Why FAAC meeting ended in deadlock – Kwara Commissioner

By Matthew Denis
The monthly Federation Account Allocation Committee (FAAC) meeting ended in a deadlock on Wednesday in Abuja.
Speaking on the development in a telephone chat with our reporter, last night, the Kwara State Commissioner for Finance, Engr. Nurudeen Demola Banu said, “There were some discrepancies in the paper that was remitted by Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC). So we were not in agreement with it during the meeting and they are trying to reconcile that figure.
“We are in contention with the figure remitted and I’m sure very soon, they will call us to reconvene the meeting. They didn’t give us any specific time but they said very soon.
Earlier yesterday, there were reports that FAAC meeting for the of April had degenerated into a rowdy session for the month of April and was Wednesday postponed, the second time in a row, as controversy again dogged the remittances by the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) to the Federation Account.
Recalled that the FAAC meeting for March where the representatives of the three tiers of government had gathered to disburse revenue that had accrued to the account for the month of February had ended in a stalemate due to a shortfall of about N37.7 billion in NNPC remittances for that month.
It took the intervention of the Minister of Finance, Mrs. Kemi Adeosun, who pleaded with the governors before the meeting was reconvened for the sharing of revenue to the various tiers of government.
The Chairman, Finance Commissioners Forum, Mallam Yunusa Mahmoud, who confirmed the postponement of the FAAC meeting for March Wednesday, described the situation as unfortunate.
He stated that the development had prompted the governors’ intervention again, adding that the governors held a โhigh-level meetingโ with top officials of NNPC Wednesday in Abuja.
โWe have some challenges, the figures we have gotten is far below what we expected to be remitted by NNPC. As it is now, there is a meeting between the governors and the top management of NNPC at the State House.
โI believe this is a very high-level deliberation and something good will come out of it,โ he said.
According to him, the NNPC was duty-bound to carry FAAC stakeholders along in its business, adding that anything short of transparency in the rendition would elicit questions.
โThere are processes okay. Before now, you did not hear such news, but because this government is a government of change, some level of transparency is expected.
โWhen you pick your figures and you submit your figures, the person that is supposed to look at it and deliberate on it will ask questions if need be,โ he said.
On whether NNPC’s action was not tantamount to deliberately shortchanging the Federation Account, Mahmoud said it was too hasty to hold the position.
He said: โI don’t want to use the word insincerity. What happened could be an error. If one party is wrong, the other party is right; if you add it together at the end of the day you make progress.
โThe last FAAC meeting was postponed twice and at the end of the day, we made progress. That was during the Easter break.
โBut in the spirit of Easter, we held a meeting, because we were looking at the plight of the workers that were supposed to receive their salaries as and when due, but based on the submission we have now, some states will not pay salaries now.
โWhat we are doing now is we have to table where we will discuss. That is why the matter is at the highest level and is being discussed now.โ