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INEC Rules Out Election In 86 Polling Units In Anambra

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Election materials will not be deployed in 86 polling units out of a total of 5,720 polling units in Anambra State for the November 6 governorship election, according to the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC).

Prof Mahmood Yakubu, the Chairman of INEC, disclosed this during a special consultative meeting of Chairmen and Leaders of Political Parties held at the Commission’s headquarters in Abuja on Friday.

The impacted polling units were among the 1,112 new polling units created when INEC turned some voting locations into polling units, he said, adding that the units also had no voters from the recent Continues Voters Registration CVR operation.

“The Anambra Governorship election will be the first first that voting is taking place in polling units since the recent successful conversion of voting points arising from the expansion of voter access to polling units in Nigeria. An additional 1,112 polling units were established in Anambra State in addition to the existing 4,608 locations. This brings the total number of polling units in the State to 5,720.

“Voters were encouraged to seize the opportunity of the Continuous Voter Registration (CVR) exercise to transfer to the new polling units most convenient for them.

The INEC Chairman explained that perhaps owing to the the security situation in Anambra State,voters did not did not take advantage of the new polling units by transferring their card there to ease access to polling units

He also disclosed that about 894 polling units were found to have between 1-49 voters ,adding that Election materials would be deployed in those units and voting as well as results collated .

He urged the political parties to ensure that their agents monitor the release of Sensitive materials from the Central Bank in Awka,as he observed that one political party failed to nominate polling agent for the election even though it has a Governorship candidate.

Buhari: “My Leaving the Presidency On May 29, 2023 Is Sacrosanct

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President Muhammadu Buhari has stated that his term as President, which ends on May 29, 2023, is sacrosanct, and that those calling for an extension are wasting their time.

Buhari made the announcement during a meeting in Makkah with a select group of Nigerians living in Saudi Arabia, where he had just returned from a visit.

“By the Holy Qur’an, I swear that I shall serve in accordance with the constitution and leave when my term is over.”

“Tazarce” is not available (tenure extension).

I don’t want anyone to start advocating for unconstitutional extension and pushing for it.

That is unacceptable to me.”

Garba Shehu, the President’s media aide, released a statement in which he conveyed his message.

He also took the opportunity to call on citizens at home to be fair to his administration at all times, asking detractors to compare the security situations in the North East and South South in 2015 with how things are now.

He implied support for measures to extend the role of technology in the country’s elections, claiming that the introduction of the card reader and electronic register was God’s response to his prayers after he was denied victory in three previous elections.

“After the third so-called defeat, I said, ‘God Dey’. My opponents laughed at me but God answered my prayers by bringing in technology. At that point, nobody can steal their votes or buy them,” the President added.

President Buhari, who ended his visit to the Kingdom with the Friday Prayers at the Grand Mosque in Makkah said he will continue to abide by the constitution in all its ramifications and he will at all times supervise and deal with his ministers on same basis.

He gave assurances at the meeting that in the balance of “eighteen months or so of my time left, whatever I can do to improve the life of Nigerians, I will do it for the country.”

The President commended diaspora Nigerians in the Kingdom for representing the country well and projecting its good image.

“My problem is the North West where people are killing and stealing from one another. I had to be very hard on them and I will continue to be very hard until we put them in line and bring back order,” he said.

Buhari equally urged Nigerians living in the country to respect the laws, remain law-abiding and do nothing to derogate from the many years of friendly and mutually beneficial relationships between the two countries.

A leader of the community, Dr. Abdulkadir Maikudi, who spoke on behalf of the group requested the President to assist the privately-run Nigerian International School in the Kingdom by equipping it to provide science and technical education.

The Nigerian Ambassador to Saudi Arabia, Yahaya Lawal and the Consul-General in Jeddah, Ambassador Abdulkarim Mansur attested to the good conduct of the nearly 1.5 million Nigerians there.

According to them, “Nigerian professionals are doing well and projecting a good image of our country.”

Insecurity: INEC Adhoc Staff Rejects Posting, Deployment To Polling Units In Anambra State —- IPAC

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Despite the Independent National Electoral Commission’s best efforts, Dr. Leonard Nzenwa, Chairman of the Inter-Party Advisory Council (IPAC), has raised major doubts regarding voter participation in the governorship election in Anambra State (INEC).

Nzenwa said the people of Anambra are afraid to vote on November 6 because of the actions of non-state actors in the state, speaking during a Special Consultative Meeting of Political Parties convened by the election umpire.

Due to the security scenario in Anambra State, Nzenwa advised INEC to address unsubstantiated claims that INEC adhoc employees are massively rejecting deployment to polling locations and especially Anambra State.

He claimed that the high expense of operating the election around the billionaire Governorship candidates and the Commission itself was due to these vicissitudes, and that it was for these reasons that some IPAC members called for the poll to be suspended to enable time for sanity to prevail.

Given the circumstances, Nzenwa, who is also the Chairman of the African Action Congress (AAC), expressed worry about whether the Anambra election can be assessed in accordance with best worldwide practices.

“The 2021 Anambra Gubernatorial Polls has not only been adjudged as the most expensive by credible pollsters with returnee of billionaires in hard currency struggling it out. This equally was validated by the Commission few days ago as it attested that it has cost it huge financial and material investment.

“On the flip side, the journey to this election has been strewn with pallets of uncertainties, not that the Commission had not prepared enough for it nor the political parties ill-equipped to participate but that actions and inaction of Non-State Actors seem to be throwing spanners in the works as wonton killings and destruction of property have continued unabated.

“It is this unfolding happenings that led to suggestion by some of us that the Anambra Polls be postponed to allow for some level of sanity to return before the polls is conducted. But some dissented.

“Truth, is that, the people in Anambra are scared stiff and have been cowed to stay indoors for the greater part of the days in the last few months. You see this on their faces, you sense this in the air they breath, you behold fear-stricken population fighting to fend for themselves in the wave of brutal and conscienceless attack on their lives and property.

“For a proper, well-credentialed poll with compliments of acceptable electoral best practices to be held in an environment as this is most unlikely, electoral polls literature across the globe testify to this. We encouraged the Commission to put their best leg forward in this regard”.

He said what is happening in Anambra in the run-up to the election will cause very high voter apathy that may raise questions thereafter.

“With all that is taking place there, with the huge money playing its role as it is still doing , with the State playing her role as they are doing, and currently still figuring out how possible they can creatively tame the audacity of the so called ‘rascal aggressors’, but those we do fear might not play their role are the people, the people that are going to vote.

” It follows, therefore, that the money may be there, the State may have its way, but to draw the people out to vote enmasee might not be an easy task.

“The people are torn between two forces, on one hand, is a force driven by credible and genuine motivation to sanitize the Anambra polity for peaceful polls to take place, on another other hand, is a band of non-state actors who are adept in guerrilla antics – they show up and disappear, ducking and causing havoc, which ultimately may lead to collateral damage in the face of major clash” he stated.

Secondus Heads To Supreme Court To Appeal Ruling

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…As PDP Elects New NWC On Basis Of Consensus

The suspended National Chairman of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), Prince Uche Secondus, has stated his intention to appeal the verdict after failing to block the PDP’s national convention at the Appeal Court in Port Harcourt.

Secondus, who said he had just received notice of the Court of Appeal’s decision dismissing his plea to suspend the party’s National Convention, added that he respected the court’s decision even though he disagreed with it completely.

Secondus said in a statement issued by his Special Adviser on Media, Ike Abonyi, that “even though the substantive case is still pending at the Court of Appeal, I have instructed my lawyers to study the ruling with a view to appealing it immediately as no abuse of our dear party’s constitution should be allowed to stand.”

“The issue is not about Prince Uche Secondus but about the sanctity of our party constitution and core democratic principles of justice and rule of law not only in PDP but in our democracy. No impunity must be condoned.

“I will therefore wish to emphasis the fact that I did not take the party to court and would not have done that.

“As a foundation member of this party who has served at various levels, State Chairman, Chairman of state Chairmen, National Organizing Secretary, Deputy National Chairman, Acting National Chairman and now National Chairman, am very much abreast with the workings of the party. I have been a witness to how much harm litigations have done to our party in the past and as a result I have been a strong advocate against settling issues in courts.

“This was why I resisted and rejected entreaties of those who wanted me to go to court to halt these forces when it was obvious that they were determined to disrupt my leadership and truncate my tenure in office with the sole objective of hijacking the party for their selfish ulterior motives.

“To allow this travesty to stand is to reduce our beloved party to a level where anybody can wake up over night and remove officers against the proscribed constitutional process and the National Chairman for that matter. And purporting to use the judiciary through an experte order to legitimize same.

“As a major practitioner in our democracy, I am duty bound to protect and defend the sanctity of the provisions of our constitution of which am the custodian.

“I wish to therefore at this juncture thank and appreciate leaders and other stakeholders of our party who have called in to express their concerns on this matter and appeal for the understanding of all.

“If those who orchestrated and fostered this avoidable crisis had listened to wise counsel of party leaders and elders who advised the withdrawal of cases, this situation would have been avoidable. I wish the party well as always.”

Meanwhile, the party, which was in joyous mood when it was announced that it won the Appeal Court case, will on Saturday elected members of the new National Working Committee (NWC) on consensus.

The only positions the 3600 delegates will elect On Saturday that are not on consensus are, Deputy National Chairman (South), Auditor and Youth Leader, while others will be affirmed on consensus.

Addressing newsmen in Abuja on Friday, the Chairman of Convention National Committee and governor of Adamawa state, Ahmadu Fintiri said, “as you can see, all the subcommittees have been mobilized and they’re fully prepared to deliver by tomorrow, most of the activities have all been completed and we’re fully satisfied.

“All the positions being contesting for are fully occupied. The result of the screening committee was submitted to me yesterday and all the positions and individuals that were disqualified, was further uphold by the Appeal Committee.

“At the moment, we’re making efforts to reconcile most of our contestants so that we can streamline them to have a better Convention, which will be hitch free and deepened our chances for 2023. Most of the positions as at today, except for three will not be contested.

“At the moment we are talking to those that are contesting for the Office of the Deputy National Chairman (South) and the those that are contesting for Office of the Auditor, and those that are contesting for Office of the Youth Leader.

“I think at the moment these are just the offices that still have many people contesting for them. The rest have been streamlined and the consensus looks like okay.

“We will be expecting 3600 delegates tomorrow. This is exactIy what I told you that I’ll be updating you because we’re still packaging the list of delegates.”

APC National Chair: I Will Follow Party’s Zoning Decision – Akume

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Senator George Akume, Minister of Special Duties and Intergovernmental Affairs and a frontrunner for the All Progressives Congress’s national chair, has stated that he will follow the party’s decision on the zoning of the party’s top position.

On Thursday, when appearing on Arise Television Night News Live, Akume addressed the subject.

He stated the party had yet to publicly identify the zone that would produce the national chairman, and that his choice to run would be contingent on the position’s zoning and what he called his “permission to contest.”

Akume alluded to his qualifications and ability to successfully and meaningfully steer the APC ship ahead of the crucial 2023 General elections, citing his eight-year governorship of Benue, where he successfully managed complex government and party issues, as well as his legislative experience and current assignment in the Federal Executive branch.

He claimed that the African People’s Congress (APC) had become the continent’s single largest political party, with over 46 million members registered.

He stated that the APC was the only option, even as he stated that the party was expecting leaders and members of the opposition Peoples Democratic Party, PDP, who were looking for a better organized and administered party.

Hon. Mai Mala Buni, the Yobe Governor and Chairman of the Interim National Convention Planning/Caretaker Committee, was praised by Akume for his focused leadership in pursuing party reconciliation.

Buni, he said, was successfully leveraging his experience in political party administration, particularly as the party’s former national secretary before becoming governor, to strengthen the party.

In response to a query about the APC’s parallel congresses, Akume noted that in places where there were parallel congresses, they were the result of alleged conflicts of interest.

He explained that there was no parallel congress in Benue State, where he is the party’s head, and that the incidence only occurred in a few states.

The APC, according to Akume, controls 22 of the 36 states in the federation, and the party has established protocols and systems for crisis management.

He used another question to reiterate why he left the PDP and joined the Action Congress, on whose platform he joined other people from different parties to form the APC.

He claimed he left the PDP, of which he was a founding leader, because it was not being run in accordance with its constitution and manifesto.

NECO Announces SSCE (Internal) Results for 2020/2021

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NECO Announces SSCE (Internal) Results for 2020/2021

… Laments N2.8 billion Debt Owed By State Governments

Professor Dantani Ibrahim Wushishi, Registrar/Chief Executive of the National Examination Council (NECO), said yesterday that the N2.8 billion debt owed by state governments, which accounts for 97 percent of the debt owed by northern state governments, is one of the major challenges weighing on the examination body.

Out of the 1, 233, 631 applicants that enrolled for the 2020/2021 Senior Secondary Certificate Examination (SSCE) (internal), a total of one thousand, one hundred and nineteen (1, 119) individuals with ‘Special Needs’ registered and participated.

Professor Wushishi revealed this during a press briefing of the 2020/2021 SSCE (internal) at the NECO headquarters. Minna, on the other hand, stated that despite the challenges, which included a spate of insecurity, the examinations were’very successful.’

The Registrar/Chief Executive began the briefing by apologizing to students who took the exams, their parents, and the Nigerian public for the delay in the distribution of the results, which exceeded the examination body’s regular 90-day timetable.

“The practice with NECO before now is that, we release the results within 90 days after the last paper, this time we had very serious challenges internal and external and lapses responsible for this delay”.

Giving details of how insecurity in parts of the country compounded the challenges NECO faced between last year and now the Registrar said, “We sincerely apologise to all parents and Nigerians that this lapses we assure that it will never happen again under my watch”.

According to Professor Wushishi, “A total of 1, 233, 631 candidates registered for the examination, but a total of 1, 226, 796 candidates actually sat for the examination, including 1, 119 Special Needs candidates”.

Further breakdown of the results indicates that, 653, 418 male students wrote the examination as against the 573,373 female students, the Registrar said and attributed the successes to the determination of not only NECO staff but the entire management.

A total of 878, 925 students scored five credits including English and Mathematics which represents, 71.64 percent, adding however that, a total of 1, 226, 796 candidates obtained five credits irrespective of English and Mathematics as against the 1, 112,14 recorded last year.

On the cases of malpractices, Professor Wushishi told journalists that a total of 20, 030 cases of malpractice were recorded as against the 34, 470 cases recorded during similar examination in the year, 2020 with significant decline of 2.1 percent.

Meanwhile, the Registrar has also disclosed that the number of candidates with Special Needs that participated in the 2020/2021 NECO SSCE (internal) increased to 1, 119 as against last year’s 160 candidates.

The Registrer who attributed the increase to the level of awareness said, “The number of candidates with Special Needs is 1, 119 including; 174 candidates with autism, 708 deaf and 178 visually impaired persons”.

Attempted Jailbreak At Benin Central Correctional Centre thwarted By Security Personnel

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An attempted jailbreak at Benin Correctional Centre led by awaiting trial inmates was foiled on Thursday by joint security operatives in Edo State.

Security officers from the Nigerian Correctional Service, Nigerian Police Force, and Nigerian Army were quickly dispatched to the Central Benin Correctional Centre to quell the rioting inmates.

The structure, also known as the White House, is located on Sapele Road, adjacent to the City Center, also known as Oba Ovoranmwen Square.

Aminu Suleman, spokesman for the Edo Command of the Nigerian Correctional Service (NCS), confirmed the incident in a statement made available to journalists in Benin City, saying no inmates escaped or died.

According to him, the attempted jailbreak started around 12.30 p.m. as a result of a confrontation between some awaiting trial inmates, particularly recaptured escapees, and convicted inmates.

Suleman went on to say that reinforcements from the state headquarters were dispatched right away to maintain law and order.

“At about 12.30 pm, some awaiting trial inmates especially the recaptured escapees started protest which led to a confrontation between them and the convicted inmates.

“Sister security agencies have showed solidarity by drafting their men around the outer perimeter fence to complement correctional service armed squad personnel to ensure total security of the custodial centre,” Suleman said.

He added that investigation into the incident has been instituted by the controller to unravel the immediate and remote causes of the disturbance.

“The controller of corrections, Felix Lawrence, wishes to assure the general public that they should go about their normal business without any fear,” he further said.

FAAC Shares N739.965bn To FG, States, LGAs In September

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The Federation Accounts Allocation Committee (FAAC) has distributed N739.965 billion in federation account earnings to the Federal, State, and Local Government Areas for September 2021.

This was stated in a communiqué published at the conclusion of the Federation Account Allocation Committee (FAAC) virtual meeting for October 2021.

The entire Distributable Revenue of N739.965 billion was made up of N577.765 billion in distributable Statutory Revenue, N159.096 billion in distributable Value Added Tax (VAT), and N3.104 billion in Exchange Gain.

Total deductions for cost of collection, statutory transfers, savings, and refunds totaled N126.272 billion in September 2021.

The Excess Crude Account (ECA) has a balance of $60.860 million.

According to the communiqué, the Federal Government received N301.311 billion, State Governments received N220.272 billion, and Local Government Councils received N164.176 billion from the total Distributable Revenue of N739.965 billion.

As a result of the 13 percent derivation revenue, a total of N54.206 billion was distributed to the relevant States.

For the month, N577.765 billion in distributable Statutory Revenue was available.

The Federal Government received N276.008 billion, State Governments N139.995 billion, and Local Government Councils N107.930 billion from this sum.

The relevant States were allocated N53.831 billion as 13 percent derivation revenue.

The gross revenue available from the Value Added Tax (VAT) in September 2021 was N170.850 billion.

This was N7.659 billion less than the N178.509 billion made available in August.

The N170.850 billion gross Value Added Tax (VAT) income was reduced by the amount of N4.920 billion allocated to NEDC and N6.834 billion cost of revenue collection, resulting in a distributable Value Added Tax (VAT) revenue of N159.096 billion.

The Federal Government collected N23.864 billion from the N159.096 billion in distributable Value Added Tax (VAT) revenue, while State Governments received N79.548 billion and Local Government Councils received N55.684 billion.

From the N3.104 billion in Exchange Gain earnings, the Federal Government earned N1.438 billion.

State governments receive N0.729 billion, local government councils receive N0.562 billion, and the appropriate states receive N0.375 billion in derivation money.

Petroleum Profit Tax (PPT), Oil and Gas Royalties, and Excise Duty increased significantly in September 2021, whereas Companies Income Tax (CIT), Value Added Tax (VAT), and Import Duty declined marginally, according to the communiqué.

USA, UK Universities Ranks Top In 2021 World University Reputation Rankings

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For the 11th year in a row, Harvard University, a private Ivy League research university in Cambridge, Massachusetts, leads the World University Reputation Rankings in 2021.

The United Kingdom is the most well-represented country in the Times Higher Education World Reputation Rankings, with 57 institutions, down from 60 last year.

The World Reputation Rankings 2021, according to the Times Higher Education, are based on the world’s largest invitation-only opinion survey of senior, published academics.

It asks academics to pick no more than 15 universities in their specialty that they believe are the finest for research and teaching.

The rankings put Massachusetts Institute of Technology, University of Oxford, and Stanford University in second, third, and fourth place, respectively.

The University of Cambridge in the United Kingdom came in fifth place out of a total of 25 UK universities in the rankings.

In the rankings, the United Kingdom still has the second-highest number of delegates.

Tsinghua University, a public research university in Beijing and a member of the C9 League of Chinese institutions, which was founded in 1911, rose three places to become the first Chinese university to enter the top ten.

According to THE, the technique was based on a poll that took place between November 2020 and February 2021 and garnered 10,963 responses from 128 nations.

“The best-represented subject was clinical and health (accounting for 16.3 per cent of responses), followed by engineering (15.8 per cent), life sciences (14.9 per cent) and physical sciences (14.2 per cent). Also, well represented were computer science (9.8 per cent), business and economics (8.2 per cent), arts and humanities (7.7 per cent) and social sciences (7.5 per cent). The rest of the responses came from psychology (2.8 per cent), education (2.2 per cent) and law (0.6 per cent).

“However, to ensure that the ranking is representative of the global distribution of scholars, THE’s data team rebalanced the weights to a fixed benchmark. These were as follows: physical sciences (14.6 per cent), clinical and health (14.5 per cent), life sciences (13.4 per cent), business and economics (13.1 per cent), engineering (12.7 per cent), arts and humanities (12.5 per cent), social sciences (8.9 per cent), computer science (4.2 per cent), education (2.6 per cent), psychology (2.6 per cent) and law (0.9 per cent).
“We have also maintained a fair distribution of survey responses across the regions.

“A total of 39.1 per cent of responses hail from the Asia-Pacific region. The rest of the responses break down as follows: Western Europe accounted for 24.3 per cent, North America for 21.7 per cent, Eastern Europe for 6.3 per cent, Latin America for 4.2 per cent, the Middle East for 2.4 per cent and Africa for 2 per cent.

“Where countries were over-or under-represented, THE’s data team weighted the responses to more closely reflect the actual geographical distribution of scholars based on UN data,” THE said.

The report added that the “World Reputation Rankings 2021 reveal how universities’ response to the pandemic may have started to shift scholars’ views of the best universities for teaching and research”, saying the full impact remains to be seen.

Other countries that featured on the World Reputation Rankings 2021 included Japan, Canada, Israel, Russian Federation, Ireland, Austria, Sweden, Canada, Singapore Italy, Norway, South Korea and Belgium.

No University on the African continent is featured on the table.

Counterfeit Drugs: Without Manpower , Vehicles, ‘We’ Can’t Match Drug Cabals , NAFDAC Boss

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NAFDAC DG

If appropriate staff and operating vehicles are not made available to the regulatory authority, Nigeria risks losing the war against drug counterfeiting and the threats it poses to the citizenry’s health.

Prof. Mojisola Adeyeye, Director General of the National Agency for Food, Drug Administration and Control (NAFDAC), revealed this alarming reality at a budget defense session with the House of Representatives Committee on Health Services on Thursday.

This came as the House Committee questioned what it called “overbloated statistics” in the Agency’s 2022 budget for the many capital projects slated for completion in the fiscal year 2022.

The nation’s Food and Drugs regulatory leader told lawmakers that in the past, the agency had to rely on corporations for their operational mobility before they could go for inspection, in defense of her agency and its use of what was revealed the previous year.

According to her, “In the past, NAFDAC was asking companies to send them vehicles to come and inspect them. Who does not know that you will have to do a favour for those who provided us vehicles? What I am saying is that there were no vehicles and we use vehicles for good manufacturing practice, we use it for clinical sites and other inspections. About 80 percent of our work is field work and without vehicles, we cannot work and that is what you will use to pursue those who wants to kill our people.

“In 2020, we had a survey which was done in collaboration with WHO. But it was limited in scope. Some of the products were local products and others imported and we found some compromises and we shut down production lines and companies involved lost hundreds of millions of naira because we wanted to send a message to them that our people are more important and the health of our people are more important.

“We have black listed companies and we published them for trying to take us for granted. These are companies from South East Asia and we also black listed products of companies they are associating with in Nigeria. Our enforcement team work round the clock.

“About ten days ago, they went on a raid based on a tip off and they recovered eight trucks load of falsified medicines.
Another way we are approaching it is to use a detection device which FEC (Federal Executive Council) approved for us in December 2020. Each one of them cost about 57000 dollars after it has been discounted for us. We are able to buy 40 which they are manufacturing right now. It is called Truscan. NAFDAC is the first agency in the world to use it about 10 years ago and we bought about 6 then and we are no buying 40 more. It can tell you whether the drug is falsified or substandard”, the DG told lawmakers.

Chairman of the House Committee Hon. Tanko Sununu and other committee members had raised issues with the figures proposed in the 2022 budget of the agency for its capital projects.

The DG had presented an estimate of N25.2 billion for the 2022 fiscal year as expenditure and revenue projections of the agency including capital projects earmarked for execution.

In summary of the capital projects, the agency had earmarked, N2.9 billion is for building of state offices, N1.7bn for generators, N1.4 billion for laboratory equipments, N1.42 billion for motor vehicles, N666 million for information and communications technology and N78 million for furniture, totalling N6.01 billion

Also , in 2022 budget, the agency had earmarked N6.78 billion for staff emoluments, N262 million for equipments and N157.8 million for purchase of laptop computers and N40.1 million for the building of its Ebonyi state office.

But the Committee helmsman and other lawmakers expressed displeasure with the huge budget proposal items for each of the budget heads saying that it is worrisome to see such huge figures in the budget items despite the previous years approved budgets.

Sununu while querying these line items presented by the agency called on the DG to ensure effective collaboration of NAFDAC with other relevant healthcare agencies, such as Nigeria Institute of Pharmaceutical Research and Development NIPRD and Nigeria Institute of Medical Research NIMR.

Similarly, the lawmaker and another committee member, Hon. Omowumni Ogunlola (Osun, APC) had earlier raised issues with the lopsidedness of the recent recruitment carried out by the NIMR during the agency’s budget defence session by the Committee.

Other lawmakers in the Committee notably Hon. Isiaka Ibrahim (Ogun, APC), Hon. Aminu Suleiman (Kano, APC) as well as Hon Muhammad Wudil (Kano, APC) also kicked against the award of contracts above the approved threshold of these agencies by the chief executive officers.