- Safiu Kehinde
The House of Representatives has moved to probe the former President Goodluck Jonathan’s $460 million investment in CCTV cameras installation in strategic areas in Abuja.
Sequel to the adoption of a motion by Amobi Ogah (LP, Abia) at plenary on Wednesday, the lawmakers came to resolution to set up an Ad hoc Committee to investigate the contract.
Ogah, while the moving the motion, explained that the most important of all responsibilities of government is the protection of lives and property as well as the entrenchment of security to engender good governance.
He recalled that the Jonathan-led administration embarked on the CCTV cameras installation around strategic areas to monitor unwholesome activities with a view to checking crime, place surveillance on criminals and apprehending them.
The lawmaker recalled that the former Finance Minister, Dr Olusegun Aganga led a delegation to Beijing in 2010 to sign a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) with ZTE Communications of China for installation of the CCTV.
According to him, the funds for the contract were secured through a 460 million dollars loan obtained from the China-EXIM Bank and lifted from a 600 million dollars financing portfolio secured as a soft credit loan, with interest repayable in 10 years, after an initial 10 years of grace.
“More concerned that in spite this huge investment as well as the financial burden Nigeria is subjected to by way of servicing the loan, the impact of the CCTV is not felt in any manner.
“Rather than abating, crime rate has soared in Abuja leading to daily reports of deaths arising from unmonitored crimes around the Federal Capital.
“Worried that the current situation whereby Nigeria is paying heavily for this loan obtained from a Chinese bank to execute the non-functional CCTV contract undertaken curiously, also by a Chinese firm and contractor leaves the country in a lose-lose nightmare,” he said.
In his ruling, the Deputy Speaker, Benjamin Kalu, mandated further legislative actions on the probe.