Why We Disowned The 2016 Budget – Sen. Ndume Explains

Buhari-Budget

The Senate, yesterday, said that it disowned the second version of the 2016 budget brought to it because it failed integrity checks.

Senate Leader Mohammed Ali Ndume, who briefed reporters in Abuja, stressed that the 2016 budget was never missing. He explained that what happened was that some copies of the budget submitted to the Senate were subjected to “integrity checks” and they failed the checks when compared with the original copy presented to the National Assembly by President Buhari. He noted that the Senate discovered some loopholes in the second version.

“There were issues with the budget that some people were not comfortable with. There were integrity checks and it was discovered that there were some loopholes,” Ndume said.

“We asked the Ethics and Privileges Committee to find out what actually happened and it was discovered that there were two versions of the budget.

“It is not that the figure submitted by Mr. President has changed. It is still the same thing. It is not that what Mr. President submitted is sacrosanct, that it cannot be changed. It can be changed.

“It is not that the N6.08 trillion budget Mr. President submitted to us has changed or any of the subheads has changed. They are still the same.

“The President did not submit a failed document. The President submitted a budget, which went through integrity checks.

“I have my soft and hard copies of the budget. I spent most of the weekend looking at the budget.

“What I tried to do was to make a comparative analysis. So, I could not find the difference. But then they told me that the difference is not in the sub-total or sectoral allocation. They did integrity checks and they gave me an example.

“That if a certain amount was allocated to do two things and they felt that the amount can be used to do four things. They said instead of two things, do four. They are still talking about spending the same amount but getting more for it.

“But what I can tell you now is that the budget that was submitted originally, there were certain integrity checks on it that made some changes in the quantity but not in the total,” Ndume said.

Senate President Bukola Saraki had on Thursday said that the Senate Committee on Ethics, Privileges and Public Petitions discovered that the Senior Special Assistant to the President on National Assembly Matters, Senator Ita Enang, printed and submitted to the Senate a fake copy of the 2016 budget. The upper chamber of the National Assembly has, therefore, resolved not to consider the budget until the soft copy of the original budget estimate presented by President Buhari on December 22, 2015 was made available to the Senate. Hence the earlier planned debate on the budget would not commence today.