Rotimi Amaechi, minister of transportation, says he might
stay away from government at the end of his current appointment. Speaking at a meeting on corruption organised by the
ministry of justice, the former speaker and governor of Rivers state lamented
the “deliberate attempt” to link public office holders to corruption.
Rotimi Amaecchi |
“The governor of Rivers state said I squandered N3 trillion.
I did not receive up to N1.8 trillion as governor both from IGR and funds from
federal allocation. So, how could I have squandered money I did not even
receive in the first place? You can see the politics of lies and lies.” Amaechi said transparency in the use of public funds was a
major factor during his administration.
He said as governor, and the people of Rivers were briefed periodically on how funds were
being utilized, adding that the state became the first to implement the bureau
of public procurement (BPP) act. Amaechi said this helped in putting government’s activities
under scrutiny. “If you had followed the Rivers state government when I was
governor, we were the first state to introduce the public procurement law in
the country. The state cabinet used to call the director-general of public
procurement in the state as an alternative governor, that they wanted an
amendment to that law,” he said. “The reason they wanted amendment is that he (DG) refused to
increase the threshold to one hundred million naira, per ministry, instead he
reduced it to 10 million naira.
“I had a battle with him (DG BPE) and the world bank who
insisted that we should not go for an amendment but should persuade him to
increase the threshold. I remember the cabinet tried to go to court against him
and I remember that he was also trying to go to court against commissioners.
“In fact, the procurement DG wrote a memo that I felt was
very incriminating requesting that since the law requires the governor to take
any commissioner who doesn’t comply with the public procurement law to court, I
should please take the commissioner of education to court for not complying…
Everybody in the cabinet felt that he was an alternative governor, they felt
that he was slowing the process.”
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