Coordinating
Minister for the Economy and Minister of Finance, Dr. Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala has
maintained her stance that N24 billion is not missing from the police pension
account contrary to allegations.
According
to her, allegations by the Chairman of the House Committee on Public Accounts,
Hon. Solomon Adeola Olamilekan “over a so-called ‘missing’ N24 billion from the
Police pension account are as ridiculous as they are false.”
The
minister’s Special Adviser (Media), Mr. Paul Nwabuikwu, in a statement last
night, said: “As we explained in a recent communication, the money is not
missing.”
“It
is unfortunate that the Chairman has persisted in using his privileged platform
to disseminate such distortions even though the Minister has repeatedly
explained to the Committee that the money was an overpayment based on the
demands of those trying to steal from pension funds which was successfully
blocked and the money returned to the treasury by the minister.
“This
persistence in peddling this untruth suggests that this is yet another attempt
to tarnish the image of the Minister for partisan political reasons and to take
public attention away from the positive efforts to reform the historically
problematic pensions sector.
“It is indeed a sad irony that the Committee Chairman is attacking the minister for taking action to ensure that public money was not stolen, but put back into the treasury where it belongs,” the statement said.
“It is indeed a sad irony that the Committee Chairman is attacking the minister for taking action to ensure that public money was not stolen, but put back into the treasury where it belongs,” the statement said.
Nwabuikwu
noted that it was also important to state that the amount in question was
returned to the treasury well before the Director General of the
Pension Transitional Arrangement Department (PTAD) was appointed, arguing that
effort to use her to “confirm” that the amount is missing was therefore
contrived and deceptive.
“The
minister is currently out of the country but she is ready and willing to take
up the challenge posed by the Committee Chairman for a public discussion on the
issue.
“Beyond
this issue, she also looks forward to the opportunity to throw light on the
status of pension reforms and the Federal Government’s efforts to fix the
problems of the sector in a sustainable way,” the statement added.
The
minister had earlier debunked the reported disappearance of the fund from the
Police Pension Fund, saying the money in question was discovered to be an
over-estimation of pensions arrears and subsequently returned to government
coffers in line with standard practice.
Okonjo-Iweala
stated that in March 2012, she had told the Senate Joint Committee on Pensions
Administration at a public hearing that she ordered the account frozen to
prevent fraud based on reports of suspicious transactions.
The
minister's reaction was sequel to what transpired at the recent House of
Representatives’ Public Accounts Committee (PAC) probe, where the Director
General of the Pension Transitional Arrangement Department (PTAD), Mrs. Nellie
Mayshak had told the committee that "no documentary evidence"
exists on the whereabouts of N24 billion released from the Service Wide Vote in
2010 for the Police Pension Fund.
I wonder they woun't allow this woman to do her job
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