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Behold! Those Milking Nigeria dry. Intersociety weeps over “hydra-headed monsters of corruption, scandalous govt. running costs”

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President-Goodluck-Jonathan-02A frontline NGO has released details of the various government offices and officials, as well as other organisations through which Nigeria is being milked dry by about 5% of her estimated 170 million populations while the greater majority wallows in poverty and misery.

In the third of series of reports focusing on the rot in the country’s higher education, the International Society for Civil Liberties & the Rule of Law (Intersociety) restated its earlier claim that the solution to the crisis in the Nigerian university system and the country’s higher education sector in general does not lie with the implementation of the 2009 Agreement between the Federal Government of Nigeria and the leadership of the Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU).

 

The group in a Public Information released from its Onitsha base in Nigeria’s South-East this morning also insisted that the “ASUU-Federal Government Agreement of 2009” is only “a smokescreen solution to the failed standard of higher education & socioeconomic consequences of industrial disputes in Nigeria.”

Said Intersociety in the Public Information jointly signed by Board Chairman Emeka Umeagbalasi and Head, Publicity Desk, Comrade Justus Uche Ijeoma:

“This is the continuation of our Public Information on how less than 5% of Nigerians continued to corner and pocket close to 80% of her public finances on annual basis especially in areas of spurious allowances and scandalous overheads. This less than 5% Nigerians comprises 17,500 top public office holders including 12,788 elected LGAs’ chairmen, their deputies and councilors from the constitutionally recognized 774 LGAs in Nigeria. Others are 1,695 elected officials at the 36 States and Federal levels including 72 governors and their deputies, 469 federal lawmakers, 1,152 States’ lawmakers and the President and his deputy.

“Also included in the list of 17,500 milky Nigerians are 3,062 appointed executives at Federal and State levels including about 472 federal executives excluding the president and his deputy already added above, about 2,664 state executives excluding 36 State Governors and their deputies already added above; 792 State Judges and 142 Federal Judges. The 14,445 milky Nigerians with other additions by the Salaries & Wages Commission bring the total number of those milking Nigeria’s public finances in the names of “allowances” and “overheads” to about 17,500. From the angle of “allowances” and salaries contained in the revised Pay Act of 2008 enacted for them, they pocket N1.13trillion (about $7 billon) every fiscal year with over 90% or over N900 billion going into payment of “allowances”.

“From the angle of “overheads”, which they allocate to themselves through “executive-legislature conspiracy” using Federal Appropriation Acts and States’ Appropriation Laws, they use them as conduit pipes to pocket spurious and scandalous sums amounting to trillions of naira or billions of dollars yearly. Part of these is now commonly referred to as “security votes”. An average Nigerian governor maintains a “security vote” of at least N4 billion a year. The security or defence budgets for Nigeria’s Presidency for 2012 and 2013 fiscal years amounted to over N1. 9 trillion or about $12 billion, which included personnel and overhead costs; yet nobody is secured in Nigeria except by divine intervention. The “security votes’ malaria virus” in Nigeria has since been extended to other holders of top public offices such as LGA chairmen and leaders of their legislative councils, chief judges of the States, FCT and Federal High Courts and their equivalents in Islamic and Customary Courts, President of the Court of Appeal and the Chief Justice of the Federation.

“Others are speakers and their deputies at States and Federal levels including the President of the Senate and his deputy, heads of key government ministries, parastatals and commissions, chairmen of the governing councils and vice chancellors, provosts and rectors of government-owned higher institutions, heads of key security agencies, to mention but a few. There are also over 35,000 personal aides working for these 17,500 milky Nigerians on average of two for each of them. Some of those occupying plum elective and appointive public offices maintain as much as six aides each. These over 35,000 personal aides are serviced monthly through scandalous allowances smuggled into public budgets and Pay Wage Act with each of them taking home at every month end frivolous allowances ranging from N30,000 to N100,000 or more. It is estimated that between N1 billion and N3.5 billion is spent monthly in the maintenance of these personal aides and between N12 billion and N42 billion a year to foot their bills. The least political appointee recognised by the Nigerian Constitution of 1999 is “special adviser” for governors, presidents and their deputies.

“But in practice, there are “special advisers” for legislators and their leaders, ministers, commissioners, heads of key public commissions and parastatals, etc. There are also motley of “senior special assistants”, “special assistants”, “executive assistants”, “personal assistants”, to mention but a few. The introduction of motley of “allowances” described in different names by public industrial bodies like ASUU, ASUP, SSANU, NLC, NUT, TUC, NMA, etc, and agitations through industrial strikes for their payment is predicated upon the foregoing. In Nigeria, striking bodies also include academic staff and non-academic staff associations for universities, polytechnics/monotechnics and colleges of education; and associations for government primary and secondary schools, medical practitioners, nurses and midwives as well as bodies of clerical office attendants such as NLC and senior civil servants bodies like TUC, etc. Nigeria labour force has one of the lowest labour productivity and highest corruption indexes in the world.

“Following from the foregoing including the part one and two of this important public information, it is now indisputably established that the 2009 ASUU-Federal Government Agreement is far from having a concrete answer to the battered and failed standard of higher education in Nigeria. Nigeria, in abundance of plenty has continued to wallow in confusions of various social variables. The hydra-headed monsters of corruption, scandalous governmental running costs including spurious overheads and allowances have been solely responsible for socioeconomic downturns including battered standard of her higher education in Nigeria especially since 2007. In the 2011 fiscal year, for instance, Nigerian Government generated $24.54 billion or about N3.9 trillion and spent $32.65 billion or about N5.2 trillion (CIA World Fact Book 2012).

“Beyond these man-made socioeconomic challenges hurting and hunting the country, Nigeria’s higher education policies are utterly awkward and retrogressive. The carrying capacities of the country’s 297 higher education institutions are very minimal, manual and unscientific. For instance, the 297 higher institutions in the country do not have up to 3 million students. The 124 accredited universities have student population of under 2 million. On average of 20,000 students for each of the 74 Federal and States’ Universities, the 74 universities’ student population is under 1.5 million. On average of 6,000 students for each of the 50 private universities, less than 400,000 student populations abound. And on average of 5,000 students for each of the 173 colleges of education, polytechnics and monotechnics, less than 900,000 student population abounds. This is against the UK Open University’s 193,000 student population made up of “full time”, “part time” and “electronic/distance based” students. Ninety percent of those that take part in the Nigerian higher education entrance examinations are denied admission and out of every five that get distinction in the pre-university exams marks, three are denied admission.”

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