Sunday, 31 December 2017
Presidency reacts to controversial board appointments list
The presidency has
reacted to the controversy generated by its appointment of 1,468 Nigerians into
the boards of agencies and parastatals.
The list generated
controversy after names of some dead persons were found among the appointees.
PREMIUM TIMES report
monitored by Newworldnewsng, also
show duplications and appointments of individuals that are no longer in the
ruling All Progressives Congress.
The Presidency
however downplayed the matter Saturday as, according to a spokesman of the
president, there was nothing scandalous about the list.
Speaking on telephone,
Garba Shehu said “the list has a history” which explains the controversy around
it.
“In 2015, Mr.
President requested all state chapters of the party to submit names of 50 party
members for board appointments,” Mr. Shehu said.
He said the names
where compiled by the national secretariat of the APC and forwarded to the then
secretary to the government of the federation, Babachir Lawal.
“However, complaint
arose from some governors who felt they were not carried along in the process.
To answer this, the president constituted a committee under the vice president
to review and reflect the interest of the governors”.
Mr Shehu however said
action was delayed on the report of the committee headed by Vice President Yemi
Osinbajo as President Muhammadu Buhari took ill.
The president’s trips
for medical attention slowed down completion of the process,” he said, until
when Mr Buhari decided to revisit the matter recently.
“The current SGF was
only directed to complete that process by releasing the list which he
apparently did without altering it,” Mr. Shehu explained.
Mr Shehu admitted
that errors were committed but added that “no human undertaking can be free of
mistakes”.
He said the errors
identified with the list were not enough to describe the exercise as
scandalous, insisting that “there is no scandal”. The spokesperson said all
errors in the list would be corrected.
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment