BREAKING

BudgIT identifies 460 duplicated projects totalling N378bn and other corruption loopholes in the #2022budget.

BudgIT also raises alarm on the N67.8m allocated to the Ministry of Environment to “build gun armouries” in 4 states, a project outside its mandate.

Thread!
Our preliminary analysis of the 21,108 capital projects in the 2022 approved budget revealed 460 duplicated projects amounting to N378.9billion. Recall that BudgIT observed 316 duplicated projects in the 2021 FG Budget approved by @nassnigeria. @ICPC_PE verified 257 duplications,
while the Budget Office confirmed the existence of only 185 duplicated projects worth N20.13bn, after which it informed the public that funds were not released for the projects in 2021.
Furthermore, BudgIT notes that the occurrence of inflated projects amounting to billions of naira directly linked to the State House and the Presidency is a cause for concern.
Examples include the N20.8bn requested by the Presidency to construct a 14-bed presidential wing at the existing State House Medical Centre, N28.72m requested for the purchase of 2units of 10KG washing machine & 6units of LG TVs in the State House Lagos Liaison Office, etc
Speaking of projects approved under MDAs that do not have the mandate to execute them, The National Agency for Great Green Wall which was set up to prevent land degradation and desertification afflicting 11 states in northern Nigeria,
and to boost food security in the country has N1.3bn of its CAPEX dedicated to purchasing Motorcycles, Street lights & other projects outside its mandate. This is disingenuous especially as communities in these states are being ravaged by bandits who often arrive in motorcycles.
Likewise, four (4) recreational parks under the Ministry of Environment, have a total allocation of N67.8million to construct “Gun Armouries” in Cross Rivers, Kaduna, Borno & Yobe States, even though the Ministry of Environment is not a security agency.
Why is the ministry of environment stashing guns in recreational parks in these states in an election campaign year and at a time when the country is facing unrest in nearly all of the 36 states?
Nigeria is currently a battling a double-digit inflation, one of the worst 20 out of 196 countries in the world marked by soaring prices.
Unfortunately, RBDA under the Ministry of Water Resources which was set up to facilitate mgt of water resources for agriculture that would end the tide of food supply fluctuations has instead morphed into an agency that constructs roads and supplies street lights.
N6.3billion was allocated to this Ministry to supply street lights in 73 communities across the 36 states, while N14.8bn was allocated to construct 219 roads across 36 states; whereas most of these roads are the responsibilities of State and LGAs, not the FG.
BudgIT is currently finalizing its detailed analysis of the approved FG #2022budget which would be presented to all stakeholders in the executive and legislative arm of government as well as the citizens.
In the meantime, we call on the government to prioritise projects that are of utmost benefit and exercise discipline in implementing duplicated and poorly costed projects in the 2022 budget.
We also enjoin all Nigerians, reformers, CSOs, the private sector and international community to join the call for an urgent redress of these issues to ensure public funds work for all Nigerians and not for a privileged few politicians.

#AskQuestions #GetInvolved #2022Budget
Full Press Statement: yourbudgit.com/budgit-identif…

• • •

Missing some Tweet in this thread? You can try to force a refresh
 

Keep Current with BudgIT Nigeria

BudgIT Nigeria Profile picture

Stay in touch and get notified when new unrolls are available from this author!

Read all threads

This Thread may be Removed Anytime!

PDF

Twitter may remove this content at anytime! Save it as PDF for later use!

Try unrolling a thread yourself!

how to unroll video
  1. Follow @ThreadReaderApp to mention us!

  2. From a Twitter thread mention us with a keyword "unroll"
@threadreaderapp unroll

Practice here first or read more on our help page!

More from @BudgITng

Nov 29, 2021
FG missed its revenue target for the 6th time after earning N2.31tn from the projected sum of N3.31tn for H1 2021.

Of this amount, debt servicing wiped off N2.O2tn, leaving ONLY N290bn for non-debt recurrent expenses.

How did FG finance its salaries, overheads & CAPEX?

Thread!
The 2021 budget was anchored on an oil revenue projection of N1.01tn as of Jun 2021; however, FG’s share of actual H1 oil revenue stood at N538bn, indicating a 53% performance.

For non-oil revenue, the actual inflow stood at N778bn, slightly above the projection of N744bn.
A quick analysis of other revenue sources reveals that FG recorded ZERO revenue from stamp duties and (Domestic recoveries+Assets+Fines), despite the projections of N250bn and N16.34bn in each category, respectively.
Read 7 tweets
Oct 25, 2021
Last week, we engaged state and non-state actors of the Abuja Municipal Area Council (@AmacLg) in a 1-day capacity building workshop on how to leverage participatory budgeting for implementing OGP’s local action plans effectively.

This project was supported by @NEDemocracy
The workshop, which was aimed at strengthening @OpenAllianceNG in the OGP process, focused on 4 main areas including, how to reach the underserved communities through participatory budgeting and the role of legislators in participatory budgeting.
In his remark, @AdamuCandido noted that his administration is an all-inclusive govt which informed the council’s drive towards signing up for OGP in 2020, making it the only LG in Nigeria to be a member of OGP.
Read 4 tweets
Oct 25, 2021
We have combed the 2168-page 2022 budget document, & we found ZERO breakdown of the N198billion oil company payments to NDDC.

Our analysis also reveals critical issues of unrealistic revenue targets, soaring year-on-year debt burden and weak accountability structure.

THREAD!
The omission of NDDC’s entire capital budget allocation from the proposed 2022 budget and public scrutiny is a source of concern, especially given the scale of alleged corruption and diversion of public funds that has afflicted this federal agency since its inception.
NDDC receives an average of N198.7 billion per year from the operating budgets of oil companies (between 2016 and 2018) in addition to the annual Statutory Transfers it receives from the federal government (the latter which is projected to be N98.7bn in the 2022 budget).
Read 14 tweets
Sep 9, 2021
#10yearsofBudgIT: A day with the press

Yesterday, we had the pleasure of hosting @mrmacaronii at our press conference. Facilitating increased citizen-led engagements & advocacy is critical to our next phase, and we're glad he's giving his support for future collaborations.
In @seunonigbinde's words, BudgIT's vision started with the objective of making the budget available and accessible to the public. "It is really great to see that vision morph into something extraordinary",- he said
"Reaching over 17 million Nigerians and empowering over 150 CSOs in ten years is not a small feat. We have played a major role in defining the landscape of Nigeria's civic-tech space, and we are currently engraving our footprints within Africa's civic-tech space."#10yearsofBudgIT
Read 8 tweets
Sep 8, 2021
Key numbers from the Solid Minerals Sector in 2019

-The sector contributed 0.26% to the total GDP.

-FG earned N74.87billion from solid minerals.

-46.68m tons of solid minerals were sold.

-Limestone contributed 54.92% to the total volume of solid minerals produced.

THREAD
1,296 solid minerals licenses were issued in 2019
A total of 59.82m tons of solid minerals were used/sold during this period. There is a 29.41% increase from the volume sold in 2018.
Read 8 tweets
Sep 6, 2021
ICYMI: Last week, we hosted CSOs from Delta, Enugu, Kaduna and Sokoto to discuss COVID-19 fund management in their states from 2020 to date.

Findings from the engagement revealed gross mismanagement of funds and diversion of palliatives for political purposes👇 #Account4COVID ImageImageImageImage
For instance, N50.13bn was earmarked for COVID-19 response in the Delta State 2020 budget, but only N4.92bn was spent.

Also, the Enugu State PHCDA got zero out of the N1.45bn allocated to it for CAPEX according to the 2020 Financial Statement of the OAG of Enugu State. ImageImageImageImage
Sokoto received N1.17bn as donations from different sources. However, the state govt allocated only N525.47m to COVID-19 related initiatives.

Kaduna state spent just N9.29bn out of its N156.86bn budget for COVID-19 response. #Account4COVID ImageImage
Read 6 tweets

Did Thread Reader help you today?

Support us! We are indie developers!


This site is made by just two indie developers on a laptop doing marketing, support and development! Read more about the story.

Become a Premium Member ($3/month or $30/year) and get exclusive features!

Become Premium

Too expensive? Make a small donation by buying us coffee ($5) or help with server cost ($10)

Donate via Paypal

Or Donate anonymously using crypto!

Ethereum

0xfe58350B80634f60Fa6Dc149a72b4DFbc17D341E copy

Bitcoin

3ATGMxNzCUFzxpMCHL5sWSt4DVtS8UqXpi copy

Thank you for your support!

Follow Us on Twitter!

:(