The Minister of Finance and Coordinating Minister for the Economy, Dr Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala, has denied claims by the Nigerian military and other security agencies that poor funding was undermining ongoing war against terrorists.
She said that the
Federal Government has been providing the needed funds to prosecute the war.
She said, for example, that the military has received N130.7 billion from the
Federal Government between January and April, 2014 while another N3.8 billion
had been approved by President Goodluck Jonathan but was still being processed
and would soon be released to the military.
Okonjo-Iweala made
this declaration while briefing journalists on the breakdown of the
N4.964 trillion 2014 budget signed by the President on Wednesday but handed
over to her in Abuja yesterday.
According to
Okonjo-Iweala, “defence spending is top in everything. You know that military
establishments need new things to assist them in their work, and ours will not
be different. No budget will be enough to meet their demands but for now, I
think the sector takes almost a trillion of the budget.”
She stated that
defence budget in 2014 is “about N968.127 billion and we have disbursed N130.7
billion between January and April 2014, N85.9billion out of what has been
disbursed is for personnel cost.
Oknojo-Iweala said
the military is in charge of its personnel salaries “because they are yet to be
integrated into the IPPIS.
On the late
passage and signing of the 2014 budget, the finance minister said the delay
would not affect the running of the economy as the existing laws give the
executive power to spend up to 50 per cent of the annual budget pending its
passage and signing.
According to
Okonjo-Iwela, “that is exactly what we have done and we have disbursed N200
billion for the first quarter of the 2014, based on what the law allows us to
do. So the effect of the delay may be relatively minimal.” She also stated that
N571 billion would be borrowed to bridge the gap (fiscal deficit), adding that
the one per cent deficit gap, when analysed within the context of the Fiscal
Responsibilty Act (FRA) provisions, which allowed for three per cent, and
global best practices is reasonable.
The finance
minister further disclosed that “from June 2014, the Federal Government will
advertise for the people that will benefit in the initial 10,000 housing
scheme, to give the young ones hope to live.”
Sshe added that
agriculture, aviation and solid mineral sectors would get support in the form
of duties to buy equipment to support the sectors. The duties, she said, would
be incentives at zero per cent.
The Nation
Boko Haram War: Military Received N130bn In Three Months, Says Okonjo-Iweala
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Saturday, May 24, 2014
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