THE House of Representatives Committee on Public Accounts on Tuesday resolved to commence full investigation into its 6th Session Committee on Power over the payment of N31m to it by the National Electricity Regulatory Commission for capacity training of its members with no evidence that the training ever took place.
The amount in question was reportedly paid to a personal aide of the Committee at that time in two instalments of N18m and N13million respectively.
The resolution was made by the Committee Chaired by Honourable Solomon Adeola Olamilekan when the Chairman of the Electricity Regulatory Commission, Dr Sam Amadi along with top officials of the Commission appeared before it over the financial queries raised against it by the office of the Auditor General of the Federation which covered between 2009 and 2010 respectively.
The Auditor General’s query revealed that the amount was collected by an aide to the Chairman of the Committee for the members to attend a capacity training workshop overseas but with no evidence that the members attended the said workshop and the money was not returned to the Commission in line with financial regulations.
In a related development, the Commission was also accused of paying a sum of $5,000 to a foreign resource person through the black market despite the readiness of the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) to carry out the transaction on behalf of the Commission but demanded for relevant documents that would facilitate the transaction.
According to the AGF, rather than to return to the CBN with the request documents, the Commission took the amount from the CBN and gave it to a staff who went to the black market to carry out the transaction.
The Commission was also said to have bought a 100kv generator at the cost of N6m for the Secretariat of the Presidential Task Force on Electricity Reform which market value was put at between N1.5m and N2.5m without following due process.
At the hearing session, Dr Amadi admitted that the transaction and other ones as contained in the Auditor General’s query actually took place but were done before his assumption of office and as such he would only rely on available information from the staff for defence, the submission which the Committee declared as unacceptable, insisting that the Commission must account for every kobo involved.
Consequently, the Committee resolved that the Chairman of the Commission must appear before it on November 11 this year along with his predecessor in office and all the former commissioners that were in office when the transactions took place.
The Committee directed the Chairman of the Commission to come along with the name of the aide to the then Chairman House Committee on Power who collected the money, the names of the members of the Committee who benefited from the money, the amount collected each,the relevant documents on mode of payment of the money to the aide, whether by cheque or cash.
The Commission is also to furnish the committee with the name of the staff that collected the $5,000 and all documents related to the transaction and other relevant documents on the N6m generating set.
The Chairman of the Committee, Hon Olamilekan lamented that the Committee was worried that a whopping sum of N31m could be paid to an aide of a Chairman of the Committee and not the Chairman and members directly for the purported capacity training if the transaction actually took place.
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