Categories: City Updates

Release of Funds to Amnesty Office Grossly Inadequate –Senate

…Says Amnesty Programme has reduced tension in N/Delta

*I’ll Work Hard to Ensure Programme attains Objectives –Dokubo

Matilda Omonaiye/

 

Against the backdrop of the significance of the Presidential Amnesty Programme towards maintaining peace and security in the Niger Delta, the Senate Committee on Niger Delta has decried the delay in the release of funds to the Amnesty Office for payment of stipends and other allowances to beneficiaries of the Programme.

According to a statement from Mr Murphy Ganagana, the Special Assistant (Media) to Special Adviser to the President on Niger Delta and Coordinator, Amnesty Programme, Prof Charles Dokubo, members of the Committee who visited the Office on Tuesday in Abuja, described funds so far released out of the 2018 budgetary allocation to the Amnesty Office as grossly inadequate.

“There are points which I did not make while I was making this presentation. Some of them actually came up as a result of Prof. Charles Dokubo’s presentation. It was while making this presentation that this committee became aware of the fact that you (Amnesty Office) got only N5bn twice out of the N65b naira allocated to you in the 2018 budget. N5bn translates to approximately 7.7 per cent which is grossly inadequate,” Senator Baba Kaka Bashir Garbai, vice chairman of the Committee, who led its members on the visit, said.

From Right: Senator Andrew Uchendu, Senator Ogba Obinna(red cap), Prof Charles Dokubo, Special Adviser to the President on Niger Delta Affairs, Senator Baba Kaka Bashir Garbai, Vice Chairman Senate Committee on Niger Delta and Senator Yele Omogunwa, when the Senate Committee members on Niger Delta paid a courtesy visit to the Amnesty office on September 11, in Abuja.

While emphasizing that the Amnesty Programme is pivotal for stability in the hitherto restive Niger Delta region, members of the committee said they would ensure prompt release of funds allocated to the Amnesty Programme.

“This kind of situation underscores the need for an interactive session like this so that we can put pressure on the Ministry of Finance and those that are involved in the release of funds. Amnesty programme is a very important programme of this government. From the Yar’Adua administration up till now, it has brought down the temperature in the Niger Delta; because of that, whenever you are having these kinds of challenges, make us know as a committee so that we can intervene,” Senator Garbai said.

He added: “Since this committee was inaugurated, we have not had the opportunity of formally coming to make an oversight visit to this agency, so we are here to share with you some of your experiences in the various departments to formally interact with you about the activities of your office. The committee is filled with a lot of complaints about your office and also petitions about students sponsored by this office that have not been paid their stipends and allowances outside the country. So because of that, we want to hear your own side of the story, so that where you have constraints, the committee will look into it in order to find some solutions.”

Responding, Special Adviser to the President and Coordinator, Presidential Amnesty Programme, Prof. Charles Dokubo, reiterated President Muhammadu Buhari’s determination to turn around the narrative of the Niger Delta region.

He said, “I will work hard to make sure that the Amnesty Programme attains the mission and objective for which it has been created. I’m happy that you are here to rub mind with us today and I believe that as you go back to your office, you will see the challenges that we face and in whichever way you can help us, I’ll plead with you not to hesitate to help us because we don’t have releases. We have to been put on pressure, and if we don’t have releases to pay those that require the stipend, the security environment in which the Niger Delta will be uncontrollable, and that’s my worst fear.

“Maintaining peace and security is the most important thing. It is not about military security; it is human security, where the human being becomes a reference point for security; where we develop, assist, empower, train and give jobs to these people that have been left out of the system. Then, we can believe that a holistic approach to the Niger Delta problem has been taken.”

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Dipo

Dipo Kehinde is an accomplished Nigerian journalist, artist, and designer with over 34 years experience. More info on: https://www.linkedin.com/in/dipo-kehinde-8aa98926

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