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Supplementary Budget: How Nigerian Navy requests for presidential yacht

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By Temitope Ajayi

It has become a pattern for some individuals, CSOs, and a section of the media to pick one or two line items every budget cycle for sensational headlines, deliberately ignoring context in their reporting.

The public that should benefit from good journalism, which should primarily educate and adequately inform, is left confused and miseducated due to mischaracterization of issues and misrepresentation of facts.

The trending issues on social media since yesterday are two items in the 2023 supplementary budget.

One is the provision for a presidential yacht in the supplementary budget by the Navy, and the other is over N6 billion for vehicles for the State House.

It is important to state clearly that President Bola Tinubu didn’t ask for a presidential yacht, and I doubt he needs one to perform the functions of his office.

From what I know, the request for a yacht, however it is named or couched in the budget, is from the Navy, and they must have operational reasons for why it is required.

The budget office should be in a position to explain to the public why such expenditures should be accommodated now, considering the economic situation of the country.

READ ALSO: President Tinubu gets Senate greenlight to borrow $7.8 bln, €100 mln for projects

I must readily admit that the one reason our budgeting system has been the subject of public attack is the very simplistic way some of the line items are described by civil servants who prepare the budget.

Examples abound. Sometimes in 2016, an Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP) project of the Ministry of Solid Minerals worth over N300 million was captured in that year’s budget as a “website”.

Naturally, it generated a massive controversy as people, rightly, asked to know the type of website that would be built with N300 million. It is important to say that journalism should enrich public enlightenment and not create an atmosphere of siege.

It is poor reporting to always reduce State House budgetary provisions for the President and Vice President. When the State House makes provision for vehicles, it is reported as if it is the President who will use all the vehicles or eat all the food when a provision is made for food and catering services.

We have had such inaccurate reporting in the past. A President and Vice President cannot, for any reason, spend N20 million naira to eat in a year if it is about the food they will eat as first and second families.

How much food can a person really eat? Yet, we will read headlines that Tinubu, Buhari, Jonathan, or whoever the President is wants to spend N5 billion on food and catering in a year when in actual fact such budgetary provisions are made to accommodate many state events, meetings, hosting of VIPs, foreign dignitaries, and even visits by other heads of state, as well as bilateral and multilateral meetings that the State House will deal with in a given year.

It is worth stating that in August this year, President Tinubu, as the Chairman of the Authority of Heads of States and Governments of ECOWAS, hosted two extraordinary summits of the regional body over the political crisis in the Niger Republic.

The two summits required catering services for the ECOWAS leaders and their delegations. Just this past Sunday, German Chancellor Olaf Scholz was on a state visit to Nigeria with a delegation of top businessmen and women from Germany.

The President hosted the visiting Chancellor and his delegation to a state banquet. The State House budget for food and catering services is spent on such events.

It is not spent essentially to feed the president and vice president.

  • Ajayi is President Tinubu’s Senior Special Assistant on Media and Publicity

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