President Muhammadu Buhari submitting the 2016 Budget proposals earlier in the year |
President Muhammadu
Buhari has refused to sign the 2016 budget a week after the document was sent
to him by the National Assembly, presidency officials said Tuesday, further
delaying the implementation of a budget the government hopes will help Nigeria
out of its present economic crisis.
Media
report continues:
A
top presidency official said Mr. Buhari could not sign the budget because the
passed budget had no details.
The
official said almost a week after the National Assembly passed the 2016
Appropriation Bill, details of the approved Appropriation Bill were yet to be
transmitted to the president.
The
source said Mr. Buhari had been anxious to give assent to the Bill, but that he
was concerned that signing the budget without details may give approval to an
un-implementable spending plan.
“The
president has not been able to sign the Bill into law because he does not know
what is contained in the details and what adjustments the National Assembly
made to the proposal sent to them last December,” the official told correspondents
on Tuesday.
The
source, who did not want his name disclosed as he was not authorized to comment
on the issue in his official capacity, said the delay in transmitting the
details could mean that the National Assembly either did not complete work on
the budget, or were “playing politics” with the passage of the document.
He
said the president was disappointed that his desire to see the immediate
implementation of the provisions to ease the tension in the economy and polity
would have to tarry a little longer till when the details were transmitted to
him and the adjustments are found to be implementable.
The
harmonized ₦6.06 trillion budget was finally passed by both chambers of the
National Assembly last Wednesday after weeks of bickering over controversial
allocations in the ₦6.08 trillion proposal submitted by Mr. Buhari on December
22, 2015.
Details
of the approved appropriation showed that N1.59 trillion was allocated for
capital expenditure, and ₦2.65 trillion for recurrent expenditure, while about ₦1.48
trillion was approved for debt servicing.
The
lawmakers also approved about ₦2.2 trillion as deficit, with N500 billion going
for social intervention projects and ₦351.4billion for Statutory transfers.
The
final assent to the budget is sure to suffer another delay for at least one
more week as Mr. Buhari leaves Abuja Wednesday to attend a Nuclear Summit in
Washington DC, USA.
When
contacted, the Senate spokesperson, Abdullahi Sabi, said he would not comment
on the issue, but he assured that the National Assembly would not do anything
to sabotage the collective interest of all Nigerians.
The chairman of the Senate
Committee on Appropriation, Danjuma Goje, did not answer several calls to his
telephone on Tuesday. He did not also respond to the text message sent to him
on the issue.
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