Rivers
Group Demands Prosecution Of Dismissed Amnesty Office Workers
The Niger Delta Anti-Corruption Forum has called on the Interim Administrator of the Presidential Amnesty Programme, Col. Milland Dikio (retd), and relevant agencies to ensure the prosecution of culprits of contract and scholarship fraud in the office.
The Coordinator of the group, Mr Joe Samuel, in a statement, said the affected officials of the Presidential Amnesty Programme, who had perpetrated years of contract and scholarship scam, should face prosecution in addition to outright dismissal.
It said the recent reports of the dismissal of some officials of the office that had been milking the PAP came as a pointer to Dikio’s integrity.
Samuel, whose statement came after a quarterly meeting of the group in Port Harcourt, said the dismissed officers were well known to have enriched themselves through phony contracts and scholarship racketeering running into billions of naira.
The NDAF leader said it was rather reprehensible that between 50 to 60 per cent of contracts in the Amnesty Office were handled illegally by members of staff of the PAP through cronies and collaborators.
Samuel lamented that such questionable characters in the Amnesty Office, who used fake contractors to plunder the resources of the PAP, had frustrated genuine efforts to meet up with the statutory obligations of the office.
The statement reads, “We’re calling on the Interim Administrator of the PAP to ensure that those culprits and their gang of collaborators are brought to justice. It is not enough to sack them; they should be arrested and prosecuted.
“A lot of people are not aware that 50 to 60 per cent of the contractors handling various projects are staff of the Amnesty Office. They use people as fronts. It is also on record that most of the contracts they award to themselves do not exist. They just get the money and lavish.
“It is the same thing they do with the PAP Scholarship Programme meant for people from impacted communities. They hijack the scholarships and sell the slots. In some schools, there are only about 20 to 25 students, but the Amnesty office pays the fees of as much as 50 to 60 students.
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