Federal Fire Service Faces Repayment Deadline of N1.48 Billion

Gloria Essien, Abuja

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Nigeria’s House of Representatives has ordered the Federal Fire Service to refund the sum of over one point four eight billion naira to the Consolidated Revenue Fund within the next seven days.

The Chairman of the House Committee on Public Accounts, Hon. Bamidele Salami, gave the order during the resumed probe of the COVID-19 intervention fund in Abuja.

He said that the accounting officer of the Fire Service should refund the said monies following its refusal to honour for the fourth time invitations from the committee to explain the spending of the COVID-19 fund.

The Deputy Chairman of the committee, Hon. Jeremiah Umar, moved a motion for the refund of the amount, saying that “so many other agencies have appeared before this committee, and the investigation is ongoing. I don’t see any reason why the Fire Service will ignore a committee like this.”

The lawmaker stated that since the service could not appear to explain what the money was spent for, it should be refunded to the coffers of the federation.

While ruling on the motion, Hon Salam stressed that the Fire Service must refund the sum of N1.484 billion it collected as a COVID-19 intervention fund in 2020/2021 and submit evidence of the refund within Seven days, while the other affected agencies would be invited once for the last chance to make an appearance

This came just as the committee issued fresh invitations to some other defaulting Ministries Departments and Agencies (MDAs) of the federal government to appear and explain various queries standing against them from the office of the Auditor General of the Federation on several billions of Naira allocated to them during COVID-19 as intervention funds

The affected MDAs are the Federal Ministry of Agriculture and Food Security (N50.5 billion), the Office of the Accountant General of the Federation (N33 billion), the Federal Ministry of Women Affairs, through the National Centre for Women Development (N625 million), the National Centre for Disease Control (NCDC) (N25 billion), and the Federal Ministry of Health (N10 billion).

Speaking on the development, the Chairman of the Committee, Hon. Salam, lamented that the Federal Fire Service had snubbed the Committee’s summons three different times in a row, while the other affected MDAs did the same twice each, saying that the later group had within one week to appear or face sanctions.

According to him, “A public officer who fails to respond to the Auditor-General’s query satisfactorily within 21 days for failure to collect government revenue due shall be surcharged and be transferred to another schedule. Where an officer fails to give a satisfactory reply to an audit query within 7 days for his failure to account for government revenue, such officer shall be surcharged for the full amount involved, and such officers shall be handed over to either the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) or the Independent Corrupt Practices and Other Related Offences Commission (ICPC).

He stated that the committee would afford the National Centre for Disease Control (N5 billion), the Ministry of Agriculture (N63.8 billion), the Ministry of Women Affairs through the Centre for Women Development (N1.25 billion), the Ministry of Health (N53 billion), and the Office of the Accountant General of the Federation (N33 billion) another opportunity to present before the committee regarding the allocation of COVID-19 funds.

“This committee has a lot of assignments before it. The COVID-19 probe is just one; we have to move on to other assignments.

Members of the committee expressed concerns that the fire service may be taking the constitutional committee for granted.

Meanwhile, the committee, however, gave the Nigeria Centre for Disease Control, NCDC, the Accountant General Office and the Ministry of Agriculture the final invitation to appear before them to explain the COVID-19 funds they received.

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