THISDAY

Abuja CCTV Project: Court Orders Buhari Govt to Account for $460m Chinese Loan

- Udora Orizu in Abuja

A Federal High Court in Abuja has ordered the government of President Muhammadu Buhari to account for the spending of $460 million Chinese loan to fund the failed Abuja Closed-Circuit Television (CCTV) project.

The court also ordered the government to publish the total amount of money paid to Chinese and local companies and contractor­s and specific details of the names of the companies and contractor­s and status of the implementa­tion of the project.

Hon. Justice Emeka Nwite made the orders last week, while delivering judgment in a Freedom of Informatio­n suit number: FHC/ ABJ/CS/1447/2019 brought by Socio-Economic Rights and Accountabi­lity Project (SERAP).

The suit followed the disclosure in 2019, by the Minister of Finance, Zainab Ahmed, that Nigeria was servicing the loan, adding that she had, “no explanatio­ns on the status of the project.”

She reportedly said, “We are servicing the loan. I have no informatio­n on the status of the CCTV project.”

However, in his judgment, Justice Nwite agreed with SERAP that, “there is a reasonable cause of action against the government. Accounting for the spending of the $460 million Chinese loan is in the interest of the public. It will be inimical for the court to refuse SERAP’s applicatio­n for judicial review of the government’s action.”

Justice Nwite also said: “The Minister of Finance is in charge of the finance of the country and cannot by any stretch of imaginatio­n be oblivious of the amount of money paid to the contractor­s for the Abuja CCTV contract and the money meant for the constructi­on of the headquarte­rs of the Code of Conduct Bureau (CCB).”

He ordered the government to provide the details clarifying whether the sum of N1.5 billion paid for the failed contract meant to construct the headquarte­rs of the Code of Conduct Bureau (CCB) was part of another loan obtained from China.

The judgment, read in part: “SERAP’s core objectives are to promote human rights, transparen­cy and accountabi­lity and anti-corruption in Nigeria.

“I am of the humble view that there is a reasonable cause of action against the government [through the Minister of Finance] and I so hold that SERAP has made out a case to be entitled to the reliefs sought. The law is well settled that where a document or letter is sent by post, it is the law that same is taken or presumed to have been delivered.

“Following this principle of law and relying on exhibit OS2, SERAP’s Freedom of Informatio­n request sent to Ms Ahmed is deemed to have delivered. Therefore, the averment by the government (through her) that they were not served with the letter is hereby discounten­ance. I so hold.”

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