Senator Babafemi Ojudu, who represents Ekiti Central zone, may have uncovered a serious fraud in this year's budget.
At
Tuesday's sitting of the Senate, Mr. Ojudu explained to his colleagues
that he compared the 2014 budget with those of 2012 and 2013 only to
discover that there was no marked difference between the 2014 budget and
the two previous budgets.
He accused the Budget Office of the
Federal Ministry of Finance of copying the two previous budgets word for
word without making any alteration. He said there was no creativity in
the budgeting process, adding that the process goes on year in year out
without any thinking going into it.
Recalling the times when
Nigeria used to have meaningful development plans, Senator Ojudu stated
that the country’s budget was no longer targeted at solving the problems
of Nigeria, but merely serves as a ruse to line the pockets of
government officials.
According to him, Nigeria stopped having
development plans in 1986. Since then, he argued, the country’s budget
has emphasized recurrent expenditures which are easy to release and
manipulate for personal purposes by civil servants.
He noted that,
in the 2014 budget, as in the two previous budgets, the recurrent
allocation for computer software acquisition, local and foreign travels,
welfare package, as well as local and foreign training ran into
billions.
Mr. Ojudu cited the example of the budgetary allocation
for computer software, which is at N10 billion. He added that all
ministries, departments and agencies of the Federal Government have
allocations for computer software acquisition to the tune of at least
N10 million, with the highest allocation of N580 million for the Office
of the Secretary to the Government of the Federation. The allocations,
he indicated, are no different from those of 2012 and 2013.
Senator
Ojudu also pointed to the allocation for Research and Development which
cuts across all ministries, departments and agencies, including those
with no research departments. The full research and development
allocation stand at N45 billion.
“These are not universities
or research agencies. What are they researching? It is this wasteful
budgeting that has shot up the recurrent expenditure to 75%. It is
incumbent on us as lawmakers, if we are truly for the people, to remove
all avenues of waste from this year's budget. If we fail to do so, we
would not have justified the reason for [their] electing us into the
Senate,” Mr. Ojudu argued.
It would be recalled that the 2014 budget raised a lot of controversies both in the political circles and among Nigerians.
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READ MORE: http://news.naij.com/58485.html
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