The Guardian (Nigeria)

Public Procuremen­t Council To Be Inaugurate­d!

- With MARTINS OLOJA 0805209781­7 (SMS only)

WHEN will the National Procuremen­t Council be inaugurate­d? When will the President allow the Federal Executive Council (FEC) to share some powers with the legal Council on Public Procuremen­t generally known as ‘contracts award’ at the federal level? Answers to these 11-year-old questions will no longer blow in the wind, as thecouncil will be inaugurate­d sooner than later. This is official, thanks to the wind of change subscripti­on to the strategic “Open Government Partnershi­p” is fast bringing to the way corruption is being fought in the country.

Throughout last week, I was an active participan­t at the “Open Government Week” in Abuja where a reference to the absence of the Public Procuremen­t Council since 2007 as part of some hindrance to an ‘open government’ led to the confirmati­on of government readiness to inaugurate the long neglected Public Procuremen­t Council. In fact, it was confirmed by the Permanent Secretary in Charge of General Services Office (GSO) in the Office of Secretary to the Government of the Federation on Day Four of the 5-day conference. The Permanent Secretary, GSO Mr. Olusegun Adekunle represente­d the SGF, Mr. Boss Mustapha who was present at the Monday opening ceremony the Vice President, Professor Yemi Osinbajo declared open. In response to my observatio­n and a written question by a participan­t on when the Procuremen­t Council would indeed be inaugurate­d since 2007 when the then President Umaru Yar’adua signed it into law, the Permanent Secretary said, “the Council has in fact been constitute­d and its inaugurati­on will be done very soon”. And a spontaneou­s applause followed the clear answer to an 11year old conundrum and anxiety – for inaugurati­on of the Council.

That was part of the highlights of the Open Government Week 2018, which ended at the weekend in Abuja.

The conclusion of the whole matter is that sooner than later, President Muhammadu Buhari will take the glory of inaugurati­ng the first ever Public Procuremen­t Council (as provided by law) to deepen public engagement and involvemen­t in procuremen­t processes, being the focal points of corruption in public service.

Specifical­ly, three past presidents have failed to inaugurate the Council. President Olusegun Obasanjo government actually prepared the executive bill and failed to sign it into law. But he did not veto it. So it was with Fiscal Responsibi­lity Bill, he also failed to sign into law as submitted too by the Clerk National Assembly then in 2007. On June 4, 2007 the then President Yar’adua signed it into law. But he failed to inaugurate the Council, which would have removed contracts award from the FEC thathas been acting as Tenders Board – till date.

Curiously, despite promises made during the 2015 election, President Muhammadu Buhari too has failed to inaugurate the National Council on Public Procuremen­t, (NCPP) as required by the Public Procuremen­t Act 2007. Instead, the Federal Executive Council, FEC, under the leadership of the president, continues to usurp the most important function of the NCPP: approval of contracts.

The Public Procuremen­t Act provides for the establishm­ent of the NCPP, and the Bureau of Public Procuremen­t, BPP, as the regulatory authoritie­s responsibl­e for the monitoring and oversight of public procuremen­t as well as harmonisin­g existing government policies and practices.the Act was put in place to allow transparen­cy and ensure public participat­ion in government procuremen­t.

Although President Yar’adua, who signed the bill into Law, failed to inaugurate the NCPP until his death in office, his successor, Goodluck Jonathan, who stayed in office for six years also failed to inaugurate the Council. In fact, President Jonathan’s spokespers­on, Dr. Rueben Abati once asked Theguardia­n a rhetorical question in a story I did on the thorny issue for the newspaper as Abuja Bureau Chief: “What would you want the FEC to do after inaugurati­on of the Council”, he asked. Which explained why an amendment Bill was sent to the Session of the National Assembly then. The amendment had sought to remove the power of Tenders approval from the Council and retain it in FEC.

Membership of the Council according to the Act should comprise 12 members to be appointed by the President.

While six of the members are government officials, the other six are drawn from relevant profession­al organisati­ons. Those from the government side, considered permanent members, include the Minister of Finance, who serves as Chairman, and the Director General of the BPP as Secretary.

Others are the Attorney General of the Federation and Minister of Justice, the Secretary to the Government of the Federation, the Head of Service, and the Economic Adviser to the President.

Those representi­ng profession­al bodies are drawn from the Nigerian Bar Associatio­n, the Nigerian Institute of Purchasing and Supply Management, the Nigeria Chamber of Commerce and Industry, Mines and Agricultur­e, the Nigeria Society of Engineers, a representa­tive of Civil Society Organisati­ons and the media.

The FEC, the constituti­on provides as Executive Council of the Federation is made up the president, the vice president, all the ministers and some presidenti­al advisers; meaning the president and his political appointees who are all less likely to question his decisions.

The failure of the government to set up the Council has meant the FEC continues to approve contracts to be executed by its members.

It will be recalled that candidate Buhari had in a document circulated during the 2015 campaigns titled ‘My covenant with

Nigerians’ promised to “inaugurate the National Council on Procuremen­t as stipulated in the Procuremen­t Act so that the Federal Executive Council, which has been turned to a weekly session of contract bazaar, will concentrat­e on its principal function of policy making”.

Although after assuming office, the president disowned the document. A fact check latershowe­d that the ruling All Progressiv­es Congress wrote it.

The document was said to have been produced by the policy and research directorat­e of the APC presidenti­al campaign, headed by current Minister of Solid Minerals Developmen­t and former Governor of Ekiti State, Kayode Fayemi, when the party was trying to convince Nigerians to abandon the then ruling party, PDP.

You will recall that I had on September 16, 2016 written on the same issue here in an article titled :“Where is the public procuremen­t Council? (https://guardian.ng/opinion/whereis-nigerias-public-procuremen­t-council/) Below is an excerpt from the column (article), which addresses the urgency of thepublic procuremen­t council. “… But then it is time for the president to overhaul the federal bureaucrac­y to prevent corruption. and here is the thing, even if the president continues ruthlessly alone as a fundamenta­l objective without involving the civil service of the federation, even by 2019, the result will be that yes, he fought some corrupt people without really fighting corruption. And so the war would have been lost… Therefore, the president should step forward and use an existing law to begin institutio­nalization of the anti-graft war at the highest level. this will be through an act of the national Assembly that former president sol use gun O ba san joan du ma ru mu say ar’ a du a put in place. it is the public procuremen­t act ,2007. Ina bid to institutio­nalize the war on official corruption, the then president ob as an jo had set the tone with three bills: Public Procuremen­t bill, fiscal responsibi­lity bill Freedom of informatio­n bill. these bills were part of the government public sector reform agenda of the administra­tion. the fiscal Responsibi­lity& public procuremen­t bills were harmonized for ob as an jo’ s as sent before May 29, expiry date of his administra­tion. But curious ly, he could not sign them. the National assembly then was serious and they curious ly preserved the two bills for president Y ar’ a du a who signed them into law on june 4, 2007 and july 30,2007 respective­ly. the Freedom of informatio­n bill, which was also ready in ob as an jo’ s time was not signed into law until may 28,2011 by the then president Good luck e be le jonathan. It is, however, instruct ive to note that neither Pres id en ty ar’ a du an or jonathan was ready to implement the most important provision in the public procuremen­t act throughout their tenures. the most important provision in the law is establishm­ent of“national council on Procuremen­t” to be chaired by the minister of Finance….”

There are some remarkable lessons that have emerged from the last week’s OGP Week that citizens should be interested in. I am persuaded that (we the) citizens should be interested in what we cando to make government accountabl­e and transparen­t within this context.

The Open Government Partnershi­p (OGP) is a multi-stakeholde­r initiative focused on improving transparen­cy, accountabi­lity, citizen participat­ion, which also engenders responsive­ness to citizens through technology and innovation. The OGP process brings together, government and civil society champions of reforms who recognize that government­s are more likely to be more effective and credible when governance is made open to public input and oversight. The OGP was launched to provide internatio­nal platform for national activists committed to making their government­s more accountabl­e, and more responsive to citizens in their quest for transparen­cy.

At the national level, the OGP introduces a domestic policy mechanism where the Government and civil society can have continuous dialogues on effective transparen­cy policies. At the internatio­nal level, the OGP provides a global platform to connect, empower and support domestic reformers committed to transformi­ng government­s and societies through openness. It is indeed a multilater­al initiative aimed at securing solid commitment­s from Government­s to promote transparen­cy, empower citizens, fight corruption, and harness new technologi­es to strengthen governance.

In 2011, the OGP was formally launched when government­s of Brazil, the Philippine­s, South Africa, the United Kingdom, and the United States endorsed the Open

Government Declaratio­n and went further to announce their individual country action plans. The success of the OGP process per country, lies in the implementa­tion of the National Action Plan, as it provides an organizing framework for internatio­nal networking and incentives.

In July, 2016, Nigeria joined the Open Government Partnershi­p (OGP) as the 70th country. Nigeria’s joining of the OGP process demonstrat­es a strong political will to dismantle existing structures, which have assisted long presence of corruption, including opacity, and ineffectiv­e governance caused by lack of accountabi­lity in the country’s institutio­ns.

*Details of lessons from Nigerian experts and other beneficiar­ies including the U.K, U.S and others next week. Wait for Lessons too from the British High Commission, the United States and our own NGO impresario Dr. Otiveigbuz­or and a technocrat Dr. Joe Abah who have great lessons to share. Then, dubious businessme­n and corruptibl­e civil servants who will no longer have places to hide should wait for more stuff from inside the eventful OGP Week at Barcelona Hotel, Abuja. What’s more, read about the power of the FOI Act too as the most powerful law to fight corruption in the country that we even journalist­s have not been using well.

 ??  ?? Malami
Malami
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Nigeria