How Obi 'Stole ' N86.65 Billion Anambra Money, But Has Clean Credit Balance According To Rights Group
Obi’s N86.65 Billion Credit
Balance & Problem Of Huge States’ Debts In Nigeria (Part Two). Find out the true position of things from this essay:
(Public Statement, Onitsha Nigeria, 5th day of April, 2014)-This is the concluding part of the above named statement on Obi’s trilling credit balances in office.
The breakdown of the updated credit balances contained in
the former popularly elected governor’s handover, investigated by our
leadership, is as follows:
1.
Local Investments in SABMiller,
Independent Power Project, Orient Petroleum, Agulu, Awka &
Onitsha Hotels as at 17th of March, 2014 stood
at N27 billion.
2.
Foreign Currency Investments
(external bonds with due dates & interests) spread in Diamond, Access and
Fidelity Banks as at 17th day of March, 2014 stood at
$156million or N26.5 billion.
3.
Certified State / MDAs / MDGs’ cash
balances as of the date under reference at N28.165 billion.
4.
Federal Government of Nigeria’s
approved refund for federal roads done and completed on its behalf by the
Government of Anambra State as at 17th day of March, 2014,
stood at N10 billion.
5.
These bring the grand total to N91,
65 billion. When deducted from the received and
paid certificates of already executed projects of N5 billion, the
total remaining balance as at 17th day of March,
2014, stood at N86.665 billion.
In other words, as at 17th of
March 2014, Mr. Peter Obi’s former administration left total investments and
cash balances of N86.665 billion and not N75 billion as previously stated. It
is also important to point out as at 31st of December 2013, the
official records of the Debts Management Office of the Federation still showed
that Anambra State owed total domestic and foreign debts of N10. 7billion. In
the context of “continuity” doctrine or tradition, this ought to have been
reflected in both stewardship account and statutory handover note of former
governor Peter Obi. On the other hand, even if it is deducted from investments
and cash balances of his N86.665 billion, Anambra State under him is still on
sound financial footing with N76 billion worth of cash and investments.
States Of The Federation
& Their Huge Debts: While it is important to ignore the antics of
some failed politicians rattled by Obi’s trilling billions of credit balance,
it is also important to curtail their nuisance values by throwing more light
into the sorry state of finances in most of the States in Nigeria. It is an
irrefutable fact that most States in Nigeria including the super oil States of
Rivers, Delta, Bayelsa and Akwa Ibom and super IGR (internally generated
revenues) States of Lagos and Ogun are hugely indebted, both internally and
externally. We are therefore, not surprised at the antics of some failed
politicians to cast a doubt at the celebrated healthy financial state of
Anambra. It is an indisputable fact that Lagos State debts alone are more than
total debts owed by the five States of the Southeast zone. As of 31st of
December, 2013, official records showed that the State under reference was
indebted to the tune of over N350 billion. It additionally borrowed $200M in
2013 to be spent in its 2014 fiscal year. The above did not include domestic
debts through bonds accumulated since January 2012 till date. Some insider
sources hold a strong view that the State’s total actual debts, domestically
and externally are up to N500 billion. Lagos State is also said to
have reached a ‘‘debt ceiling’’.
The domestic and foreign debts of 15
most indebted States in Nigeria as at December 2011 and June 2013 respectively
are the following: Lagos N350Billion (excluding domestic debts incurred in
2012 and 2013), Bayelsa N167Billion, Cross River N107Billion, Delta 93Billion,
the FCT N91Billion, Rivers N89Billion, Kaduna N75Billion, Ondo 56Billion, Akwa
Ibom N50Billion, Ogun N47Billion, Ebonyi N46Billion, Edo N45Billion, Kogi
N39Billion, Imo N34Billion and Adamawa N30Billion. It is important to state
that domestic debts incurred by the States above named in 2012 and 2013 were
not added. Imo State’s N34 billion debts as disclosed by the DMO is strongly
questionable because it is one of the States that have reached “debts ceiling”,
which depicts reckless borrowings and over-sized indebtedness. Anambra State,
on its part, remains one of the least indebted States and only credit State in
Nigeria with a total debt of N10.7Billion, which is made up of local debts of
N6.4Billion and foreign debts of $27.3Million or about N4.27Billion. The
State’s dollar cash balance in bonds of $156M or naira equivalent of N26.5
billion is two and a half times higher than its total debts of N10.7 billion.
As we write, some States like Ebonyi, Enugu, Bauchi and Niger are back in local
capital markets, seeking to borrow again. The total loans being sought by the four
States in the country’s local capital markets is said to be between N90 billion
and N100 billion.
At the six geopolitical zonal
levels, South-south geopolitical zone is the most indebted zone in terms of
domestic debt with a total of N508, 692Billion. The zone is home to Nigeria’s
superbly rich oil States of Rivers, Delta, Bayelsa and Akwa Ibom. The second
most indebted geopolitical zone in the country’s States’ local debts is
Southwest, which owes N305.9Billion. The North-central zone and the FCT is the
third most indebted zone in terms of local debts with N214.7Billion, followed
by Southeast with N107.1Billion, Northeast zone with N72.7Billion and Northwest
with N69.8Billion. Another important thing to note is the fact that local
debts incurred by the States in the affected zones since January 2012 till date
are not included. In the area of foreign debts, the Southwest zone is the most
indebted zone owing $1,18Billion as at December 31, 2013, out of which, Lagos
State alone owes $857 million. The second most indebted zone in foreign
borrowings is the Northwest zone, which owes $540Million. The Nigeria’s
third most indebted zone in foreign loans is South-south zone with
$302.2Million, followed by the North-central and the FCT with $230.6Million, Southeast
zone with $217.1Million and Northeast with $198.6Million.
Finally, the common characters of
many, if not most of Nigeria’s public office holders are coherent at all times
with any negative definition, including malcontent, treacherous, subversive,
wicked, beastly and mischievous. In the country, fundamental yardsticks to
measure public governance are fundamentally lacking. In other words, whatever a
public office holder, like a State governor calls good governance is what good
governance becomes. If he or she decides to mortgage the future of the State in
serial borrowings (i.e. Lagos), it becomes a norm. If he or she adopts State
terrorism and mass killings as an official policy (i.e. Anambra under Mbadinuju
& his Bakassi boys killer squad), it becomes a norm and celebrated.
Nigeria’s whistle blowers and watchdogs are like locomotive engines adorned
with steady noise without end. The likes of Government of Lagos State now
divides and calculates its huge public loans by GDP to justify being neck-deep
in serial public loans’ procurement. This is in-spite the fact that Lagos State
is a N24 billion monthly internally generated revenue economy. This type of act
is expressly deemed “economic crime and sabotage” and can attract death penalty
by hanging in countries like China.
What we call “government”
today has its root from agriculture, which, in turn, originated from family. As
it is traditionalized in family and agricultural circles, when a family head is
debt free, he becomes happy and highly respected among his family members and
kindred. Same thing applies to a debt free farmer. There is no amount of
justification that will make borrowing a credit factor. Borrowing is bad in all
its ramifications and remains a deficit factor. One of the greatest weapons China
has against the United States of America today is her credit status and
worthiness. China is also America’s global landlord in world economy
because of its huge investments in USA’s economy including billions of dollars
loaned to USA. This has become her major foreign policy weapon against USA.
China is the world reigning “creditor country” and fastest growing economy.
Flowing from the forgoing in its
totality is the fact that Mr. Peter Obi of Anambra State has become Nigeria’s
“Chancellor of Exchequer” and should be treated and celebrated in
the like manner. The highly organized and well funded campaign of calumny
by politicians of underworld and their failed counterparts
against him and his record breaking achievement in office are not unexpected
because when a leader or public office holder in Nigerian context records what
his or her colleagues failed woefully to achieve, he or she becomes the target
of image, character and physical assassination. In Nigeria, it pays to do evil
or be a monumental failure in public office than to be a great achiever.
Signed:
Emeka Umeagbalasi, Board Chairman
International Society for Civil
Liberties & the Rule of Law
08180103912, 08033601078
Comrade Justus Uche Ijeoma, Head,
Publicity Desk
08037114869
How Obi 'Stole ' N86.65 Billion Anambra Money, But Has Clean Credit Balance According To Rights Group
Reviewed by Unknown
on
Saturday, April 05, 2014
Rating:
No comments: