In what is the latest in the spate of controversies dogging President
Muhammadu Buhari’s 2016 budget, the Nigerian Federal Ministry of Health
has disowned the budget proposal submitted on its behalf by the
Ministry of Budget and National Planning.
Health Minister, Isaac Adewole, who addressed the Senate Committee on
Health during its budget defence session on Monday, said the proposal
drawn up by the ministry and submitted to the budget office had been
doctored and that “foreign” appropriations, different from what was
submitted, had been sneaked in.
“We have to look into the details of the budget and re-submit it to
the committee,” he said. “This was not what we submitted. We’ll submit
another one. We don’t want anything foreign to creep into that budget.
What we submitted is not there.”
Mr. Adewole’s revelation is the latest of controversies and
embarrassing disclosures trailing the 2016 budget proposed by President
Buhari and currently being considered by the National Assembly.
Last week, the Senate had discovered a sum of N10 billion
“questionably smuggled” into the budget of the Ministry of Education
for an allegedly questionable subhead.
A senior Presidency official also disclosed that a “budget
mafia” was responsible for the embarrassing allocations in the budget.
Stating further, Mr. Adewole lamented that the proposed
appropriations in the budget before the National Assembly ran parallel
with the priorities of the health sector as contained in the “original
budget.”
While some important agencies in the health sector had been excluded,
votes proposed by the ministry had been redistributed, he said.
“In the revised budget as re-submitted, N15.7 billion for capital
allocation has been moved to other areas. Some allocations made are not
in keeping with our priorities.
“There is nothing allocated to public health and family health.”
While discarding the budget, he therefore asked the committee not to
work with the budget before it but wait for another one to be
re-submitted.
He also expressed surprise that appropriations were made for some
subheads that were generating controversies, whereas no conclusion had
been reached on the amount required.
On the State House clinic whose capital vote exceeded cumulative
capital vote for teaching hospitals, Mr. Adewole said, “The State House
Clinic is not under the Ministry of Health. I hope it’s not the same
rats that changed things in our budget that changed it.
“The amount is meant for procurement and purchase of medical
equipment. It is very important that you engage them because what
happened to us might have also happened to them. It is possible that
what is there might not have been what they put there.”
Meanwhile, the Minister allayed public fear on Zika virus, saying
Nigerians had developed resistance to the virus, which, according to
him, had been in the country since 1954.
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