President Goodluck Jonathan’s government today approved the
recommendation of a committee headed by former official of the Civil
Service, Steve Oronsaye on the scrapping of the National Poverty
Eradication Programme (NAPEP) and the Fiscal Responsibility Commission
(FRC).
However, it turned down the recommendation of the merger of the
Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC), Independent and Corrupt
Practices Commission (ICPC), and Code of Conduct Bureau (CCB). The
proposal for the renaming of the Code of Conduct Tribunal as Anti
Corruption Tribunal was equally rejected.
According to the White Paper on the Report of the Presidential
Committee on Restructuring and Rationalization of Federal Government
Parastatals, Commissions and Agencies — which was submitted to the
president by Attorney General of the Federation, Mohammed Adoke — the
Federal Government accepted the proposal for merging the Nigerian
Airspace Management Agency (NAMA), the Nigerian Civil Aviation Authority
(NCAA) and the Nigerian Meteorological Agency (NMA) into a new body to
be known as the Federal Civil Aviation Authority (FCAA).
The government also accepted to amend their respective enabling laws
accordingly to reflect the merger, while amending the enabling law of
the Nigerian College of Aviation Technology (NCAT) and restructuring the
college.
The recommendation for the withdrawal of the Bill seeking for the
establishment of NEPAD as an agency of the Federal Government from the
National Assembly (since there are existing laws relating to most of
NEPAD’s activities) was accepted as well.
The Presidential Committee on the Rationalization and Restructuring
of Federal Government Parastatals, Commissions and Agencies chaired by
Oronsaye also recommended the abolishment of the Utilities Charges
Commission as well as the reversal of its enabling law, to be initiated
by office of the Secretary to the Government of the Federation (SGF).
The Federal Government accepted it, as well as the recommendation for
the commercialisation of the National Agricultural Insurance
Corporation and the recommendation that the passed bill on the Nigeria
Agriculture Quarantine Service should be dissented to by the president.
The federal government similarly accepted the recommendation that the
Veterinary Research Council of Nigeria, being a professional body,
should begin to fund itself and henceforth forfeit budgetary allocation.
The Federal Government accepted the proposal for the partial
commercialization of the Nigerian Postal Service (NIPOST) and that of
selling off its shares in the Nigerian Communication Satellite
(NIGCOMSAT) Limited in favour of retaining minority shares. It also
accepted to transfer to the National Space Research and Development
Agency (NASRDA) all functions of NIGCOMSAT relating to space
development.
Other recommendations accepted include that of merging the Nigerian
Institute for Education Planners and Administrators (NIEPA) with the
National Teachers Institute, that of the commercialisation of the
Nigerian Film Corporation from the 2013 fiscal year but with government
seed funding, of immediately closing all offices of the Nigerian
Institute of Advanced Legal Studies outside Lagos and Abuja, of merging
the National Council of Arts and Culture with the National Troupe and
the National Theatre into the National Council of Arts and Culture, and
of withdrawing its funding of the Nigerian Financial Reporting Council
(from 2015) and the Industrial Training Fund (from 2014).
The Federal Government accepted recommendation of the scrapping of
Fiscal Responsibility Commission (FRC) whose functions would then be
performed by the Revenue Mobilisation, Allocation and Fiscal Commission,
and that of the need to repeal the National Salaries, Income and Wages
Commission’s enabling law and subsuming its functions under Revenue
Mobilisation, Allocation and Fiscal Commission.
However, it rejected the recommendation of an amendment in name and
status of the Federal Civil Service Commission to the Federal Public
Service Commission, despite accepting the recommendation of a single
term of five years for the chairman and members of the commission.
The Federal Government also rejected the recommendation of subsuming
the Infrastructure Concession and Regulatory Commission under the Bureau
of Public Enterprises, and that relating to the merger of the Nigerian
television Authority (NTA), Federal Radio Corporation of Nigerian (FRCN)
and Voice of Nigeria (VON) into one body to be known as the Federal
Corporation Broadcasting of Nigeria (FCBN). Notwithstanding, the
proposal for fully commercialization of NTA by 2013 was accepted.
It rejected the recommendation of the abolition of Federal Character
Commission, of an amendment in the name and status of the Federal Civil
Service Commission to the Federal Public Service Commission, of
repealing the law establishing the Border Communities Development Agency
and reverting its functions to the National Boundary Commission, as
well as that of the withdrawal of funding for the current expenditure of
the National Institute on Policy and Strategic Studies (NIPSS) from the
2015 fiscal year.
Also rejected include the recommendation of merging the National
Emergency Management Agency (NEMA) and the National Refugees Commission
into one agency to be known as the National Emergency Management and
Refugees Commission, and that of repealing the Act setting up the
Federal Road Safety Commission (FRSC) and reverting the commission to
the Highways Department of the Federal Ministry of Works.
In all, Oronsaye’s committee recommended the abolition of 38
agencies, the merger of 52 and reversal of 14 agencies to departments in
the relevant ministries. It also recommended the management audit of 89
agencies capturing biometric features of staff, as well as the
discontinuation of government funding of professional bodies/councils.
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