Hehehehe.... Six months after President
Muhammadu Buhari swore in his ministers, most of them have still not
settled down in Abuja and are groaning because the N4 million approved
by the president as their yearly accommodation allowance have not been
able to rent any meaningful house in Abuja, Fidelis Chidi blog has learnt.
The N4 million, our
findings reviewed, can only rent flats and not homes, and giving the
need for security, those flats which have many other tenants in the
building, are not secure or fit for purpose.
Usually, accommodation for
ministers, special advisers and other political office holders is
quickly resolved shortly after their swearing-in to enable them settle
down to their official responsibilities.
But owing to the inadequacy
of the funds approved for their accommodation by Buhari, some ministers
have been forced to stay in dingy hotels or squat with friends and
relatives, it was gathered.
The ministers, we
learnt, are concerned that it would be next to impossible for them to
get accommodation befitting their offices with N4 million in Abuja and
have repeatedly appealed to Buhari to review it upwards to N20 million
per annum, but their request has been turned down.
According to a source in the
presidency, “In a bid to make their case, all the ministers who had
formed a committee on the issue of their accommodation met with Buhari
last week Wednesday, but he rejected their request because his hands are
tied by the Remuneration Act, even though he empathises with their
situation.
“They were asking for N20
million per annum for their accommodation. But prior to last week’s
meeting, several other options had been proposed, including buying an
estate or the FCDA (Federal Capital Development Authority) building one,
but these were considered expensive and dropped.
“The final option was the
request for N20 million per annum, because some ministers are squatting
in Abuja and the situation is impacting on their jobs.”
However, the president was
said to have balked at increasing the accommodation allowance to N20
million on the grounds that the administration could suffer a backlash
from the public.
The source also explained
that the N4 million approved by the president was in line with the
current remuneration package for public office holders in the
ministerial cadre set by the Revenue Mobilisation, Allocation and Fiscal
Commission (RMAFC) under the Remuneration Act of 2007.
Under the current package,
ministers are entitled to N4,052,800 as housing allowance per annum. The
housing allowance is 200 per cent of a minister’s annual remuneration.
They are also entitled to
N6,079,200 as furniture allowance. The furniture allowance is 300 per
cent of a minister’s annual salary.
But unlike the housing
allowance, the furniture allowance is paid once in four years. This
means the furniture allowance per annum is N1,519,800.
We also gathered that
ministers will be entitled to N8,105,600 as motor vehicle allowance, but
will come in the form of a loan repayable by the end of a minister’s
tenure.
However, aides of the
ministers conversant with the problem, informed us that some
compromise would have to be reached so that the ministers could find
decent accommodation in Abuja.
“We hope there will be a
meeting point over what the president has approved for the ministers and
the special advisers who are on the same level, as the N4 million is
not realistic at all.
“Some of these public office
holders were past governors and chief executives in private concerns
before they were appointed, and it will be unfair to downgrade their
living standards,” one ministerial aide stated.
He added that the nature of
their jobs also requires some ministers to host local and foreign
dignitaries at their residences when they visit Abuja.
“By virtue of their office,
some ministers such as those in charge of foreign affairs, budget and
national planning, finance, trade and investment, health, and education,
among others, often host foreign dignitaries from missions, embassies
and international or multilateral donor agencies. Accordingly, they
would need befitting accommodation.
“It would not be in our
interest for such dignitaries to be hosted in tiny flats or in far flung
suburbs outside the metropolis, which is what the N4 million can afford
at the moment. Besides, there might also be security concerns about
allowing ministers to live in such suburbs or even hosting foreign
dignitaries there.
“Right now, the absence of
accommodation also means that many of them have not been able to
relocate their families and have been shuttling on a regular basis to
cater to the home front. Realistically, that will be a distraction that
the administration could do without,” the aide said.
Another aide, who preferred
not to be named, blamed the problem on the monetisation programme of the
Olusegun Obasanjo administration, resulting in the sale of official
residences built for ministers and other top government functionaries in
Abuja.
“In the past, former
ministers lived in purpose-built spacious mansions in Maitama, the
Ministers’ Hill, also in Maitama, and the Ministers’ Quarters in
Mabushi, which were all within the Abuja metropolis.
“But those official
residences were sold to former ministers. So their successors have had
to rent accommodation starting with the Goodluck Jonathan
administration.
“And with the N4 million
approved by President Buhari, it is next to impossible for the ministers
to rent anything decent,” the source said.
He added that the problem does not just apply to ministers but also the principal officers of the National Assembly.
“The Obasanjo administration
should not have sold the official residences of the Senate president,
the Speaker of the House of Representatives and their deputies to
Senator David Mark, Hon. Dimeji Bankole, and others.
“Today, the FCDA is spending
billions of naira building another set of official residences for the
National Assembly’s principal officers. Had the government retained
them, billions could have been saved in building a new set of residences
for the leadership of parliament,” he said.
A survey carried out by us revealed that a four to five-bedroom detached house in Wuse II,
Abuja, goes for anywhere between N8 million to N10 million per annum.
The rate is almost the same in Gwarinpa Phase 1 and Utako, Abuja, while a
four-bedroom detached house in Maitama or Asokoro goes for between N10
million and N15 million per annum.
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