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, THISDAY has learnt.
The N4 million, THISDAY 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, THISDAY 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.
THISDAY 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
THISDAY 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.
Via NaijaLoaded...
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