The Nigerian Maritime Administration and Safety Agency (NIMASA) and the House of Representatives Committee on Maritime Education, Safety and Administration are in disagreement over the performance of the 2017 appropriation budget of the agency.
This happened on Wednesday, during an oversight visit of the committee to NIMASA, prompting Chairman of the committee, Mr. Muhammed Umar Bago, to threaten zero allocation to the agency in 2018, if its 2017 capital budget is not fully expended.
Bago said: “It’s a shame if we give NIMASA money to spend on appropriation and because of bureaucratic acumen, they are unable to spend it. So, they shouldn’t expect us to give them money next time and we have pledged as a committee and as a parliament that anyone we give resources to spend and did not, we will only give in the next appropriation the percentage of what it spent in the previous year. I have told NIMASA that I will give them zero allocation in 2018 if they don’t spend money allocated for 2017.”
But the Director General of NIMASA, Dr. Dakuku Peterside, disagreed with the committee Chairman saying the agency has expended 80 percent of its allocation on capital projects.
He said: “I think we didn’t quite get the Chairman. We have made over 80 percent accomplishment of the capital budget provision. Though we have challenges in a few because we have to go through the regimented procurement process, I believe we should be able to get to 100 percentA and if we can’t get to 100 percent, with 80 percent accomplishment we have done our best.”
The NIMASA DG also spoke on the Chairman’s complain about the nation’s porous Exclusive Economic Zone (EEZ)and trading by foreign vessels, revealing that initiatives have been deployed to enhance the security of the nation’s territorial waters, including the EEZ.
“He said we should step up coastal security and recall that lots of initiatives have been put in place and one of them is the one approved by the FEC called the Presidential Maritime Security Intervention, where we are supposed to acquire a lot of assets and work with the Nigerian Navy and Air Force to enhance the patrol of our waterways.
“The project is on course, and once we commence full implementation, it will yield the desired results. We are pursuing early passage of the anti-piracy bill that will criminalise maritime crimes. We have also invested in maritime intelligence gathering in our maritime surveillance gathering and we are close to integrating the satellite surveillance system in the Navy falcon.
“We have improved on the intelligence gathering. We have improved enforcement and working closely with the Navy and renewed our MoU with the Air Force. He suggested that we should engage more platforms and we are doing that. We have done tremendous improvements in coastal security. We have taken note of the suggestions and we will continue to invest our time and talent in improving coastal patrol,” the DG assured.