Date Published: 02/22/11
INEC Chairman wants N5 billion more
…N140 Million for Refreshment and Honorarium
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Prof. Attahiru Jega, INEC Boss |
Chairman of the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) Prof. Attahiru Jega is requesting an additional N5 Billion with N63.1 and N77 Million set aside for refreshments and honorarium respectively. Few weeks ago, he requested N6 Billion to extendthe voters registration exercise.
Prof. Jega who made the new request while defending the INEC 2011 budget said the N5 Billion is for the lamination of Voters cards. The Budget Office had proposed N2.7 Billion for the lamination of voters card but the INEC chairman was said to have insisted that the job can only be done with N5 Billion.
“The commission will need N5 billion to convert an estimated 80 million voters’ cards to plastic cover. Each of the plastic cover is estimated to cost the commission N64. We will have difficulties with the 40 per cent cut in the N5 billion for the job, because we have registered 67.7 million Nigerians and will continue the exercise after the general elections,” Prof. Jega told the Senate Committee.
The INEC chairman also said the voters’ cards issued to those who were registered would only last for a maximum of two months but would last longer if laminated, adding that the commission registered 67.7 voters in the last exercise and already working on a timetable to continue with the voters’ registration immediately after the April general elections.
He further said the exercise would be repeated after 10 years to capture those who may had reached the voting age after the last exercise.
Prof. Jega also told the Senator Isiaka Adeleke-led committee that the commission would need another N450 million to cover donations and gifts to some agencies that already made presentations for sponsorship of capacity building workshops and seminars.
This was as he also said the commission would spend about N181 million on fueling and lubricants in addition to another N45 million on generators and plant for the 2011 fiscal year.
Similarly, the commission was expected to spend N22 million on local training while N270 million was reserved for foreign training in addition to another N180 million on local travel just as it would need N135 million for foreign tours.
Prof. Jega told the Senate committee that the slash in the commission’s 2011 budget was done by the Budget Office without consultation with the electoral body thus said that N51 billion earlier proposed was expected to put the commission in better position to deliver credible elections in April.
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