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2022: NASS On Rescue Mission As NIPOST Receives Zero Capital Vote
The National Assembly, yesterday, raised its voice against zero allocation given to the Nigerian Postal Service (NIPOST) capital expenditures proposal for the year 2022, even as the lawmakers insisted on giving the agency a capital vote.
Amidst expectations that the NIPOST will be unbundled next year, the agency was slammed a zero allocation from N137.2billion capital votes earmarked for the Ministry of Communication and Digital Economy and its parastatals.
The ministry, in its proposed budget for 2022, got an appropriation of N160.593billion budget, NIGCOMSAT, NIPOST and National Identity Management Commission (NIMC).
While the ministry got N85.231billion for capital votes, NIMC got N46.533billion and NIGCOMSAT N5.440billion, leaving NIPOST with only overhead and personnel costs.
The Joint Committee of the National Assembly on Communications gave the information, yesterday, during budget defence session it had with the Minister of Communication and Digital Economy, Dr Isa Ali Pantami and heads of agencies under the ministry at the National Assembly.
Chairman of the committee, Senator Oluremi Tinubu expressed disappointment over the development, and said it was wrong for the agency not to be given any capital vote for 2022 fiscal year.
Tinubu specifically asked the minister whether the zero capital budget allocation proposed for NIPOST in 2022 was based on non-request by the agency or lack of funds.
The committee, she added, may have to appropriate something for the agency, if there was no solid reason for the zero allocation.
In his response, Pantami said, he was not against some votes taken from the capital estimates of the ministry for NIPOST, as he pointed out that the unbundling of the agency into three separate bodies would be done in 2022.
He said: “I’m not against the committee taking about N200million from N85.231billion capital vote of the ministry to NIPOST”.
According to Pantami, the unbundling of NIPOST in 2022 will give birth to three different agencies which will include a Property Development Company that will manage the 2,500 properties of the agency located across the country.
Responding to questions on the increase observed in the personnel cost of the ministry which rose from N981million appropriated in 2020 to N1.032billion proposed for 2022 fiscal year, the minister said the increase arose from salaries of newly recruited staff posted to the ministry by the Federal Civil Service Commission.
The ministry’s recurrent expenditure proposal of N160.593billion has a total of N86.488billion for the ministry, N8.226billion for NIGCOMSAT, N13.116billion for NIPOST and N52.761billion for NIMC.
By: Nneka Amaechi-Nnadi, Abuja
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Senate Orders NAFDAC To Ban Sachet Alcohol Production by December 2025 ………Lawmakers Warn of Health Crisis, Youth Addiction And Social Disorder From Cheap Liquor
The upper chamber’s resolution followed an exhaustive debate on a motion sponsored by Senator Asuquo Ekpenyong (Cross River South), during its sitting, last Thursday.
He warned that another extension would amount to a betrayal of public trust and a violation of Nigeria’s commitment to global health standards.
Ekpenyong said, “The harmful practice of putting alcohol in sachets makes it as easy to consume as sweets, even for children.
“It promotes addiction, impairs cognitive and psychomotor development and contributes to domestic violence, road accidents and other social vices.”
Senator Anthony Ani (Ebonyi South) said sachet-packaged alcohol had become a menace in communities and schools.
“These drinks are cheap, potent and easily accessible to minors. Every day we delay this ban, we endanger our children and destroy more futures,” he said.
Senate President, Godswill Akpabio, who presided over the session, ruled in favour of the motion after what he described as a “sober and urgent debate”.
Akpabio said “Any motion that concerns saving lives is urgent. If we don’t stop this extension, more Nigerians, especially the youth, will continue to be harmed. The Senate of the Federal Republic of Nigeria has spoken: by December 2025, sachet alcohol must become history.”
According to him, “This is not just about alcohol regulation. It is about safeguarding the mental and physical health of our people, protecting our children, and preserving the future of this nation.
“We cannot allow sachet alcohol to keep destroying lives under the guise of business.”
According to him, “This is not just about alcohol regulation. It is about safeguarding the mental and physical health of our people, protecting our children, and preserving the future of this nation.
“We cannot allow sachet alcohol to keep destroying lives under the guise of business.”
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