Pointblank News is reporting that A former Minister of the Federal
Capital Territory (FCT), Mallam Nasir el-Rufai, may have hit it big with
the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN), as his quantity surveying firm has
landed a multi billion-naira contract with the apex bank.
Interestingly,
there had been a link between CBN Governor, Lamido Sanusi and E-Rufai.
Aside from the fact that the body language and rhetoric of both men have
not been anything complementary, they may soon be in-laws.
It
was gathered that kid sister of El-Rufai may soon be Mrs Lamido Sanusi
as preparations are on for the Nikai which comes up soon in Daudawa,
Faskari Local Government area of Katsina state .
Sources
hinted that the CBN which has disbursed over N163 Billion so far under
the Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR) sub head, has concluded plans
to build another events center in Garki Abuja for a whooping sum of N84
Billion.
El-Rufai and Partners Limited, design cost associates
based in Aminu Kano Crescent, Wuse 2, Abuja landed the design contract
for the center. The professional fee for the firm, stands at 6 per cent
is about N5 Billion. Besides there is no evidence that due process was
followed by the CBN in the award.
The total cost is a little
over N94 Billion with about N10 Billion going into professional fees for
surveyors, architects. Sources told Pointblanknews.com that the CBN
Governor has been capitalizing on the liberal nature of the President to
award contracts to his friends and cronies.
Said a source,
“can you imagine Sanusi awarding contracts to his friends under a
General Sani Abacha or even President Musa Yar’Adua? This is only
happening simply because President Goodluck Jonathan is very liberal
minded, he simply allows people to get away with a lot.”
The
center, which will be where the old NITEL building was, would have
malls, business centers, and sundry commercial and recreational
concerns. A South African firm demolished the old NITEL building. The
Central Bank of Nigeria had in 2012 awarded a N9.5 Billion contract for
the construction of a Conference Centre at the University of Jos’
permanent site.
There also indications that this firm got a large
slice of the N64 Billion FCT city gate project that would have
pedestrian bridges; the Northern axis would have conference rooms,
parade ground, botanical garden, five star hotel and hospital among
others.
Within two years, Sanusi whose donations is well
above $1 Billion, has doled out N15 billion to only four educational
institutions, and the figure could even be more. The latest is the N10
billion donated to Uthman Danfodio University, UDU, Sokoto, through
Kabiru Nuhu, deputy director, Projects, Planning and Implementation
Division, Procurement and Support Services Department, of CBN. According
to Nuhu, the intervention, which was part of CBN’s corporate social
responsibility, CSR, for 2013, was aimed at building capacity, manpower
and infrastructure in the university, with a view to making the Nigerian
economy at par with top economies in the world.
Pat
Utomi, a professor of Economics, had similarly described the donations
as absurd and arbitrary. Said he: “There is no logic in what he is
doing. It just shows there is no control even from the system. I am
aware that he is probably gunning for the Emirate of Kano, and wants to
give the Bayero s a run for their money, but should that be at the
expense of Nigerians and their money?”
Indeed, Femi Gbajabiamila,
minority leader, House of Representatives, wondered whether the CBN had
become a donor agency or a charity organisation.
In the
meantime, the executive and the legislative arms of government are
worried by the donations by CBN. For instance, the exercise reportedly
earned Sanusi a query from President Goodluck Jonathan in April.
Although
the bank denied getting any query from the Presidency, Reuben Abati,
presidential spokesman, was quoted by The Punch newspaper then as saying
that the President, indeed, wrote the CBN governor asking him to
explain certain things regarding the accounts of the bank, to which
Sanusi responded immediately.
What was said in the reply was
not certain, but the Presidency might have been convinced that the CBN
could not have gone beyond bound. However, if the apex bank cannot be
questioned on how itdoes its CSR, how proper is it that one institution
gets N10 billion in an economy as Nigeria’s, while others get
interventions in millions of naira?