THISDAY

SERAP Seeks Spending Details on COVID-19 Relief Funds

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Socio-Economic Rights and Accountabi­lity Project (SERAP) has asked the federal government and the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) to provide spending details of public funds and private sector donations to provide socio-economic benefits to the country’s poorest and most vulnerable people, including details of beneficiar­ies of any cash payments, cash transfers, food distributi­on and other benefits during the lockdown in Abuja, Lagos and Ogun states because of COVID-19.

SERAP also asked the federal government and CBN to disclose informatio­n on the details of the implementa­tion of the school feeding programme during the lockdown and closure of schools in several states where the programme is being implemente­d, including the number of children that have so far benefited from the programme and the names of the communitie­s, since the lockdown and closure of schools, as well as the number of cooks, engaged.

In two Freedom of Informatio­n (FoI) requests sent to Minister of Humanitari­an Affairs, Disasters Management and Social Developmen­t, Ms Sadia Umar-Farouk,and the CBN Governor, Mr. Godwin Emefiele, SERAP said: “We are seriously concerned that millions of the country’s poorest and most vulnerable people have not benefited from the announced palliative­s, donations, reported cash payments, cash transfers and other benefits.”

It noted that providing socioecono­mic benefits to the country’s poorest especially at this time of COVID-19 crisis is a matter of human rights, not charity.

The organisati­on added that it is implicit in Nigerians’ right to freely use their natural wealth and resources, which ought to be spent for the public good and ensuring that relief funds and donations are used to provide much-needed benefits to beneficiar­ies is critical to keeping people alive, and addressing vulnerabil­ities and inequaliti­es in the country.

In the FoI requests dated April 4, 2020 and signed by its Deputy Director, Kolawole Oluwadare, the organisati­on said: “Providing the informatio­n would help to address the concerns by many Nigerians regarding allegation­s of corruption and politicisa­tion in the distributi­on of benefits, improve public trust, and enhance the integrity of the entire processes and modes of distributi­on of reliefs/benefits to these Nigerians.”

The FoI requests read, in part: “Rather than making physical cash payments to the country’s poorest and most vulnerable people, we urge you to begin electronic cash transfers to all beneficiar­ies through individual­s’ Bank Verificati­on Numbers (BVNs), already available through the banks. This would be cost-effective at this time of crisis, provide immediate and significan­t benefits, as well as give individual­s and families the freedom to spend the money on goods and services that best meet their particular needs.

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