
Abubakar had appeared
before the House Committee on Police Affairs to defend the budget of the
police, but the session turned into lamentation over the challenging work
conditions of policemen in the country.
Chairman of the
committee, Mr. Usman Kurmo, confirmed the IG’s worries when he said the salary
budget cut was about N13bn.
“As a committee, we have
done a calculation on what the IG is saying; the money is about N13bn.
“That is the much that
was reduced in the personnel cost of the police force in the budget,” he
stated.
Kurmo said as of 2013,
the personnel cost of the police was N293.5bn, but added that it went down to
N279bn in the 2014 budget.
He noted that the slash
was surprising since there were no large-scale retrenchment or retirement by
the police in the last one year that could lead to a reduction of N13bn from
their salary budget.
The IG appealed to the
committee to look into the matter urgently by resolving it before it would
begin to affect the salaries and allowances of men and officers of the force.
Abubakar said, “Mr.
Chairman, this is a serious shortfall. Very soon, it means that we will not be
able to pay salaries.
“I urge the committee to
address this in order to avoid a likely crisis; this has to do with the welfare
of our personnel.”
Responding, Kurmo said
he had already met with the matter with the Director-General of the Budget
Office of the Federation, Dr. Bright Okogu, who assured him that the issue
would be sorted out.
He said Okogu had
explained that the office started an integrated salary payment system across
all agencies since 2013, resulting in cuts for many of them.
The DG was said to have
stated that his office found out that “what is provided for the police will be
enough for the personnel cost.”
However, he was said to
have added that in the event of a shortfall, the gap would be filled with money
drawn from Service Wide vote.
Speaking on funding for
police operations generally, the IG told the lawmakers that the overheads cost
had been dropping since 2009.
Giving a year by year
report, he said the overhead cost was N10.8bn in 2009; N15.6bn in 2010; N5.5bn
in 2011; N8.1bn in 2012; N7.6bn in 2013 and N6bn in 2014.
Abubakar expressed
concern that at a time the police were over-stretched by insecurity, government
was consistently underfunding their operations.
For example, he said the
N6bn voted for personnel cost could not cover the cost of fuelling the 10,232
police vehicles scattered all over the country
The committee resolved
that one way of addressing the funding problem of the police was to prioritise
the expenditure of the force so that more money could be moved to areas of
importance.
“If we are really
serious about transforming this country, then we must first transform the
security agencies,” he added.
Meanwhile, the Chairman
of the Independent Corrupt Practices and other Related Offences Commission, Mr
Ekpo Nta, disclosed that the commission arrested a junior member of staff
of the National Pension Commission with 50 bank accounts.
He told the House
Committee on Anti-Corruption, National Ethics and Values that the officer
operated the accounts with 50 different names and signatures.
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