Reps demand answers on $460m Abuja CCTV project

.I’ve no information on status of the CCTV project, says Finance minister
The House of Representatives Committee on Finance on Thursday demanded further explanation on the $469 million Abuja CCTV camera project from the Ministry of Finance.

Chairman of the committee, Rep. James Faleke (APC/Lagos), who made the demand at a budget defence session with the ministry in Abuja, said there is a need for Nigerians to get value for monies paid.
“Before this administration, we collected some loans and the one that strikes me the most is the $460 million for CCTV installation in Abuja.
“I want to know the position of this loan, I am sure we are paying back but the CCTV is not working.
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“Any time we take loan from China, the Chinese will come and do the job, they will bring all their equipment, the personnel and the goods and yet we do not have value for the money, especially that of the CCTV.
“Where are we? I need you to look into it and send us a memo on this particular aspect,” he said.
Responding, the Minister of Finance, Mrs. Zainab Ahmed, said that Nigeria is servicing the loan, but she had no explanations on the status of the project.
“We are servicing the loan, but on the project, we will have to ask the Federal Capital Territory (FCT) Authority because the project was deployed in the FCT. I have no information on the status of the CCTV.
“The conditions of the loans that we take from China always will be that a Chinese company will provide the infrastructure services.
“These are loans that are of three per cent, the rail lines are being rolled out, the Abuja-Kaduna, Lagos-Ibadan rails are all loans from China and are being executed by Chinese companies,” she said.
Ahmed said that the Abuja, Lagos, Port Harcourt and Kano airport rehabilitation projects were done by Chinese companies and were supervised by the relevant ministries and the National Assembly to ensure quality work.
She said that there were a lot of Nigerians working with Chinese on the projects.
On the 2019 budget releases, the minister said that by October, the ministry had released 100 per cent for personnel cost.
Ahmed said that for debt service, payment was also 100 per cent and that for overhead, six out of 10 months had been released, adding that some critical ministries had, however, received overhead for nine months.
The minister said that as at October 15, N654 billion had been released for capital expenditure.
According to her, the plan is to ensure that by December, every Ministry, Department and Agency (MDAs) had received at least 40 per cent of its capital expenditure.
In another development, Minister of Health, Dr. Emmanuel Osagie, says that plans were on to maximise the skills of Nigerian medical experts in the Diaspora to develop the medical system in Nigeria.
The minister made this known at an interactive session with the House of Representatives Committee on Diaspora on Thursday in Abuja.
He said that Nigerian medical experts abroad, especially in the U.S. and the UK have often organised themselves to give back to the Nigerian society through free medical services.
Osagie said that a structure that would maximise the benefits of such missions and aid transfer of knowledge and experience to local experts was being designed.
The minister said that there was a need to also make the Nigerian medical environment more comfortable for the experts to return to Nigeria.
Chairman of the committee, Rep. Tolu Shadikpe (APC/Oyo), said that the committee had made a commitment to prioritise the life of every Nigerian in the Diaspora.
She said that everything legally possible would be done to safeguard their lives for them to live side by side with other Nigerians peacefully.