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Scandal trails NEMA’s payment of N400m to clear N414.8m rice donation

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Scandal trails NEMA’s payment of N400m to clear N414.8m rice donation

A House of Representatives Committee has been told of how the National Emergency Management Agency (NEMA) paid a whopping sum of N400 million in demurrage to clear rice donated by the Chinese government for distribution to Internally Displaced Persons (IDPs) in the North East which is valued at N414 million.

The Director General of the agency, Mustapha Yunusa Maihaja, reportedly made the disclosure on Wednesday before the House of Representatives Committee on Emergency and Disaster.

Documents submitted to the committee by the ministry of finance dated July 20, 2017 indicated that the total quantity of the rice was 6,779 metric tonnes valued at N414.8 million while the federal ministry of agriculture paid another sum of N272.5 million as duty.

However, the figure of N400 million is said to exclude the cost of transporting the rice from the ports to the ware houses of the agency.

Expressing dismay over the way the rice donations were handled, the House Committee accused NEMA and its leadership, led by Mustapha Yunusa Maihaja, of inefficiency, waste of tax payers’ money and breach of public trust.

While making a presentation before the committee, representative of the Comptroller General of Nigeria Customs Service, Assistant Comptroller General Ekekezie Kaycee (T and T), said three batches of the Chinese rice donation arrived at the Nigerian port on the 9th of May, the second, 15th August, and the last, 11th September, 2017 respectively.

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She added that the value of the rice, which came in 151 containers in total, as stated on the bill of lading are as follows: 7, 405, 222 Yuan, 9, 219, 650 million Yuan and 11, 247, 973 Yuan, at an exchange rate of 46.2450 Naira to one Yuan.

Altogether, she informed the committee, 3, 779 metric tonnes of the rice have been cleared, leaving a balance of 3000 metric tonnes. She identified the two companies that did the clearing as Global view nig ltd and Baltic Air and Maritime Services.

Responding, the director general of NEMA, Engr Mustapha Maihaja, said the agency could only start clearing when it received the bill of lading six months later.

He added that due to the emergency situation, the agency relied on section 43 of its establishment Act and engaged Global View Logistics and Baltic Air and Maritime Services without following due process on procurement. The first clearance was done in January, 2018. He also added that the 110 containers of rice cleared have been taken to Borno and Yola.

This disclosure enraged the lawmakers who were angry that the poor handling of the clearance of the rice led to a cost of N400 million taxpayers’ money on payment for demurrage.

 

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