Nigeria’s Supreme Court spent over N12 billion in breach of financial regulations for five years, the latest audit report of the Office of the Auditor-General of the Federation (OAuGF) has revealed.
The funds should be recovered
and remitted to the treasury by the Chief Registrar of the court, the audit
report, released in December 2023, recommended.
The report essentially covers
the expenditures and finances of ministries, departments and agencies of the
federal government for the 2020 fiscal year, but for the Supreme Court, it
stretches forward and backwards to touch on some major payments and transactions
executed from 2017 to 2021.
The current Chief Registrar of
the Supreme Court, Hajo Sarki-Bello, assumed office in 2021, a year after the
alleged infractions took place under Hadizatu Uwani-Mustapha.
Mrs Uwani-Mustapha, who was the
Supreme Court’s chief registrar for most of the period when the flagged
transactions took place, retired from the court as Chief Registrar in June
2021.
Walter Onnoghen, who was the
Chief Justice of Nigeria (CJN) between 2016 and 2019, and his successor Tanko
Muhammad, who was CJN between 2019 and 2022, oversaw the Supreme Court during
the period of the controversial payments and transactions spotlighted by
Nigeria’s auditor-general.
Mr Muhammad abruptly resigned
from office, citing health issues in June 2022, amid a raging, unprecedented
protest from his colleague justices of the Supreme Court about his handling of
the finances and other affairs of the court at the time.
Highlights of the issues raised
concerning the transactions totalling N12.335 billion in the 2020 audit report
include – payments for contracts without budgetary provisions, diversion of
government assets for private use, inflation of contract price, irregular award
of contracts and overpayment to contractors, among others.
In one of the key violations of
extant regulations, the report revealed that the Supreme Court appropriated and
received the sum of N645 million for the procurement of broadcast equipment in
2017.
However, the court failed to
produce “relevant documents such as vouchers, vote book, store receipt
vouchers, store ledger and invoices” for audit.
Following the silence of the
court to provide any explanation for its failure to tender the documents, the
audit report attributed the “anomalies” to “weaknesses in the internal control
system at the Supreme Court.”
Also, the report said, contrary
to constitutional provisions and financial regulations, the court funnelled
over N10.223 billion through 124 vouchers to “various beneficiaries” in 2020.
But the paid vouchers and other supporting documents were not presented for
audit, the report said.
Citing a case of irregular
award of contract and overpayment to a contractor, the report requested the
Chief Registrar to justify the sum of N826.75 million to the National Assembly.
In addition, it asked the
Supreme Court’s chief registrar, who is the accounting officer of the court to
recover the N826.75 million and remit it to the national coffers, as failure to
do so would attract statutory sanctions in the Financial Regulations (2009).
Narrating the circumstances
around the issue of overpayment to a contractor, the report revealed that a
contract was awarded for the construction of an access road to justices’
quarters (Yellow Houses) in Abuja in April 2021, the twilight of Ms Uwani-Mustapha’s
exit from the Supreme Court.
The contract was awarded at the
cost of N990 million (N990,494,207.80 in total). The level of work done was
valued at 50 per cent, which should have amounted to N495 million
(N495,247,103.90).
But “the contractor was paid
N827 million (N827,075,713.04 in total) being 83.5 per cent of the contract sum
resulting in an overpayment of N331,815,559.61,” the report said, adding that
the court offered no explanation for the violation.
In another instance, the court
awarded contracts totalling N371.5 million (N371,541,636 in total) for
supplies, works and services in 2017 without budgetary provisions.
However, payments amounting to
N112 million (N112,117,106.37) were made in 2018, 2019 and 2020 “with no
evidence of appropriation.”
The report also uncovered the
sale of four landed properties belonging to the court in Lagos.
The plots of land located at 72
Alexander Avenue, 2 Club Road, 20 Cameron Road and 15 Ikoyi Crescent, all in
Abuja, were “disposed of without following due process.”
It added that “evidence of the
disposal such as authorisation, report from board of survey, engagement of
auctioneers, advertisement, proceeds from disposal, among others were not
produced for audit.”
In a case of illegal possession
of government property, the report said the Supreme Court paid over N3 billion
for 45 vehicles between the 2017 and 2021 fiscal years.
Giving details of the vehicle
purchase, the report disclosed that 18 of the 45 vehicles costing over N515
million were attached to seven justices of the Supreme Court for official use.
But after the justices retired
from the court, the official cars attached to them were not returned for
inspection, a scenario the report described as “diversion of government assets
for private use.”
In the myriad of violations
detailed by the audit report, the court management responded to the issue of
justices’ retirement with official vehicles attached to them.
“The vehicles are part of
Supreme Court justices’ entitlements,” the court responded in the report.
But it kept mum on other egregious
violations in the report.
Lawyers and anti-corruption
activists have questioned the illegality of the National Judicial Council (NJC)
in concealing the judiciary’s budget details from public scrutiny, even
sometimes doing so in resistance to Freedom of Information requests.
The extent of NJC’s desperation
to keep details of its finances away from the public became clearer in 2022,
when the then Attorney-General of the Federation and Minister of Justice,
Abubakar Malami, challenged it to open its budget for the sake of transparency.
Amid the secrecy of the budgets
and finances of the judiciary which the NJC helps to sustain, allegations of
corruption and mismanagement of funds, sometimes coming from highly placed insiders,
hover over the judiciary.
In May 2022, a retiring Justice
of the Supreme Court, Ejembi Eko, in his valedictory speech, lamented the
corruption in the handling of the finances of the judiciary.
He, therefore, called on
anti-graft agencies to probe the financial records of the judiciary.
“Nothing stops the office of
the Auditor-General of the Federation, the ICPC and other investigatory
agencies from opening the books of the judiciary to expose the corruption in
the management of their budgetary resources,” Mr Eko had said.
“That does not compromise the
independence of the judiciary. Rather, it promotes accountability.”
It would take just a month
after Mr Eko’s invitation to the anti-corruption agencies to probe the finances
of the judiciary for internal rumblings about corruption and suspicions of
financial mismanagement within the Supreme Court to implode.
In June 2022, in an
unprecedented protest letter to then CJN, Tanko Muhammad, 14 Justices of the
Supreme Court demanded “to know what has become of our training funds,” and
asked rhetorically, “Have they been diverted, or is it a plain denial?”
Later that year in September,
one of the justices who authored the protest letter, Abdu Aboki, took advantage
of his valedictory speech while retiring from the Supreme Court bench, to press
for financial transparency and accountability in the judiciary.
Under the part of his
valedictory speech which he sub-titled, ‘My valedictory messages to the nation
and judiciary in particular,’ Mr Aboki called on “those in charge of
administering the funds allocated to the judiciary” in Nigeria “to be prudent,
transparent and accountable.”
In a more direct and critical
tone, another Justice of the Supreme Court, Dattijo Muhammad, while retiring as
the second most senior justice of the court in October 2023, alleged widespread
corruption in the Nigerian Supreme Court and down the hierarchy of the
judiciary.
Mr Muhammad was one of the 14
Supreme Court justices who authored the protest letter sent to then CJN, Tanko
Muhammad, in June 2022. But as of the time of Dattijo Muhammad’s retirement in
October last year, Olukayode Ariwoola, who led the pack of the 14 protesting
justices more than a year earlier, had taken over from Tanko Muhammad as the
CJN.
Turning on the handlers of the
funds allocated to the judiciary in his valedictory speech last October,
Dattijo Muhammad said despite the “phenomenal” increase in the judiciary’s
budgets over the years, there had been no commensurate improvement in the welfare
of judges.
He similarly called for a probe
of the judiciary’s handling of its funds.
He said, “unrelenting
searchlight need to be beamed to unravel how the sums are expended.”
With the Supreme Court’s
silence over the infractions highlighted in the latest audit report, Nigeria’s
auditor-general’s office requested the chief registrar to account, recover and
remit the funds into the federation account.
It specifically asked the chief
registrar to show proof of compliance with the recommendations to the Public
Accounts Committee of the National Assembly.
But this is not the first time
the office of the Auditor-General of the Federation has indicted ministries,
departments and agencies of government over serious violations of financial
regulations.
But the recommendations of the
audit reports are never implemented by the National Assembly, or taken up by
Nigeria’s law enforcement agencies, a development that has emboldened public
institutions to perpetrate grand corruption in the form of diversion of public
funds.
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