$1bn annual Social Investment Programme allocation, biggest fraud in Africa — HURIWA

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Civil rights advocacy group, Human Rights Writers Association of Nigeria (HURIWA), on Friday, described as the single biggest fraud in Africa, the $1bn annual allocation for the National Social Investment Programme of the federal government.

HURIWA’s National Coordinator, Comrade Emmanuel Onwubiko, in a statement, said it was unfortunate that the programme started by President Muhammadu Buhari in 2016 has been a conduit for siphoning billions of taxpayers’ funds.

The rights group maintained that it was glaring even to the unsound minds that it was impracticable that government was spending so much money on the poor but the population of the poor keeps doubling since 2015 to a toxic extent that Nigeria became the poverty capital of the world in 2018, thus overtaking India with approximately 90 million absolutely poor families.

Besides, HURIWA dismissed the involvement of some handpicked and well paid Non-governmental organisations to monitor the activities of the office of the Minister of Humanitarian Affairs and Disaster Management in the execution of the Social welfare initiative of the President Muhammadu Buhari’s administration.

The group said it was wondering how a set of non-governmental bodies, hired as contractors, would be independent and objective.

Onwubiko said that “HURIWA demands a comprehensive audit of the programme since its inception and challenged the Minister of Humanitarian Affairs, Disaster Management and Social Development, Sadiya Farouq, to publish a detailed account of the ministry since she took over office and also publish the list of beneficiaries from inception.

HURIWA said such an account should contain names of all the vendors working for the government on the project, their addresses, owners, and other important verifiable details.

Recall that the Minister, through the Permanent Secretary in the Ministry, Nasir Gwarzoh, recently said $1 billion was being earmarked annually for the Social Investment Programme.

“NSIP is one of the largest social protection programmes in Africa, with over $1billion earmarked annually to cause positive change in the lives of the poorest and the most vulnerable in the country.

“Let me use this opportunity to inform us that over 12 million households had benefitted from NSIP interventions in the last five years,” Gwarzoh was quoted as saying.

In his reaction, Onwubiko said: “The National Social Investment Programme which includes the School-Feeding Programme is, perhaps, the biggest fraud scheme in the whole of Africa. This is the most significant governmental fraud to have ever been activated in Africa because apart from being opaque, it is also characterised by absolutely falsehoods, especially in the so-called School Feeding Programme whereby pupils are fed with obviously poorly prepared foods that taste like foods that are fed to local breed of dogs in the villages.

“The poorly made foods given to school pupils is distasteful despite the humongous amount being spent. The last time Vice-President Yemi Osinbajo tasted the food, his face spoke another language that showed his displeasure.

“HURIWA makes bold to ask if any government official’s child is a pupil in the schools where the foods are being served? We remembered that even Governor Nasir El-Rufai’s son that was comically enrolled in a public school in Kaduna was almost immediately withdrawn before he could partake in the eating of the food that can at best be  obviously described as poisonous chalice.”

“The programme has been marred with several cases of fraud as since November 2019 when the Independent Corrupt Practices and Other Related Offences Commission arrested two persons involved in a N68,097,053 fraud. Also, in September 2020, the ICPC said investigations done showed that N2.67 billion released for school feeding of the 104 Unity Colleges during the COVID-19 lockdown found its way into individual accounts.

“But as usual, nothing has been done to unearth the rot and the corruption obvious in the programme that has become a conduit to siphon billions of taxpayers’ funds.

“HURIWA demands a comprehensive forensic audit into the accounts of the Humanitarian Affairs Ministry. Nigerians need to know. Enough of the charade and shenanigan!

“It must be made known to these officials that history will be so unkind to them for feeding Nigerian kids with poorly prepared foods and then end up announcing a humongous amount appropriated for such a show of shame.”

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