The
acting Managing Director of the Niger Delta Development Commission (NDDC),
Kemebradikumo Pondei, has admitted that the commission spent N1.5 billion for
staff as ‘COVID-19 relief funds’.
He made this statement at the investigative hearing on the
N40 billion corruption allegation against the commission.
The
Senate had on May 5 set up a seven-man ad-hoc committee to investigate the
“financial recklessness” of the Interim Management Committee (IMC) of the
commission.
The lawmakers said, within the last three months, the
commission has spent over N40 billion of the commission’s fund ”without
recourse to established processes of funds disbursement which has opened up
further suspicion among stakeholders of the Niger Delta Region.”
They also faulted the IMC’s ”arbitrary use of executive
power in an alleged wrongful sacking of management staff without recourse to
established civil service rules and practice with the aim of allegedly
concealing the fraudulent financial recklessness they have committed.”
Mr Pondei and other delegates from the commission appeared
before the committee on Thursday for the hearing.
Part of the audit report read out by the chairman of the
committee, Olubunmi Adetunmbi, said N3.1 billion was spent as COVID-19 funds
between October 2019 and May 2020.
In the report, the lawmaker said ”N10
million was paid to one person, N7 million to two people, N5 million to three
people, 148 people took N3 million each, 157 people got N1.5 million each, 497
people got N1 million each and 464 people were paid N600,000 each.”
Another N475 million was given to the police to purchase face
masks and hand sanitisers, he added.
Responding to questions regarding the COVID-19 Relief Fund
paid to NDDC staff, the MD said ”only N1.5 billion was used to take care of
staff” despite being paid their salaries.
He explained that part of the fund was for the youth of Niger
Delta.
”The youth were given palliatives to help cushion the effect
of the pandemic on the people. The youth were idle and to avoid violence, they
were paid,” he said.
“Five million for youths and
five million for women and five million for people living with disabilities in
each senatorial district,” he said.
He said ”the remaining fund was spent
on staff of the commission.”
“We used it to take care of
ourselves. We are NDDC, we need to take care of ourselves too,” he said.
He further explained that the IMC inherited debts upon
assumption of office ”that needed to be cleared on
time.”
He said the previous management owed hotels and had unpaid
electricity bills of about N26 million.
When asked why the police was given N475 million, Mr Pondei
said a request was made from ”the high command of police
and the management took a look at it and approved it.”
He explained that the money ”was an intervention and the
NDDC is expecting a report as to how the money was spent.”
Meanwhile, the acting deputy director, projects, Cairo
Ojougboh, added that the money given to police is for nine states of the Niger
Delta region.
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