Officials
of Nigeria’s Federal Ministry of Health (FMOH) are questioning how former
Finance Minister Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala handled payment of the sum of $2.2 million
that was the subject of a dispute between the Health Ministry and a global
non-governmental organization called the Global Alliance for Vaccine and
Immunization (GAVI).
A letter
written by the permanent secretary of the Ministry of Health wondered why Ms.
Okonjo-Iweala’s Ministry of Finance rushed to pay the disputed sum to GAVI, a
health NGO that had claimed that Nigeria’s health officials had misappropriated
the funds between 2011 and 2013.
GAVI had
sought the intervention of the Federal Ministry of Finance and the Economic and
Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) following disagreements between the NGO and
the Federal Ministry of Health, according to a letter written by the permanent
secretary of the Ministry of Health, L.N. Awute.
Specifically,
GAVI had accused the National Primary Healthcare Development Agency (NPHCDA) of
several infractions, including failure to pay taxes, failure to make required
payments to UNICEF, and failure to supply promised goods and programs between
2011 and 2013.
In the
midst of the dispute, the Federal Ministry of Finance made a $2.2 million
payment to GAVI to make up for the supposedly misplaced funds.
However,
Mr. Awute claims in his letter, addressed to the EFCC and dated July 15th, that
all of the funds were properly accounted for by the NPHCDA.
The
agency’s own report found receipts, confirmations, and other forms of evidence
verifying that the money was in fact appropriately spent. The permanent
secretary’s letter to the EFCC stated that the discrepancies between NPHCDA’s
and GAVI’s accounting were glaring, but accused GAVI of being “evasive to all
requests for reconciliation.”
Mr. Awute
wrote that, following GAVI’s insistence that the Ministry of Finance involve
the EFCC in the issue, the Ministry of Health was under the impression that the
EFCC would seek to harmonize GAVI’s audit report and the response from the
NPHCDA.
Instead,
he disclosed, the Ministry of Finance headed by Ms. Okonjo-Iweala paid the
disputed $2.2 million to GAVI “without recourse to the Federal Ministry of
Health.”
Mr. Awute
surmised, wondering whether the EFCC had concluded its investigation and
recommended that the Ministry of Finance pay the full disputed amount to GAVI.
“In the
light of the foregoing, I wish to seek your clarifications on the issues
raised,” Mr. Awute wrote to the chair of the anti-corruption agency.
Source: SaharaReporters
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