Contractors threaten to drag ministry before anti-graft agency |
Contractors
who executed the year 2017 appropriated capital projects towards food security
may have concluded plans to take the Federal Ministry of Agriculture and Rural
Development (FMARD) to any of the anti-graft agencies for investigations into
why their monies for jobs completed since have not been paid. A source close to
the affected contractors told Food Farm
News.
The source
who spoke on condition of anonymity told
Food Farm News that the contractors have threatened to invite Independent
Corrupt Practices and related offences Commission (ICPC) or Economic and Financial
Crimes Commission (EFCC) into the matter so as to be able to ascertain why an
appropriated capital project that have been duly completed and delivered have
not been paid for over a year later
when procurement law says that
jobs should be paid for within six months.
He said the
contractors, many of whom have lost their workers to inability to pay salaries,
are already putting their heads together towards documents and other materials
they are going to present that will enhance meaningful investigation by any of
the anti-graft agencies they finally decide to approach.
Another
source close to the ministry told Food
Farm News on the condition of anonymity that all capital projects are always
appropriated with fund so as to ensure prompt payment as soon as jobs are
completed, and that for the non-payment to have taken this long was a thing of
concern that deserved scrutiny so as to checkmate any discrepancy of any sort.
Another source said in confidence that a
thorough auditing has been conducted which reflected some questionable areas
that need to be clarified by the Director of Finance and Accounts in the
ministry, former permanent secretary and the main minister, Chief Audu Ogbeh
since the new Permanent Secretary who assumed duties last September 29, has insisted on not authorizing any payment
until proper auditing is done.
Food Farm News gathered that the contractors are
already running out of patience and that one of their demands would be to
compel the ministry to be the party to pay interest incurred on loan by
contractors.
The
contractors alleged that since the arrival of the new Permanent Secretary (PS),
the activity towards payment has been put on hold even as new jobs were still
being issued.
They also complained that the management under
the former PS has effected payment for jobs below five million naira of which
they, (the officials) were the beneficiaries, leaving them (the contractors)
unattended to since the arrival of the new permanent secretary.
A management
source in the ministry confirmed that the ministry is owing
some contractors of which it has not been able to pay due paucity of funds.
When
confronted that the jobs awarded were supposed to have cash backing before
being awarded, going by procurement law, he said that may not be true because
payments for jobs in the last five years has been affected due to low release
of funds.
He affirmed
that on the average only 52 percent of the budget has always been released to
the ministry in the last five years and that efforts are going on to ensure
payment as soon as funds are released. Both the PS and the minister were not on
seat as at time of filing this story.
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