Day: January 14, 2017

OBAZEE IN FRESH FINANCIAL IRREGULARITIES ALLEGATIONS

The last may not have been heard about the sack of Mr. Jim Obazee as Executive Secretary of Financial Reporting Council of Nigeria (FRCN).

Few days after he was removed as the scribe of the body, the Federal Government is considering probing his tenure.

Some other top officials of the council may also be asked to make way  as government  prepares for the overhaul of the parastatal.

The planned reorganisation is a consequence of allegations of wrongdoings  in the establishment.

One of the allegations is that over N1 billion cash of the council, meant for International Financial Reporting Standards Academy (IFRS) is  trapped in a bank, contrary to the decision of the board to invest it in treasury bills.

Investigation revealed that FRCN had been under probe radar since 2014 but the administration of ex-President Goodluck Jonathan did not act.

Some of the other allegations against the council border on curious budget and expenses as follows:

  • Expenditure of  N225 million on the  production of FRC registration certificates which cannot be exhausted in 24 years’ time
  • Acquisition of  a  N47 million mansion in Houston, Texas (suspected as 15918 Mission Village DR Houston Texas 77083) by a top official  of FRCN.
  • Expenditure of N36 million within  60 days in 2014 on local travel to Abuja to probe the books of Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) under ex-Governor Sanusi Lamido Sanusi
  • Suspicious payment of incidental expenses.

In a particular  curious expense in July 2014, a top official allegedly applied for N736, 250 to go to Abuja for an official assignment.

His memo said: “Please arrange to reimburse me for my trip to Abuja to meet and brief the Permanent Secretary on the activities of the FRC.

“I travelled on Monday, July 14, 2014 and returned to Lagos on Tuesday, July 15, 2014.

“Details are as follows: Return ticket (Lagos-Abuja-Lagos) N150,000; Hotel Expenses (N86, 250); Incidental Expenses (N500,000), amount due to me, (N736,250).”

In a similar claim,  the official on August 18, 2014 asked for a reimbursement of  N836, 250 for a trip to Abuja.

The official  had applied for the reimbursement of the cash through a memo addressed to Assistant Director (FIND).

The memo, which was obtained by our correspondent  said: “Please arrange to reimburse me for my trip to Abuja for a meeting to attend the meeting of Heads of Parastatals with the Honourable  Minister at Federal Ministry of Industry, Trade and Investment on Thursday, August 14, 2014.

 

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“I travelled on Thursday, August 14, 2014 and returned back to Lagos on Friday, August 15, 2014.

“Details are as follows:  (i) Return ticket( Lagos-Abuja-Lagos)—N150,000; (ii) Hotel expenses (N86,250);  and (iii) Incidental expenses (N600,000).

“Amount due to me is N836, 250.”

A top government official said: “There were a lot of issues during the tenure of Obazee which the government will look into.

“There were allegations of mismanagement of funds and  huge incidental expenses incurred by some top officials of the council.

“For instance, it was alleged that about N36 million was spent on local travel to investigate the books of the Central Bank of Nigeria during Sanusi Lamido Sanusi’s tenure.

“We have a report on how a top official of FRCN allegedly bought a N47 million mansion in Houston, Texas.

“The council made suspicious payments to  hired consultants, who  were suspected to be proxies for some of its officials.

“Some contracts awarded were questionable. Also, some outrageous allowances were paid outside the approved rates in the civil service. So, we may probe the administration of FCRN anytime from now.

“The probe of Obazee and others will be part of plans to overhaul the Financial Reporting Council of Nigeria. The agency stinks  a lot.

“These allegations are not new but the administration of ex-President Goodluck Jonathan did not act on them.

“Actually, a member of the Audit Committee of the former board of FRCN had raised some of these issues, especially on poor management of resources.

“There are allegations that  council did not publish its annual reports for some years contrary to Section 38 of the FRCN Act. This is not in line with international best practices.

“We will ask the new board to restructure the FRCN in a manner that it will disallow a sit-tight syndrome. Until he was removed, Obazee had served as FRCN chief for more than 10 years as Technical Director through CEO in NASB and to the Executive Secretary level.”

 

 

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The FRCN’s stipulation of a maximum period of 20 years for the heads of all registered churches, mosques, and civil society organizations and its Governance Code 2016 have caused tension in the last few days.

The FRC’s regulations, which had not received final approval, led to  the exit  last weekend of Redeemed Christian Church of God (RCCG) General Overseer Pastor Enoch Adejare Adeboye.

Worried by the religious tension, President Muhammadu Buhari on Monday sacked Obazee and reconstituted the board of FRC.

A statement by the Senior Special Assistant to the President on Media and Publicity, Garba Shehu, announced the President’s decision.

The statement said: “President Muhammadu Buhari has approved the immediate removal and replacement of the Executive Secretary and the reconstitution of the board of the Financial Reporting Council of Nigeria.

“He has appointed a Chairman and a new Executive Secretary for the council. The new Council as approved by the President has Mr. Adedotun Sulaiman, MFR, as Chairman.

“Mr. Sulaiman was a former Managing Partner/Director of Arthur Anderson and later, Accenture. He is a Chartered Accountant and a product of the University of Lagos and Harvard Business School.

“The President has also approved the appointment of Mr. Daniel Asapokhai as the Executive Secretary of the Council. Mr. Asopokhai is a partner and a Financial Reporting Specialist at the Price water House Coopers, Nigeria.”

 

 

Culled from TheNationOnlineNG

 

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THERESA MAY ORDERS GP SURGERIES TO OPEN FOR LONGER 7 DAYS A WEEK

Theresa May has ordered GPs to offer appointments 8am to 8pm, seven days a week – or lose funding.

In a personal intervention, the Prime Minister is demanding easier access to surgeries to help tackle overcrowding in NHS hospitals.

A Daily Mail investigation revealed that patients unable to see their GP are inundating casualty units.

Nearly half of England’s hospitals were struggling so badly last week they declared ‘operational pressure alerts’. Six issued the highest level warning, where patient safety was judged to be at risk.

Thousands of GP practices close their doors on weekday afternoons, while others take a three-hour lunch break. Now they will have to open from 8am to 8pm every day, unless they can prove there is no demand for it.

They will be required to give Whitehall officials detailed information on the number and type of appointments they offer.

A Downing Street source said: ‘Most GPs do a fantastic job, and have their patients’ interests firmly at heart. However, it is increasingly clear that a large number of surgeries are not providing proper out-of-hours care – and that patients are suffering as a result because they are then forced to go to A&E.

‘It’s also bad for hospitals, which then face additional pressure on their services. That’s why ministers are calling on GPs to deliver on their commitments – while introducing reforms to deliver in the interests of patients.’

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Ministers say they been shown evidence that some GP surgeries are failing to tell patients about extended hours appointments or ensure they are at times that patients want. No 10 says this means that some patients are left with little option but to go to A&E departments.

Figures this week from the National Audit Office showed almost half of GP surgeries close at some point during core hours – with 18 per cent closing at or before 3pm on at least one weekday. This is despite three quarters of the practices that closed receiving additional extended hours funding to provide greater access.

A report from the Commons public accounts committee said part-time hours were partly to blame for the crisis in hospitals. It highlighted how half of the 7,600 practices in England closed at least once during the normal working week, including a fifth that took one or two afternoons off.

Some surgeries were accused of gaming the system and claiming extra cash by staying open slightly later on just one evening a week. Under their NHS contract, GPs have to provide a service between the core hours of 8am and 6.30pm. But surgeries do not necessarily have to be open during these times, as long as they tell patients to call the NHS 111 helpline or an out-of-hours provider.

Labour’s disastrous 2004 GP contract let 90 per cent of GPs stop giving out of out-of-hours care.

Gordon Miles, head of the Royal College of Emergency Medicine, said: ‘Efforts to increase primary care cover – particularly GP out-of-hours services and dentistry – at weekends, and reduced alcohol consumption in the general population, could alleviate this pressure.’ Yesterday, a set of bleak statistics showed that more than four in ten hospitals in England declared a major alert in the first week of the year.

Some 65 out of 152 trusts raised the alarm as bed shortages intensified and A&E departments became overwhelmed.

Officials said the Government had prepared for winter earlier than ever. Mrs May yesterday publicly thanked A&E staff for their tireless work in coping with additional demand over the winter period.

She said that, as a result, a record number of people had been seen within the four-hour target time this winter.

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