Daily Trust

Residents allege poor performanc­e as FCT councils get N16.6bn in 8 months

Reps begin probe today Area council chairmen mum

- FɓȄưȽ ژ ȵƷƩƷǠɫƷư ژ ƨɲ ژ ɋǚƷ ژהژ ȵƷƌ ژ ƩȏɓȄƩǠǹȽ ژ ǠȄ ژ F ژ¾ ǑȵȏȂ ژ eȏǠȄɋ ژ ƩƩȏɓȄɋ ژ ǹǹȏƩƌɋǠȏȄ ژ ȏȂȂǠɋɋƷƷ ɋƩ‚٢ژ ژٮבא׎אژ uƌɲ ژ٣גא׎אژ By Hussein Yahaya & Abubakar Sadiq Isah

Amid controvers­ies surroundin­g the performanc­e of the council chairmen in the Federal Capital Territory (FCT), the six area councils have been estimated to have received a total of N16,663,045,626.58 from the FCT Joint Account Allocation Committee between October 2023 and May 2024.

The allocation is different from other sums also running into billions of naira set aside for payment of teachers’ salaries and pensions of local employees of the area councils.

The area councils also get millions of naira monthly from their Internally Generated Revenue (IGR), through a string of taxes they have imposed on businesses, vehicles, among others.

Stakeholde­rs in the administra­tion of the nation’s capital have berated the performanc­es of the councils’ chairmen despite the huge monthly allocation­s to the councils’ coffers.

The House of Representa­tives Committee on the Federal Capital Territory and Ancillary Matters will today begin investigat­ion of the six area council chairmen over the spending of the allocation­s.

The chairmen include: John

Gabaya (Bwari), Christophe­r Maikalangu (Abuja Municipal Area Council, AMAC), Abubakar Umar Abdullah (Abaji), Abdullahi Suleiman Sabo (Kuje), Abubakar Jibrin Giri (Gwagwalada), and Danlami Chiya (Kwali). Chiya is also the FCT chairman of the Associatio­n of Local Government­s of Nigeria (ALGON), FCT chapter.

The FCT Minister, Nyesom Wike, had while defending the 2024 budget at the National Assembly, said the council chairmen had failed to discharge their responsibi­lities to the residents.

Wike had warned that he would no longer tolerate their lacklustre attitude to developmen­t as the nation’s capital needed accelerate­d developmen­t, which he said, the area councils must take as priority.

The House of Representa­tives, which serves as House of Assembly for the FCT, had threatened to withhold the FCT area councils’ budgets for snubbing their invitation­s to explain to their expenditur­es in recent months.

Residents have also raised concerns over the performanc­e of the six area council chairmen, which they describe as “poor”.

The breakdown of the disburseme­nt of the over N16 billion shows that AMAC received the highest amount of N3,767,608,367.69 during the period.

Gwagwalada Area Council received N2,625,643,872.62; Kuje Area Council, N2,853,356,240.36; Bwari Area Council, N2,543,717,890.61; Abaji Area Council, N2,274,127,263.21 and Kwali Area Council, N2,598,591,992.06.

Residents score council chairmen low

FCT residents who spoke to Daily Trust, allege that they were not feeling the impact of governance as many of their roads and other infrastruc­ture are in bad states.

Mr. Joseph Imran, a resident of Bwari, decried what he called the “poor sanitation and bad road network” in rural communitie­s within the area.

A resident of Kawu, Mrs Alice Joseph, said apart from the poor state of roads in the area, water scarcity is also a problem.

“If you come to some of the communitie­s around us here, especially during the dry season, you will see how women are suffering to get water. They sometimes drink from the same stream with cows and all efforts to get the attention of some of the area councils to some of these communitie­s have so far yielded no results,’’ she said.

Residents of Kwali Area also scored the Council low in terms of performanc­e.

One of them, Danlami Joseph, said the council chairman ought to pay attention to developmen­tal projects that would have positive impacts on residents.

Another resident, Ishaya Kaura, claimed that, “The only thing the chairman is good at is stomach infrastruc­ture and buying vehicles and motorcycle­s for his cronies and political loyalists.”

In the Abaji Area Council, residents who spoke said the huge funds allocated to the council could not be justified by the number of projects on ground.

Some of them, who admitted that the council had constructe­d an 80-bed hospital at the low-cost housing and roads at Road Safety quarters and Sabon Tasha, said such projects did not match the revenue that the council had been receiving.

A resident, Shuaibu Ahmed said: “If we must say the truth, the funds the present administra­tion has received for just one year alone is double what the past administra­tion got for six years, and I am not sure if the projects the present administra­tion has executed are worth up to N1 billion”.

Residents of Kuje Area, who also spoke, said the situation in their area was pathetic as no meaningful projects could be linked to the present administra­tion in the council.

A resident, Abdullahi Musa, said the council needed to do more in the area of providing access roads in the rural communitie­s, provision of water, health and sanitation.

Residents of some communitie­s under AMAC said the authority had been trying in the areas of healthcare facilities’ upgrading and road rehabilita­tion.

They, however, said more should be done in view of the fact that the council had been receiving the highest of the monthly allocation­s, coupled with a number of taxes it had been collecting from the residents.

Residents of Gwagwalada Area, when spoken to, asked the authority to go beyond prioritisi­ng rural infrastruc­ture and look at many other areas begging for attention.

Amina Ahmed, a school teacher, said roads within the headquarte­rs of the council are in bad shape.

“It will be difficult for you to drive through the main junction to get to the FRCN office. That road is very important before the market is there. There are thousands of people living in that area”, she said.

“Water supply and sanitation are poor; it is unbecoming of a local council,” said Blessing Okon, who owns a shop at the market in Gwagwalada.

Area council chairmen mum

Attempts to speak to the chairmen individual­ly were not successful as they refused to speak to our correspond­ents.

Also, the ALGON chairman in the FCT, Chiya, by virtue of his position as their leader, neither answered phone calls nor replied to text messages sent to him by our reporters seeking his reaction to the allegation­s of poor performanc­e levelled against the area council chairmen.

Chiya had, last week when he and his colleagues accompanie­d the FCT Minister of State, Mariya Mahmud to the National Assembly, said they were ready for probe.

Reps to begin probe of council chairmen today

The probe of the area council chairmen by the House Committee on FCT and Ancillary Matters is billed to commence today.

The chairman of the committee, Hon. Frederick Agbedi, had, at a hearing last Tuesday, accused the area council bosses of dodging invitation­s seeking their explanatio­ns of how they had been spending the funds.

According to a schedule provided by the Clerk of the Committee, the chairman of Abaji Area Council will appear before the committee today; while his Bwari counterpar­t will appear tomorrow.

Thursday will be the turn of the chairman of Gwagwalada Area Council; Kuje Area Council, July 30; Kwali, July 31 and AMAC, August 1.

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