SERAP Seeks Transparency In N729bn Disbursement To Poor Nigerians

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Human rights organisation, the Socio-Economic Rights and Accountability Project (SERAP), has launched a lawsuit against the Federal Government, seeking disclosure in the disbursement of N729 billion earmarked for poor Nigerians.

The suit, with the number FHC/L/CS/853/2021 and filed at the Federal High Court, Lagos, seeks clarification on whether the money makes up part of the N5.6 trillion budget deficit.

Disclosing this was the group’s Deputy Director, Kolawole Oluwadare, in a statement shared on Sunday.

SERAP said that it was seeking “an order directing and compelling the Federal Government to clarify whether the proposed payment to poor Nigerians is part of the ₦5.6 trillion budget deficits.”

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It added that it also sought the court “to compel the Federal Government to disclose details of proposed payments of ₦729bn to 24.3 million poor Nigerians, including the mechanisms and logistics for the payments, list of beneficiaries, and how they have been selected, and whether the payments will be made in cash or through Bank Verification Numbers or other means”.

Kolawole noted that SERAP was also seeking the disclosure of “the details of beneficiaries and selection criteria, as well as the payment plan [which] would promote transparency and accountability, and remove the risks of mismanagement and diversion of public funds”.

“Providing support and assistance to poor Nigerians is a human rights obligation but the programme to spend five percent of the 2021 budget, which is mostly based on deficit and borrowing, requires anti-corruption safeguards to ensure the payments go directly to the intended beneficiaries, and that public funds are not mismanaged or diverted.

“The Nigerian Constitution of 1999 [as amended], UN Convention against Corruption, and African Union Convention on Preventing and Combating Corruption to which Nigeria is a state, require the government to set the highest standards of transparency, accountability and probity in programmes that it oversees.

“The government has a responsibility to ensure that these requirements and other anti-corruption controls are fully implemented and monitored and that the payments are justified in light of the huge budget deficit and borrowing, and whether there are better ways to spend N729bn to support poor Nigerians.”