THISDAY

House Orders Adeosun, Emefiele to Halt Alleged Diversion of $35m GEM Funds

- James Emejo in Abuja

The House of Representa­tives yesterday directed the Minister of Finance, Mrs. Kemi Adeosun; the Governor of the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN), Mr. Godwin Emefiele; the Growth and Employment (GEM) Project Team and the World Bank to halt the planned movement of $35 million out of the GEM project account and immediatel­y discontinu­e any process on the considerat­ion or approval of the new restructur­ing proposal for the creation of what it termed a “fraudulent SME Investment Fund”.

The House further directed that the Ministers of Finance, Industry, Trade and Investment, the GEM project coordinato­r and the World Bank to maintain the status quo as was conceptual­ised and approved by the National Assembly.

It also mandated a joint committee of the relevant committees of the House to investigat­e the circumstan­ces surroundin­g the implementa­tion of the project, the number of beneficiar­ies so far under the project, extent of the involvemen­t of consultant­s, inflow received and disburseme­nts made since commenceme­nt, including all other related issues and report back to the House within four weeks for further legislativ­e action.

The resolution of the lower chamber followed a motion sponsored by Hon. Mark Terseer Gbillah (APC, Benue) on the need to urgently investigat­e the infraction­s and halt the planned diversion of funds under the World Bank-funded Growth and Employment (GEM) project.

In the lead debate, Gbillah said there was a corruption scandal waiting to happen if the House failed to act fast, as funds were about to be appropriat­ed without recourse to the parliament.

He noted that the implementa­tion of the GEM project was predicated on funding from the World Bank and the UK Department for Internatio­nal Developmen­t (DFID) with the DFID providing a grant of £90 million (strictly managed by DFID) and the World Bank providing a concession­ary loan of $160 million domiciled in the project account with the CBN under the oversight of the Minister of Finance and with a project steering committee chaired by the Minister of Industry, Trade and Investment, who is responsibl­e for the management of the project implementa­tion.

Gbillah argued that the federal government’s external borrowing from the World Bank was approved by the National Assembly in 2013 with the proviso that the project is run from June 2013 to September 2018, based on the indicated project deliverabl­es.

He expressed concern over what he described as a clear violation of the initially approved scope and without an approval for virement by the National Assembly or recourse to the Project Steering Committee.

The lawmaker said the GEM Project Coordinato­r had gone ahead to advertise for a Fund Manager and concluded plans with the World Bank (whose representa­tive were expected to have arrived in Nigeria on November 1, 2017) and the Ministry of Finance who have either been misled or are in collusion with the GEM Project team to proceed with the considerat­ion and possible approval of the restructur­ing plan on Friday 3rd November, 2017 in total disregard to due process.

He said the Department of State Security had even advised the Minister of Finance after investigat­ing petitions against the GEM Project Coordinato­r to halt any disburseme­nt of funds under this questionab­le restructur­ing plan where the country enriches a few individual­s to the detriment of millions of Nigerians who would have benefited from the initial scope of the project.

Gbillah raised the alarm that only three months into his appointmen­t and barely one year to the expected end of the project with only 800 beneficiar­ies out of the 4,000 initially proposed, the new GEM Project Coordinato­r, alleged to be one of the two employees of African Capital Alliance a Private Equity firm owned by the current Minister of Industry, Trade and Investment, Mr. Okechukwu Enalemah, was engaged by the minister on the project and paid up to N4.9 million a month instead of a capable civil servant in the Ministry.

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