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Speaker Abbas Reaffirms Commitment to Accountability in Public Funds
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By Gloria Ikibah
The Speaker House of Representatives, Rep. Tajudeen Abbas, has restated the commitment of the 10th House to ensuring transparency and accountability in managing public funds.
Speaking at a public hearing organized by the House Committee on TETFUND and Other Services, on Friiday in Abuja, Speaker Abbas, who was represented by the House Leader, Rep. Julius Ihonvbere highlighted the significance of the proposed amendments to the Tertiary Education Trust Fund (TETFUND) Act (2011).
Abbas noted that TETFUND, established by an Act of the National Assembly in 2011, serves as an intervention agency supporting public tertiary institutions across Nigeria.
According to him, the agency focuses on providing educational infrastructure and facilitating capacity-building initiatives for academic staff.
In her address, the Committee Chairman, Rep. Mariam Onuoha, stated that the proposed legislation aims to address the challenges of poor project implementation, which have raised concerns about the actual use of funds in tertiary institutions.
She noted that, in response to complaints and controversies from stakeholders, the Speaker recommended amendments to Section 7 of the Act to strengthen guidelines for accessing and utilizing the funds.
Onuoha assured that stakeholders’ views and submissions would be carefully considered in the final report after the hearing.
The Executive Secretary of TETFUND, Sonny Echono, who highlighted ongoing efforts to ensure effective management of the fund, criticized the unchecked establishment of tertiary institutions, particularly by state governments relying solely on TETFUND without proper financial plans.
According to him, to promote fairness, only one university, one polytechnic, and one college of education per state was eligible for funding each year.
He therefore urged lawmakers to prioritise expanding existing institutions instead of creating new ones, to ensure better allocation of resources.
President of the Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU), Prof. Emmanuel Osodeke, called for ASUU’s reinstatement on the TETFUND board and advocated for an independent monitoring committee to oversee projects from inception to completion.
Prof. Osodeke also warned that ongoing tax reforms could threaten TETFUND’s operations, stressing that the fund is crucial to sustaining Nigeria’s tertiary education system.
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Palmpay Customer Panic – Before Opay Puts Me In Trouble
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I operate a Palmpay account. Until this morning, I had never attempted to set up an OPay account. I did not succeed setting it up because I discovered that someone with my three names and phone number operates an OPay account. I was mystified at the discovery and think this is grossly unsafe. The person could commit fraud and I could end up paying for it, say. That this happened is a result of formidable negligence on the part of OPay. I have no doubt.
Exactly what its KYC processes are I don’t know. I do not want to speculate, but I think OPay’s KYC processes are worse than poor. From my experience, the KYC processes at Opay, which self-describes as safe and secure, are squalid. They’re shit. Hot shit. Don’t dupe yourself into believing that you’re safe.
The number I attempted to use to set up an account is linked to my NIN, BVN and bank accounts, of course. How it could be in use by another person in Opay’s system eludes me. But in the meantime, the backstory.
I wanted to move N50,000 to my account to my Palmpay account from my Zenith Bank Plc account this morning. On account of a concentration outage I can’t explain, I typed Opay as the destination bank instead of Palmpay. My phone number, which serves as my account number, was correctly inputted and it threw up my name. I made the transfer, but got no notification from Palmpay. Strange. Very strange.
I checked a few minutes later and there was still no notification. I checked the receipt on my @ZenithBank app and discovered that the destination bank I typed in error was OPay. I called a friend, who advised me to open an Opay account and that the money would drop. I asked why it left my account at all since I had no OPay account. I felt it should have been reversed. He asked that I should go set up an Opay account.
I went through the whole facial recognition shebang, got an OTP and later a request for the last six digits of my BVN before things screeched to a halt.
I typed the last six digits and I got a response that they were out of sync. How? I wondered. I called the OPay customer care desk to know what happened. Someone named Funke, who spoke in Yoruba, attended to me. I chose to be served in that language because I thought, from my experience with telco help desks, my chances of being quickly attended to were brighter.
I gave the Funke my name and the number with which I tried to open an account with. She said the number is linked to an Opay account with the name Bamidele Temitope Johnson. She advised me to speak to my bank. My bank? I asked why it was even possible in the first instance, given KYC. She said she didn’t know. I contacted my bank, which said it couldn’t do anything because the names of the OPay account holder to whom I sent money in error are the same as mine.
The person I spoke with at my bank warned that I need this resolved. Very quickly, too. If the OPay account holder is funding terrorism or involved in other crimes, he warned, I coul get into a really sticky situation. I also suspect that there may be hundreds of people in a similar situation where shabby KYC processes make them sitting ducks. Trouble is just around the corner and they don’t know.
Johnson, a Lagos based Marketing Communications Executive shared this on his Facebook page…
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BREAKING! TInubu fires NYSC DG, announces fresh appointment
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President Bola Ahmed Tinubu has appointed Brigadier General Kunle Nafiu as the new Director-General of the National Youth Service Corps (NYSC).
Bri. Gen. Nafiu, until his appointment, was the Chief of Staff to the Chief of Army Staff, Lt. General Olufemi Oluyede, having also served in the same capacity with the late Chief of Army Staff, Lt. General Raised Abiodun Lagbaja.
A Member of 47 Regular Course, Nafiu is an Artillery Officer who graduated from the Armed Forces Command and Staff College and the US Army War College.
Before he was appointed Chief of Staff to the COAS, he was a Directing Staff at the Army War College, Nigeria.
The new NYSC DG hails from Ileogbo, Aiyedire Local Government Area of Osun State.
Nafiu, whose appointment is immediately effective, replaces Brigadier General Yushau Ahmed.
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BREAKING: Elliot, other lawmakers weep as Lagos Speaker Mojisola Meranda resigns
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By Kayode Sanni-Arewa
The speaker of the Lagos state house of assembly, Mojisola Meranda has officially resigned.
In a sitting today, the lawmakers who are on her side bid her a heartfelt farewell and it was indeed an emotional moment.
She was reelected as Obasa’s deputy on Monday.
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