Nigeria's president suspends welfare scheme over scandal
Nigeria's President Bola Ahmed
Tinubu on Friday suspended a major national welfare programme designed to help
ease poverty, a spokesman said, amid a spiralling corruption scandal.
The National Social Investment
Programme Agency (NSIPA) has provided cash transfers for some of the country's
poorest people as well as funds to help the young and offer school meals.
The president had
"suspended all administered programmes by the National Social Investment
Programme Agency... further to the ongoing investigation of alleged malfeasance
in the management of the agency and its programmes," the spokesman said.
"During the period of
this suspension, all NSIPA-related activities, including but not limited to all
distributions, events, payments, collaborations and registrations are now
frozen."
The suspension would initially
last six weeks, he said.
On Monday Tinubu suspended his
poverty minister following allegations she diverted public funds into a private
bank account.
The opposition Peoples
Democratic Party (PDP) had called for Betta Edu to be sacked and prosecuted
"over the alleged looting of N44 billion", almost $50 million, from a
social investment fund "meant for the well-being of the poor".
It claimed this included
"N585.2 million audaciously diverted by her to a private account".
The measure against the
humanitarian affairs and poverty alleviation minister came days after another
senior official was suspended over corruption allegations.
Halima Shehu, the head of
NSIPA -- which falls under the poverty ministry -- was arrested and released on
bail, while former poverty minister Sadiya Umar-Farouq was also taken for
questioning, according to local media.
Tinubu came to power last year promising to
crack down on graft in Nigeria.
He vowed reforms and swiftly
suspended several officials, including former central bank chief Godwin
Emefiele and ex-head of the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC)
Abdulrasheed Bawa.
But Edu is the first minister
the president has suspended.
Nigeria remains one of the
lowest ranked on Transparency International's widely watched corruption
perceptions index.
Africa's most populous nation
has seen the poverty rate increase from 40 percent of the population in 2018 to
46 percent in 2023, affecting around 104 million people, the World Bank said
last month.
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