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Abiodun Budgets Nearly N1bn For Three Non-Existent Ministries In 2024 – INVESTIGATION 

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Abiodun Budgets Nearly N1bn For Three Non-Existent Ministries In 2024 – INVESTIGATION 

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Abiodun Budgets Nearly N1bn For Three Non-Existent Ministries In 2024 – INVESTIGATION 


Daud Olatunji

An investigation by PLATFORM TIMES has uncovered that Ogun State Governor, Dapo Abiodun, has allocated close to N1 billion for three non-existent ministries in the state’s 2024 budget.

 The ministries in question—Energy, Mineral Resources, and Regional Integration—do not currently operate within the state’s 21 existing ministries.

Governor Abiodun signed the 2024 Appropriation Bill into law, marking a total budget of N703.028 billion under the theme, “Budget of Sustained Growth and Development.” 

However, the investigation revealed that N922,169,997.11 has been allocated to the three phantom ministries in the budget uploaded on the open states.ng/Ogun  by the state government.

 

The Ministry of Energy, for instance, has been allocated a total of N598,395,489.58.

 This includes N48,398,834.60 for personnel expenditure, N49,999,525.00 for other recurrent expenditure, N98,398,359.60 for total recurrent expenditure, and N499,997,129.98 for capital expenditure.

Similarly, the Ministry of Mineral Resources was allocated N285,691,660.12, with N148,306,473.24 for personnel expenditure, N37,853,090.70 for other recurrent expenditure, N186,159,563.94 for total recurrent expenditure, and N99,532,096.18 for capital expenditure.

In a further revelation, the Ministry of Regional Integration was budgeted N38,082,847.41. 

This includes N9,999,999.86 for other recurrent expenditure, with no funds allocated for personnel and capital expenditure.

Notably, the Ogun-Lagos Joint Commission is listed under the Ministry of Regional Integration, with a significant budget allocation despite the ministry’s non-existent status.

PLATFORM TIMES gathered that Abiodun had in 2023 announced the plan  to establish the Ministries of Mineral Resources, Information Communication Technology (ICT) and Digital Economy and Energy.

 Abiodun said this  during a meeting with Permanent Secretaries held at the Executive Chambers of the Governor’s Office, Oke-Mosan, Abeokuta last year.

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Also, there were reports that three years after the  establishment of the Lagos-Ogun Joint Development Commission, the economic alliance between the neighbouring states had  yet to be formalised.

PLATFORM TIMES reports that in  May 2021, Governors Babajide Sanwo-Olu and Dapo Abiodun of Lagos and Ogun states respectively,had  signed a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) establishing the Joint Development Commission. 

The initiative was due to the interconnected nature of the two states bonded by culture, language, geography and urbanisation challenges. 

The collaborative approach centred on security, transportation, infrastructure, urban renewal and other economic drives in the two states. 

At the MoU signing, Abiodun stressed that Ogun State has a larger percentage of the population over-spill from Lagos State as witnessed in many of the border communities like Ota, Akute, Alagbole, Lambe, Ojodu, Agbado, Mowe, Warewa, Isheri, and indeed, all the eight local government areas that share boundaries with Lagos State.

Sanwo-Olu on his part recalled the historical emergence of Lagos as a megacity with a population of over 22 million people and what the state government has done to realise its dream towards expediting action for greater synergy with other states, especially Ogun, for sustainable socio-economic development.

He, therefore, described the MoU as a “game-changer” that would transform the urban agglomeration that Lagos State had attained. 

However, about three years after the signing of the MoU, the commission has not been formalised due to lack of a legal framework sealing the alliance.



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