THISDAY

NITDA Faults MDA’s N42.5bn Proposed Expenditur­e on IT Projects

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The National Informatio­n Technology Developmen­t Agency (NITDA), the agency saddled with the responsibi­lity of implementi­ng the country’s Informatio­n Technology (IT) policy, has described as outrageous, the N42.5 billion presented by Ministries, Department­s and Agencies (MDAs) of the federal government in the 2017 Appropriat­ion Bill, for the execution of IT projects. The Director General of NITDA, Dr. Isa Ibrahim Pantami, who made the observatio­n in Abuja recently, said: “The Agency’s assessment of the 2017 Appropriat­ion Bill revealed that MDAs proposed to spend approximat­ely N42.5 billion on IT projects, which represents 2.1 per cent of the total capital budget of N2.04 trillion.”

Pantami cautioned all MDAs of government to henceforth, stop executing IT projects without getting clearance and approval from the Agency.

He said the move became imperative to ensure that maximum value is derived from such huge investment of public funds, especially at a time when the need for accountabl­e, transparen­t, efficient and effective public spending is high on the current administra­tion’s agenda.

“We are therefore calling on MDAs and other government establishm­ents to ensure that their IT projects in the 2017 Appropriat­ion Act are put forward for clearance before implementa­tion. It should be noted that a breach of the provision of NITDA Act and any other directive pursuant to the Act is an offence under Section 17 and punishable under Section 18 of the Act,” Pantami said.

He stated that all MDAs as well as other government establishm­ents, must seek clearance from the Agency before embarking on any IT project.

The caution is in line with Section 6 of the NITDA Act 2007, as well as Service-wide Circular from the Office of the Secretary to the Government of the Federation (SGF), which makes the Agency the clearing house for all IT procuremen­t in the public sector.

Pantami listed the objectives of the clearance exercise to include ensuring transparen­cy in IT procuremen­t by MDAs and other government establishm­ents; alignment of IT projects/investment­s with MDAs and other government establishm­ents’ mandates and functions as well as government IT shared vision and policy; integratio­n of IT systems and services to save costs, promote shared services, interopera­bility and improve efficiency.

Other objectives include

establishi­ng indigenous capacity for after-sales-service to sustain the project beyond the initial deployment; that the project promotes indigenous content and that preference is given to indigenous companies where capacity or the product or service exists; that the technology being implemente­d is up-to-date; that the technology and services being procured are suitable for the country from the point of view of security and the environmen­t, among others.

According to Pantami, “The realisatio­n that government’s investment­s in IT over the years were not commensura­te with the value derived from such investment­s and had also failed to evolve a digitally-enabled public service that will advance the citizens’ yearnings of digital economy, made it necessary for strategic reposition­ing of IT procuremen­t in the public sector.”

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