|
In my intervention letter to the
Minister of Information and
Communication, Prof. Dora Akunyili,
dated June 2, 2009 on the dispute
involving her Ministry and other parties
in the disposal of 2.3GHz Licensing
Round by the Nigeria Communication
Commission (NCC), the 14-page document
was based on personal monitoring of the
process over time, my knowledge as a
student of purchasing and supply and
legal review of the Public Procurement
Act (PPA) 2007 as it relates to the
crisis.
Though the Minister failed to
acknowledge or reply to that letter
which was copied to all parties involved
in the dispute, including the Chairman
and the Director General of NCC, the
Economic and Financial Crime Commission
(EFCC), the Director General of the
National Broadcasting Commission (NBC),
and the petitioner, it is evident that
some of the errors and unresolved issues
pointed out in that letter are now
reappearing in this latest contract
fraud in public procurement corruption.
Now, as the nation is struggling with
severe economic crises, another round of
frauds are committed daily which now
occupies our national media – print and
electronic – to the detriment of already
depressed Nigerians. At the centre of
this latest saga again are the Minister
of Information and Communication, Prof.
Dora Akunyili and her co-travelers.
Others include the Director General of
the Nigeria Television Authority (NTA),
Mall Bello Aliyu Magawata, the NTA
Tenders Board and the Director General
of the Bureau of Public Procurement (BPP),
Engr. Emeka Ezeh.
The revelations on this latest web of
corruption and the debate generated so
far would have been enough to allow for
public evaluation of the happenings, but
the comments by Senator Ayogu Eze,
Chairman of the Senate Committee on
Media and Communications, to the effect
that he apologized to the DG of BPP and
that “we are now wiser” with the
explanation offered by Engr. Ezeh is to
my mind a deceit of the highest order,
an insult to the generality of Nigerians
and a ploy to rubber-stamp the hidden
agenda, which has provoked this
rejoinder, as a means to putting the
record straight so that the unsuspecting
public are better informed about this
latest political hara-kiri and to
guard against this outpouring by an
elected (or selected) leader. This
summersault in his comment is coming on
the heels of his earlier description of
the Bureau as a Due Delay Process Office
(DDPO) in less than a month ago.
From the information available on that
live transmission of the event as it
occurred during the session, it came to
demonstrate to us once again the caliber
of people we have in leadership
positions, as they gradually exhibit the
rot and collapse that have engulfed the
nation under their supervision.
Ultimately, those entrusted with public
funds are now the same people looting
the treasury.
The NTA contract saga as it now known
began with the N8.9bn contract purported
to have been awarded in 2009 by NTA
which the bulk of the outstanding are
smuggled into the 2010 Appropriation
Bill, as the personnel in the Ministry
of Information and Communications
defends their budget before the Senate
Committee with the oversight
responsibility. The controversies evolve
around the upgrading of some OB Vans, in
lieu of the Under-17 World Cup. The
Vans, eight in number are currently
being held by a foreign firm named WTS
based in London, and would not release
them until the balance of money paid or
a government guarantee is issued. The
repairs on the eight OB Vans is said to
have been completed four months ago with
part payment, a counter-part funding
agreement with the Ministry already paid
to the contractor by NTA from the
internally generated revenue. The amount
paid is yet to be disclosed.
While it is a well known fact that none
of the parties involved in this contract
mis-procurement, including
Senator Eze, the Minister, Prof.
Akunyili, Mall. Magawata and the DG of
the BPP, Engr. Eze have the professional
capacity to engage the matter, we would
however hold them responsible for their
actions as public officers entrusted
with public funds and for failing to
heed several warnings and advises on
this danger that was predicted long time
ago.
To provide a useful analysis of the
whole scenario and support the claims
above, it will be helpful to review the
statements and actions of each party,
one after the other. This I have no
doubt will avail even a lay man an
understanding of the entire process and
the criminal marriage that took place
behind the scene daily in our economy.
Though this is just one of the frauds
committed daily, it is helpful to put it
on record for posterity.
Beginning with Prof. Akunyili, she
claimed the contract was not awarded by
her; rather she only received three
names of contractors forwarded to her by
the NTA (Director General?) which she
forwarded to the Federal Executive
Council (FEC) for approval. Further she
claimed that the planning of the
contract started about two years ago
before her appointment as Minister, and
concluded that she is ignorant of the
technicalities involved in the
procurement processes.
Everyone knows that ignorance is not an
excuse in law, to accept the above
statement and put them as facts before a
court of competent jurisdiction is to
commit her to the fact that she is
ignorant of public office procedures
which she has been part of since July
2007. And in the spirit of ‘Rebranding
Nigeria’, will she swear that this is
the first contract awarded under her
supervision since her career as public
office holder? Of course, the answer is
‘NO’. In procurement implementation
under this circumstance, no contract is
awarded to three contractors at the same
time and then forwards same to the FEC
for approval. The questions are who are
these three contractors? (One is known
as WTS by the admission of Engr. Ezeh).
Why did Prof. Akunyili failed to refer
same to BPP for action or return same to
the NTA Tenders Board, the DG or Board
for implementation as contained in
Section 16 (21-22), 17, 19 and 20 (1) of
the PPA 2007.
In his defense during the session, the
NTA Director General, Mall. Magawata
simply said that an advanced payment,
the counter-part funding from NTA has
been paid to the contractor. In any
procurement planning under the PPA, the
DG of NTA is the Chief Accounting
Officer for his Agency; as such he will
be responsible for any action or
inaction arising therein. By forwarding
three names of contractor to the
Minister, the NTA DG failed in my
opinion to perform his role under
Section 16 (20), (21), 18, 19, 20(1) and
20(2) of the PPA. Specifically, he
failed to integrate procurement
expenditure into the yearly budget
before award of contract. Again, there
is an error in the estimation of
procurement budget based on approved
threshold for the Agency, a failure to
determine the best procurement method
based on the estimated value and
situation under the International
Competitive Bidding (ICB) which is a
violation of the Act. In summary, the DG
failed under the law to ensure that
estimated amount is actually available
in the 2008 or 2009 Appropriation Act as
the case may be. However, by sending
three names to the Minister, one can
assume there is no contract awarded yet.
Now coming to the role of the DG of the
Bureau of Public Procurement (BPP) in
this newest order, the exposition so far
is a pointer and confirmation of several
submissions and warnings about the lack
of competence management and composition
of the BPP to deal with issues on public
procurement process and the economy. To
review the content of his submissions
and put Senator Eze’s claim to shame,
let me generally relay his comments and
evaluate it against his position as a
regulatory organ and then allow the
public to do justice by determine
whether he deserve ‘a pat in the
back’ as said by Senator Eze.
Engr. Emeka Ezeh admitted on the floor
of the Senate, before the nation’s media
crew of print and electronic that the
President sent the details of the three
contractors to him for review. In this
chain of contract award, the bus stop is
now at Engr. Ezeh’s door step. On
analyzing the contract documents he
found out there were errors, which
include that the project (contract) was
not appropriated for, neither was it
advertised for prospective bidders as
required by law in Section 24 of the PPA.
As a follow up to this, Engr. Ezeh wrote
the DG of NTA, Mall Magawata and pointed
out the errors, but the NTA DG replied
that they are satisfied with the
selected contractors as they can match
any other competitors even if when
advertised.
Based on the response from Mall Magawata,
Engr. Ezeh informed us that he decided
to introduce a Damage Control Mechanism
(DCM) and awarded the contract to WTS,
one of the three contractors forwarded
to him by the President, believing in
his own judgment that WTS is the best of
the three contractors because with only
20% down payment on the total sum of
N8.9bn, WTS will give reasonable
moratorium to the NTA Network Stations
before the balance of 80% is paid.
Further he claimed that the contractor
showed incontrovertible evidence of its
ability to fund the project and have has
agreed that the balance of the money be
spread over a period of 24 months, and
as such “the offer is too good to
refuse”
What a scenario! What a billion Dollar
movie scene! From a layman’s view, the
above scenes appear perfect, the DCM has
indeed worked and the Bureau (or the DG)
has saved Nigeria (government) money
according to Senator Ayogu Eze. There
are however many questions that begs for
answers here. Let us begin with the
first as our common knowledge permits.
If Engr. Eze intervention was indeed a
damage control, why then are we having
this problem and the Senate Committee is
concerned about the errors? And
locating this within the ambit of the
law, the next question is was the
process of awarding the contractor
fraudulent as claimed by Engr. Eze
during his investigations? If the answer
is yes, then the next question will be
did Engr. Eze awarded the contract
instead of returning same to the
procuring entity (NTA tenders Board) as
required by law? Unfortunately the
Senate Committee failed to ask these
simple questions that would have exposed
the truth.
The answers to the above questions are
simple. In the foregoing circumstances,
the Bureau under Engr. Ezeh has not only
become a player but a party to the
contract award. In essence, he is now
acting as a procuring entity instead of
an independent umpire that should
adjudicate on the matter when and if
there is a dispute. He merely removed
his uniform as a referee and become a
player with Jersey No. 10. The next
action is to score a goal and he did it!
The President acted in line with the
rule of law when he refused to approve
or award the contract but forwarded the
names of the contractors to the Bureau
for review, which is to investigate.
Since the Minister, Prof. Akunyili
failed to forward same to the Bureau,
the DG, Engr. Ezeh should know far more
than anyone that the procedure under the
law is to forward same to the procuring
entity, or cause another action under
the law..
By selecting one of the contractors
forwarded to Engr. Ezeh, which he
described as damage control, knowing
that the award failed due process make
him a party in the dispute. The
invitation of Engr. Ezeh by the Senate
Committee to explain his role in the
illegality is an indictment on the DG
and a confirmation of the above fact.
For the benefit of doubt, Section 53 of
the Act establishing the Bureau empowers
it to review and recommend for
investigation any relevant authority and
any matter related to the conduct of
procurement proceedings by procuring
entities or the conclusion or operation
of a procurement contract, if it
considers that a criminal investigation
is necessary to detect or prevent an
infraction of the law
In any procurement dispute, the BPP is
an umpire, a quasi-court of first
jurisdiction whose pronouncements can
only be challenged in the Federal High
Court. By involving himself in the
direct selection and award of the
illegal contract makes him the biggest
offender under the Act in review. The
implications are that Engr. Ezeh is now
a party to the award of contract and
therefore lacks the legal power and
moral justification to perform the
regulatory or oversight function, but
answerable to the criminal intention
therein.
For the benefit of the unsuspecting
public, procurement stages involve
planning, implementation, execution and
evaluation/audit. The NTA Tenders Board
and Director General are saddled with
the implementation and final award of
contract of the OB Vans. The Tenders
Board failed in their responsibility to
carry out certain actions which include
to advertise, solicit or invite bidders
in line with International Competitive
Bidding (ICB) as contained in Section 16
(21,22), 17, 19, 20 (1) 23, 43 and 45 of
the PPA. The failure to obtain
Performance Guarantee and award the
contract before forwarding three names
for approval (?) or otherwise informed
the decision of the Minister of Finance
not to issue a Bank Guarantee.
While it is not out of place to commend
the President, Finance Minister and the
Debt Management Office (DMO) for their
actions, let us revert this issue back
to the National Assembly, where the
exposition occurred, and as they have
the oversight responsibility of ensuring
transparency, accountability and value
for money in our fiscal expenditure.
Section 5(p) of the PPA requires that
the National Assembly receive a
bi-annual audit report of all
Ministries, Departments and Agencies (MDAs)
of government from the BPP to assist
with their detention of frauds, errors
and arrest cases associated with public
procurement corruption. This is to
ensure transparency in the management of
our economy. Despite series of advises
and warnings to this effect, the
National Assembly has never called for
this audit since the inception of the
Bureau. By this action and inaction, the
national Assembly has also failed in
their duties to curtail public
procurement corruption that we are
witnessing daily. The recent outpouring
against the Bureau for me is a
face-saving strategy to hide the truth.
The laws are available; it is only the
implementers that are not available. It
is possible to attempt fooling
Nigerians, but Nigerians are not fools.
Flowing from the above, the apology
granted to Engr. Ezeh by Senator Ayogu
Eze brings us to a dangerous juncture in
the implementation of public procurement
in Nigeria where nepotism and selfish
interest makes us sacrifice the
provisions of the law. If this type of
action is left unchallenged, we would
have suffered a great loss in the fight
against corruption. Worse still, we may
have introduced into our procurement
system superstructures that we may never
recover from. We would also be telling
the whole world that the Nigeria Senate
is packed with ‘yes men’ who cannot
discern right from wrong and merely sit
to rubberstamp the whims and caprices of
the mundane mind that cook up
misprocurement and injustice at all
levels in Nigeria.
The film show as it occurred on the
floor of the National Assembly is just a
new addition to the accumulated
investigations that have not seen the
light of the day. To demonstrate that
the Legislators are true representatives
of the people is to forward issues of
criminal intentions or corruption to the
anti-corruption agencies like the EFCC,
the Independent Corruption Practices and
Other Related Offences Commission (ICPC)
and others that have the capacity for
investigations and possible
prosecutions. The anti-corruption organs
will also demonstrate their sincerity by
inviting independent experts opinion or
witnesses where requires interpretations
is required. Until this is done, Nigeria
will continue to live in sorrow arising
from the behind-the-scene activities of
our leaders.
As maintained in many of my earlier
submissions, including the Report of a
10-member Committee for the Review of
the Public Procurement Act 2007, what
Nigeria need and which the President or
his cabinet members should adhere, to
help us get out of this logjam is the
constitution and inauguration of the
National Council on Public Procurement.
Attah is the Managing Editor of
NGO Network, a general interest
magazine for the non-profit sector,
monitoring public procurement corruption
in Nigeria.
|