion document predicatin­g sources of funding on oil revenue pegged at N1.985 trillion, non-oil revenue at N1.73 trillion, external and domestic borrowing, and other federal government independen­t revenue sources.

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