According to Vanguard
ABUJA— Disturbed by the rot and
thriving corruption in the civil service, which has cost the country
trillions of naira, President Muhammadu Buhari has taken his anti-graft
war to the sector.
He has ordered that all outstanding audit queries which had piled up over the years be resolved within the next 30 days.
Confirming the presidential directive, Senior Special Assistant to
the President on Media & Publicity, Malam Garba Shehu, said the
unanswered audit queries sounded unsavoury to the President who, on
hearing it, expressed his displeasure.
An audit query is the request for an explanation by the
Auditor-General of the Federation over improprieties discovered in the
Accountant-General of the Federation’s report. The report is done
quarterly.
By law (Civil Services Re-organization Decree No. 43 of 1988), the
Office of the Accountant-General of the Federation supervises the
accounts of federal
and extra-ministerial department; collates, presents and publishes
statutory financial statements of account required by the Minister of
Finance; conducts routine and in-depth inspection of the books of
accounts of federal ministries and extra-ministerial department to
ensure compliance with rules, regulations, policies, and internal audit
guides; investigates cases of fraud, loss of funds, assets and store
items and other financial malpractices in ministries/extra-ministerial
department; ensures revenue monitoring and accounting; provides a system
for the monitoring of the accounts of all Ministries, Departments and
Agencies and ensures timely submission of all financial statements to
the Auditor-General of the Federation.
If the Auditor-General is dissatisfied with the reports, he issues
queries. Audit queries are also used to check fraud as the ‘ghost
workers’ phenomenon.
Over time, an avalanche of these queries have not been answered, a
development that has created a huge tunnel for graft through unaccounted
expenditures, misappropriation and miscalculation of funds running into
trillions of naira. The measure is used to check unspent budgets, which
are expected to be returned to the treasury.
Following the disappointing manner the queries were handled,
President Buhari directed that any civil servant who failed to answer
audit queries within 24 hours, henceforth, would face a disciplinary
action.
These are part of the marching orders Buhari gave the Auditor-General of the Federation, Vanguard gathered.
The orders followed the discovery of a plethora of unanswered audit
queries which spanned a long period of time, running into years, under
previous administrations.
Era of impunity is gone
Garba Shehu stated that President Buhari was irrevocably committed to
tackling administrative and bureaucratic corruption head-on.
He said: “The era of impunity is gone. The President is taking the
war on corruption to the civil service. He is not happy that standard
operating procedures and financial regulations are no longer being
observed as they should.
“President Buhari will ensure that public officials and civil
servants in the service of the Federal Government pay a heavy price from
now on for violating financial regulations or disregarding audit
queries.”
He added that the President was determined to put an end to the
present situation in which, rather than respond to legitimate audit
queries, violators of financial regulations in the Federal. Government
resort to threatening, bribing or mounting other forms of social
pressures on auditors.
“On his watch, President Buhari wants to see firm action against
those who violate extant financial regulations, not the prevarications
and shenanigans that went on in the past in the form of endless probes
and public inquiries,” the Presidential spokesman said.
Probe Siemens, Halliburton, other scandals, Igbo leaders urge Buhari
This came as Igbo leaders on the plank of Igbo Leaders of Thought,
ILT, led by Professor Ben Nwabueze (SAN) urged President Buhari to
extend his probe of past administrations to 1999.
However, the call to extend the probe beyond the Dr Goodluck
Jonathan’s administration was opposed by former Minister of State for
Education, Olorogun Kenneth Gbagi, who argued that late President Umaru
Musa Yar’Adua and Jonathan should have probed the former President
Olusegun Obasanjo regime, if they had any issues with his government.
Commending President Buhari over his anti-graft war and calling on
all Nigerians to support the crusade in the interest of the country, the
Igbo leaders, however, said that making the probe extensive will lead
to a “change that will endure.”
In a statement by Evangelist Elliot Uko, Deputy Secretary, ILT,
founder, Igbo Youth Movement, IYM, and Leader, South-East Democratic
Coalition, SEDC, the Igbo leaders said: ‘’The promise of change to the
ugly manner things have been done in our country for decades, inspires
hope among the citizenry.
“Talk about probe, prosecution and the eventual return of looted
funds to the coffers of government is a wonderful, exciting and a most
welcome idea.
“President Buhari’s corrupt-free image goes a long way here to
inspire hope and confidence that this exercise will help send the
necessary signal to public officials, that the era of mindless looting
and siphoning of public funds is over.
“We support the probe, prosecution of looters and return of all
stolen common wealth of Nigerians over the years. We also ask our
countrymen to support this needful and timely exercise.
“But we have two worries: Firstly, we plead that the exercise be
totally free of political vendetta as that would taint the credibility
of the whole exercise. Secondly, we wonder why the exercise would be
restricted only to the immediate past regime. Does that mean that the
notorious Siemens and Halliburton bribery scandals have been rested
forever?
“Are we saying that the glaring corrupt cases of 1999-2007 are closed
cases? Is it morally right to target only the last regime while
exonerating the 1999-2007 sleaze-infested regime? Will the deliberate
isolation of the last regime alone for probe not give the impression of a
political vendetta? Why is it so compelling to look away and leave out
the 1999-2007 era?
“We conclude by pleading with our countrymen to support the probe
because corruption remains one of the four great problems facing our
country. Others are ethnicity and nepotism, religious bigotry and the
mother of all problems: unjust political structure.
“It is important we thoughtfully appraise the impact of singling out
only one regime for probe and prosecution while giving others a clean
bill of health.
“The exercise must not be seen as political and divisive, as the
essence and noble goal will be lost. If the change we profess is real,
then false starts must be avoided.’’
Buhari has no business probing Obasanjo’s regime
—Gbagi
Opposing the extension of the probe to Obasanjo’s administration,
Gbagi said: “Whatever was done in 1999, there was a president before
this president. It was the duty of Jonathan to have probed the
government that he took over from. Buhari has no business going to a
government which is not back-to-back with him. The Jonathan
administration is back-to-back with him.
“Whatever negativity there was with regards to the Jonathan’s
government will have effect on the Buhari government. Buhari cannot be
going to the 1999 regime. What concerns him by law and every fact of
life is the Jonathan’s government.”
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