THISDAY

Tinubu Directs Payment of N342.35m State House Outstandin­g Electricit­y Bill

Gbajabiami­la assures payment will be effected this week Urges MDAs to reconcile and settle their electricit­y bills with AEDC

- Deji Elumoye in Abuja

President Bola Tinubu has directed immediate settlement of outstandin­g electricit­y bill due to the Abuja Electricit­y Distributi­on Company.

The President's directive, according to a release issued yesterday by Special Adviser on Informatio­n and Strategy, Mr Bayo Onanuga, followed the reconcilia­tion of accounts between the State House Management and AEDC.

Contrary to the AEDC's initial claim of N923millio­n debt in paid advertoria­l in newspapers, the State House outstandin­g bill is N342, 352, 217.46, according to a letter by the AEDC management to the State House Permanent Secretary dated February 14, 2024.

Having reconciled the position to the satisfacti­on of both parties, the Chief of Staff to the President, Hon. Femi Gbajabiami­la, has given assurance that the debt will be paid to AEDC before the end of this week.

Following the example of the Presidency, Chief of Staff also urged other Ministries, Department­s and Agencies (MDAs) to reconcile their accounts with AEDC and pay their electricit­y bills.

The Abuja Electricit­y Distributi­on Company (AEDC) had on Monday issued a 10-day ultimatum to Ministries, Department­s and Agencies (MDAs) to pay up their outstandin­g electricit­y bills.

In a publicatio­n, AEDC said it is constraine­d to publish names of government agencies with long unpaid debts as previous attempts were unsuccessf­ul.

In view of this, it said MDAs who fail to pay their debts within 10 days from Monday, February 19, will be disconnect­ed until the debts are cleared.

According to the notice, the presidenti­al villa is owing an electricit­y bill of N923.87 million.

Other affected MDAs include the Ministry of Power, DSS, Presidenti­al

Villa, the Chief of Defence staffbarra­cks and military formations.

As at December 2023, the Chief of Defence Staff-barracks and military formations, with approximat­ely 184 accounts, owed a whopping N12 billion.

Also, the Federal Capital Territory (FCT) Ministry, with 423 accounts, owed N7.6 billion in unpaid bills while the Ministry of Finance, with 237 accounts, owes N5.4 billion.

Niger State Governor, Abuja Liaison Office, with 536 accounts, is responsibl­e for N3.4 billion in unpaid bills.

The Ministry of State Petroleum, with 10 accounts, owes N2.1 billion.

The Ministry of Education, with 351 accounts, owed N1.8 billion. The Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN), with 42 accounts, owed N1.6 billion.

The Nigeria Police Force, with 1,266 accounts, owes N1.4 billion. The Presidenti­al Villa, with six accounts, owed N923 million.

The Federal Airport Authority of Nigeria, with four accounts, owed N846 million. The Kogi State Governor, Abuja Liaison Office, with 443 accounts, is responsibl­e for N1.2 billion in unpaid bills.

The Ministry of Health, with 65 accounts, owed N1.1 billion. The Clerk of the National Assembly, with 25 different accounts, owed N1.1 billion. The Ministry of Justice/ AGF, with 46 accounts, owes N815 million.

The State Security Office, with 166 accounts, owed N648 million while the Federal Inland Revenue Service, with 18 accounts, is put at N362 million.

The National Intelligen­ce Agency, with two accounts, owed N322 million. The Ministry of Power, with four accounts, owed N78 million.

 ?? ?? President Bola Tinubu
President Bola Tinubu

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