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Controversy Trail FG’s Approval Of N1bn For Committee’s Inauguration

Controversy Trail FG’s Approval Of N1bn For Committee’s Inauguration
  • PublishedFebruary 10, 2024

Controversies have trailed the use of N500 million, the first installment of a purported N1bn allegedly approved by President Bola Tinubu, for the inauguration of a 37-man Tripartite Committee on the New National Minimum Wage.

A leaked memo surfaced on Thursday, revealing that President Tinubu allegedly approved N500m out of a total of N1bn for the Secretary to the Government of the Federation, Senator George Akume, for the inauguration of the 37-man Tripartite Committee.

The development has been generating reactions with the Peoples Democratic Party, PDP, calling for a National Assembly investigation.

In a statement on Friday, the PDP National Publicity Secretary, Debo Ologunagba, described the approval as the height of financial recklessness.

“The PDP describes the said approval of the huge amount for a routine government activity like committee inauguration as the height of profligacy, imprudence, and financial recklessness which further validates PDP’s position that the Tinubu-led government is a cesspit of corruption where officials engage in brazen and reckless treasury-looting,” Ologunagba added.

He described the action as provocative and unpardonable, noting that at a time when the nation was suffering from acute food shortages, with millions of Nigerians starving due largely to inadequate investment in food production, insecurity, and harsh economic policies of the government, President Tinubu was allegedly spending a huge amount to inaugurate a committee.

The statement read in part, “It is even more revealing that the Secretary to the Government of the Federation allegedly requested for an audacious sum of N1.8bn for the event which was later scaled down to N1bn, out of which President Tinubu reportedly directed the SGF to “start with N500m first.”

But reacting to PDP’s claim, the Presidency called for a probe into the civil service structure to rid it of those it called “moles” loyal to the main opposition, the Peoples Democratic Party, who it blamed for leaking classified documents.

The Special Adviser to the President on Information and Strategy, Mr Bayo Onanuga, in an interview with newsmen on Friday, urged the Federal Government to weed its ranks of moles loyal to the opposition who are leaking classified documents.

Onanuga said, “What is worrisome is, how come a memo written by SGF to the President and bearing the President’s signature leaked out? It means that there are some fifth columnists-within the government.

“It’s not the first time a memo will leak. There was a memo leak when the President went to UNGA, about a request for money to pay for his hotel bills and you wonder where it is leaking from.

“There are so many moles around who are probably doing the bid of the opposition. They do not respect the civil service rule for handling official secrets. And it shows that the government should look inwards to probe how memos between officials are getting into the public space. Memos that are supposed to be secret are not supposed to be flying all over the place.”

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