Cost Reduction: 50 Government Agencies to be scrapped, 42 Ministries Reduced to 19
After three
weeks of consultations with international and Nigeria’s political
leaders, President Muhammadu Buhari appears set to effect major changes
in the administration of the country in a bid to translate the ‘change’
mantra of his party into reality.
To start
with, the President is said to have accepted the recommendation of the
transition committee he raised a few weeks ago to slash the number of
ministries from the present 42 to 19 with a view to saving cost and
making them more effective and responsive to the needs of Nigerians.
In
the same vein, many of the ministries have been merged to ensure proper
coordination of duties and ensure greater efficiency and service
delivery.
Effectively, it means that no fewer than 50 of the MDAs
that were not backed by relevant laws might be scrapped and their staff
moved into relevant departments to save cost.A source close to the
Presidency told Sunday Vanguard that the number of Federal Government
departments and agencies had also been trimmed in line with the policy
of the administration.
The Presidency source hinted,”But the point
being made is that relevant MDAs that will exist under the present
administration must be those backed by laws.
“What that means is that the era of doing things the wrong way to please certain persons in positions of power is over.”
Shedding
light on some of the ministries that had been merged, the official
pointed out that the Ministry of Aviation and relevant agencies had been
subsumed with Inland Waterways and associated agencies.
Similarly,
the Ministry of Agriculture has been merged with that of Water Resources
under what the Presidency source described as the consolidation of
larger ministries.
It was learnt that under the administration of
Buhari, only 19 ministers and 17 ministers of state would operate as
opposed to the previous arrangement where there were at least 42.
It
was further gathered that some ministries would be run by senior
ministers while others would be manned by junior ministers to save cost.
On
the fight against corruption, the source disclosed to Sunday Vanguard
that the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) is to be
merged with the Independent Corrupt Practices Commission, ICPC, to
tackle graft in a new way that would be prompt, fearless and decisive.
Buhari,
who travelled out of Abuja since returning from the African Union
meeting in South Africa, late last week, is expected to join his wife,
Aisha, at the Presidential Villa, for the first time after being
sworn-in on May 29.
The wife had moved into the Villa on Thursday
ahead of the President to prepare the ground for his formal assumption
of work at the seat of power. He has been operating from the Defence
House in the last three weeks.
A top source also said Buhari was
expected to make some key appointments this week so as to get the
machinery of his administration running. The delay in naming the
critical staff of his office had forced some of his key loyalists to
demand that he acts fast to deliver the change he promised Nigerians
during the campaigns.
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