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Maiyegun General

Thursday, 13 August 2015

NDDC can’t account for N183.7b – Auditor General



Mr. Samuel Ukura

The Auditor-General of the Federation, Samuel Ukura, said N183.7 billion could not be accounted for by auditors who conducted a special check on the Niger Delta Development Commission from 2008 to 2012.

Ukura said this on Wednesday in Abuja after submitting three special reports to the National Assembly.

Two of the reports were on the environmental audit on the drying up of Lake Chad, while the third was on Special Periodic Checks on the activities and programmes of the Niger Delta Development Commission.

Giving a highlight of the report, Ukura said a lot of discrepancies were noticed in the NDDC accounts, adding that about N183.7 billion was expected to be refunded to the federation.

Ukura said a breakdown of the refund included the N70.4 billion unaccounted for from the mobilisation of various contractors that never reported to site.

It also includes N5.8 billion paid to contractors for projects not executed or abandoned, N90.5 billion was spent on extra budgetary expenditure without approval by legal authorities, while un-deducted taxes from contractors are N1.2 billion.

About N10.07 billion should be refunded as tax deductions made without evidence of remittance to the Federal Revenue Inland Services, N3.1 billion was transferred to unauthorised accounts and unaccountable staff advances were N1.7 billion.

Ukura said: “It is our belief that all the money spent by government, if it was properly spent in the region, Niger-Delta would be a better place.”

Ukura said N785 million out of N1.1 billion contracts for the supply of furniture to various schools in Delta State was also unaccounted for.

He said the additional details of their findings were contained in the report he submitted to the Clerk of the National Assembly, Salisu Maikasuwa.

On the drying up of the Lake Chad report, Ukura said the reclamation of the lake would revive economic activities of the North East and end insurgency in the region.

He said: “The key message is that Lake Chad is drying up very fast from 25,000 sq km in 1960 to just 1,500 sq km as at present.

“We must save Lake Chad from extinction.

“Right now, the part of the lake with water is in Cameroon and Chad.

“Hence farmers, cattle breeders in the Nigerian side are suffering and economic activities in the region have dwindled significantly.

“The drying up has brought about so many problems like the clashes between herdsmen and farmers and Boko Haram as well.

“This is because the youth are idle and like the saying, an idle mind is the devil’s workshop.”

Ukura said when the committee members on public account at the National Assembly were constituted, his office would organise a workshop to enlighten them on the subject matter.

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