The Federal
Executive Council (FEC), presided over by President Muhammadu Buhari has
ordered the probe of past heads of the Joint Admission and Matriculation Board
(JAMB) and the Nigerian Maritime Administration and
Safety Agency (NIMASA), for poor remittances.
It was the first FEC meeting since the president returned
from his over one hundred day medical trip in London, last month.
Minister of Finance, Kemi Adeosun, who briefed council about the performances
of some government agencies, said JAMB for the first time remitted N5 billion
to the coffers of the
government with a balance of N3 billion still to be
remitted compared to maximum of N3 million per annum remitted in the past.
JAMB in July announced the remittance of N5
billion to the Federal Government, the highest in the last 40 years of its
existence.
According to Adeosun, while NIMASA remitted N4.95 billion
in 2015, it remitted N24 billion in 2016
She said the disparity in the remittances of the two
agencies in the past and now necessitated the decision to probe all previous
heads of the two agencies.
Adeosun said the discovery had led to a directive from
the FEC to summon all past heads of JAMB to explain where past revenues had
been diverted to, noting that the current generation by the body is not
prompted by increase in JAMB fees as they remain the same.
The minister also disclosed that other agencies with
similar discrepancies in their revenue remittances will be probed.
Adeosun also debunked beliefs that Nigeria exited
recession because disruption of oil installations in the Niger Delta had
stopped and oil production volume has consequently increased, saying the exit
was not driven by increase in oil revenues only but also by investment in
infrastructure such as road construction, which she said facilitated the growth
in agriculture and industry.
Adeosun also said the council approved a memo she
presented which harped on the necessity of Nigeria to join African Trade
Insurance Agency to provide risk guarantee for investment coming into Nigeria
as well as export from the country.
She said joining the agency would provide risk guarantee,
sovereign guarantee and risk mitigation, disclosing that many African countries
are already members of the agency.
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