Corruption: Report tears presidential panel apart
Members of the Presidential Panel on Arms Deals are now divided over
the non-presentation of its findings to President Muhammadu Buhari,
several months after they concluded work on it.
The development is being seen as an attempt by fifth columnists to derail President Buhari’s anti-corruption crusade.
The AUTHORITY learnt that those behind the plot were forces opposed to the President’s anti-corruption and change agenda.
The AUTHORITY’s findings, which was confirmed by Alhaji Rabi’u Hassan, a
principal material witness and a major contributor to the work of the
Presidential Panel investigating arms deal under ex-President Goodluck
Jonathan, revealed that since the panel submitted its first interim
report through the Office of the National Security Adviser (ONSA)
under Col. Sambo Dasuki (rtd) and its second interim report to Buhari
on the Nigerian Air Force, it had failed to submit the one on the probe
of the Nigerian Army.
Sources close to the panel and the ONSA revealed that a report on the
Nigerian Army and the one on the defunct Presidential Implementation
Committee on Maritime Security and Safety (PICOMSS) have been ready for
the past three or four months.
The alleged suppression of the release of the report to the President is being linked to a principal member of the committee.
The panel had scrutinised among others the padding of the 2011 budget
where the sum of N50 billion was unlawfully appropriated and allocated
to PICOMSS.
The money, it was learnt, was hidden as a sub-head under the budget of
the ONSA for which 30 percent of the padded sum was allegedly paid
upfront to a section of the leadership of the National Assembly.
The report of the investigation of the Nigerian Army may have been kept
away from the President because certain persons bent on perpetuating
nepotism and cronyism decided to keep it close to their chests, a
source said.
For instance, the sum of N18 billion, which was said to have been
traced to a relative of a senior panel member, was uncovered by the
audit and financial sub-committee of the Presidential Panel of
Investigation that dug into the affairs of the defunct PICOMSS.
Five years ago, Hassan blew the whistle on similar conspiracy, official
massive corruption and fraud; subversion of the vital security and
defence interest of Nigeria at PICOMSS in his official petition to
Jonathan.
Further corroboration of these revelations came to light when our
correspondent stumbled on the court record of a recent motion filed by
Hassan at the Federal Capital Territory (FCT) High Court No. 14 by
Hassan, who has been joined with Atawode and accompany, Hypertech
Nigeria Limited, as co-defendants in a case by the EFCC marked Federal
Government of Nigeria (FGN) versus the defendants.
According to sources, the development has factionalised the
Presidential Investigation Panel and has led to a serious disquiet
within the committee and the ONSA; with some members kicking against
the antics of a key officer and his cohorts.
Hassan, who declined to comment on the issue before the court as it is
subjudiced, agreed to speak on the substantive issue of his original
petition on PICOMSS, which borders on the criminal act of budget padding
in the 2011 budget, where the sum of N50 billion was unlawfully
appropriated and allocated to PICOMSS.
The N50 billion, allegedly stolen directly from the treasury and
unlawfully allocated to PICOMSS, is the substantive issue at stake and
was the basis for Hassan’s petition to the President on PICOMSS. Hassan
said that he was invited and conscripted to serve as the money bag that
would pay off that 30 percent, which equals N15 billion of the N50
billion upfront to the leadership of the legislative arm of government.
He said this was duly reported to the appropriate authorities by him.
He was instructed to understudy the situation and report back. Later he
was told to pull the rug off the deal.
“This act of budget padding has been a tradition since the institution
of democracy in 1998. The controversy of this that characterised the
2016 budget of the current government was only a confirmation of this
established trend,” Hassan said.
According to him, “Buhari was not given the proper understanding and
definition of the term and the phenomenon that is called budget padding.
For as long as the President has no true understanding of what this
phenomenon means, he will remain chasing shadows.
“This is because Buhari was left with the impression that budget
padding was a process perpetrated by members of the public service and
thus he focused his attention and punitive measures on the perceived
culprits in the civil service. This is why he is addressing the
symptoms and not the root causes of the problem.’’
“For the general understanding of Nigerians,’’ Hassan defined budget
padding as ‘’an act or process where the leadership of the National
Assembly appropriates and allocates vast sums of money, solicited or
unsolicited by agencies of government for bogus projects in which an
agreed fixed percentage of 30 percent of the padded sum is paid upfront
to these elements.”





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