REPORT ACCORDING TO 247UREPORTS
President
Goodluck Jonathan has sent a letter to the House of Representatives to
seek for an inclusion of a credit facility of $600 million for the Lagos
State government in the 2012-2013 medium term borrowing plan of the
Federal Government.
In a letter, which was addressed to the speaker of the House, Rt.
Hon. Aminu Waziri Tambuwal, on Thursday, Jonathan explained that while
the World Bank facility was designed to be implemented in three tranches
of $200 million each year, “unfortunately, the second tranche of
Development Policy Operation II was not captured in the 2012-2014 medium
term borrowing plan.”
He noted that the inclusion of the second tranche was necessary due
to its importance “to the success of and sustainability of the first
tranche.”
Pointing out that the World Bank supported scheme would help the
state some critical infrastructure projects, including an ultra-modern
burn centre, cardiac and renal centre, 27 kilometer Lagos-Badagry light
rail line and the completion of a 70 million gallons per day Adiyan
water facility among others, Jonathan said: “in the light of the above
therefore, I wish to seek your understanding and to request you to admit
the Lagos State Development Policy Operation II into the 2012-2014
Medium Term Borrowing Plan to enable the state consolidate the gains of
the first tranche of the Operation with no implication to the borrowing
plan.”
The 2012-2014 medium term borrowing plan of the country was earlier
transmitted to the National Assembly for approval, but without the Lagos
State Development Policy Operation (DPO II). The DPO I of the state was
implemented in 2011.
Meanwhile, the N315.8 billion 2013 Budget Bill of the Niger Delta
Development Commission (NDDC), of N315.8 yesterday scaled second reading
on the floor of the House.
Of the amount, N15.08 billion is for personnel costs, N11.99 million
is for overhead expenditure, and N2.28 billion is for is for capital
expenditure while the balance of N286.45 billion is for development
projects for the service of the NDDC.
Also on the floor of the House, the House Committee on Banking and
Currency was mandated to investigate the alleged discriminatory
policy by certain commercial banks on real estate and assets located in
selected cities and locations as acceptable collateral, and report back
to the House in four weeks.
This followed a motion brought by Udo Oluchi Ibeji in which the House
expressed worry over the negative impact of the policy will have on
trade and businesses and the general economy of the country.
Ibeji had specifically named the commercial banks including Skye
Bank, Access Bank, FCMB, Mainstreet, Keystone, Ecobank and Sterling Bank
as culprits, who, according to him operate a quiet policy of insisting
that immovable assets required as collateral for banking facility must
be located in Lagos, Port Harcourt or Abuja.
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