The Presidency has issued a warning to Ekiti State Governor,
Ayodele Fayose over the allegations he made about the federal government,
pertaining to the September federal allocation of N389 billion.
Reacting to Fayose, the Senior Special Assistant to the
President on Media and Publicity, Malam Garba Shehu, warned the governor to
stop making unsubstantiated allegations pertaining to the running of the
economy by the federal government.
Shehu, who described Fayose’s comment as reckless and
typical of his past said “the governor didn’t get his facts correct.”
This came as a reaction to the remarks Fayose made at the
recent graduation ceremony of College of Education, Ikere-Ekiti, in which he
asked President Muhammadu Buhari to address Nigerians on the state of the
economy.
Fayose had specifically accused the Buhari administration of
paying out the lowest-ever federally distributed allocations among the three
tiers of the government.
According to the presidential spokesman, records of such
past allocations showed “that the lowest-ever allocation to the three tiers was
issued by the PDP-led Goodluck Jonathan administration.”
While calling on the Ekiti Governor to be mindful of his
utterances, Shehu said: “Governor Fayose needs to be advised to desist from
spreading falsehood against the person and government of President Muahmmadu
Buhari as has become characteristic of him. He needs to get his facts right
before making accusations of the nature he makes.
“The governor equally knows full well that his party in
government ruined the economy to the extent that workers in 27 states went for
several months without salary. This crisis situation has now been reversed in
nearly all the states. Governor Fayose is himself in line for the collection of
his state’s bailout.
“Under the PDP federal government, ministries were not given
overhead costs for five months while the capital budget was unpaid for six
months in the run-up to the exit of the PDP administration. Is there anyone in
that party with a moral justification to criticise the Buhari administration
which is working hard to clean up the mess they (PDP) left behind?”
Shehu, who used statistics in backing up his position,
stated that the lowest monthly allocation in the last 12 months, amounting to
N358 billion, was distributed in May this year under the PDP government, adding
that the figure rose to N380 billion in June before it fell to N373 billion in
October.
He continued: “Records obtained from the Ministry of Finance
show that the decline in federally collected revenues shared by the three tiers
didn’t just set in but had become clearly manifest under the PDP
administration. In February, N480 billion was distributed. In March it was N459bn;
April, N385bn; May, N357bn; June N389bn, and July, N526bn. In August, N499bn
was paid out; September, N412bn and N374 in October.”
“As most Nigerians are aware, this decline in revenue has
chiefly been caused by the drastic fall in oil prices, compounded by the
free-wheeling crude oil theft which was allowed to thrive under the PDP
administration in which Governor Fayose was a leading character.”
The presidential spokesman further noted that the low
allocation under the present administration was a temporary phase that would
soon go away, “as the various measures put in place by the government to block
leakages in revenue generation come to fruition”.
On how the problem of declining allocation would be
addressed, Shehu said: “Non-oil revenue is expected to rise substantially with
the effective take-off of the Treasury Single Account (TSA). With this in
place, government now has a framework for understanding the picture of
accruable revenues in ministries, departments and agencies (MDAs). They will no
longer tax and spend, but do so only in line with their budgets.
“Reforms and the close monitoring in the Federal Inland
Revenue Service and the Customs are all expected to shoot up federally
collected revenues and would, in a short period from now, start to move the
country from over-reliance on oil as promised by the president.”
Stressing that President Buhari did not need the unnecessary
heckling by Governor Fayose to achieve all these, Shehu added that, “Neither is
the country helped in any way by leaders peddling falsehood.”
Vanguard

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