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Delta Govt Clears Air On 13% Derivation Funds

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THE Delta State Government has denied any wrongdoing in its handling 13 per cent derivation funds that accrued to the state, with Commissioner for Finance, Chief Fidelis Tilije, on Monday, November 28, disclosing that the state’s total debt profile currently stood at N272 billion.

  Tilije, at a news conference in Asaba, said the N240 billion refunds from the Federation Accounts Allocation Committee (FAAC) was not a loan, but the state’s share of 13 per cent crude oil derivation arrears from 2004 till date.

  The commissioner, alongside the Chief Press Secretary to Governor Ifeanyi Okowa, Mr. Olisa Ifeajika, explained that the state government could offset its current debt if it discounted 100 per cent of its share of N240 billion refund approved by the Federal Government.

  According to him: “The total debt profile of Delta State as we speak is N272 billion. Out of this, N84 billion is due to contractors and pension arrears is about N27 billion. The rest are the debt profile actually inherited by the administration.

  “And in this past months, we have a total expected refund of N240 billion with respect to the 13 per cent oil derivation refunds to nine states that is ongoing. We had initially wanted to phase out  many legacy projects that we wanted to complete, we approached the state House of Assembly and got approval to discount N150 billion, which we pruned to N100 billion, as bridging finance facility from the N240 billion.

  “I did say recently that out of this N240  billion that is expected from FAAC receipts, Delta has received N14.7 billion in three quarterly installments. And out of this N100 billion bridging finance, we have accessed N30 billion from the commercial market.”

  Tilije said with the totality of the refunds expected from FAAC, the state could clean up the outstanding debt profile if it fully discounted the N240 billion, adding that the governor, being a prudent manager of human and resources, felt it would be necessary not to allow a repeat of the experience he had as new government in 2015.

  “At inception in 2015, Okowa’s administration saw hell managing the lean resources available to the state as a new government. This informed why all the state governments had to take a bailout fund from the federal government in 2015.

  “The truth is that if the state government had totally taken or fully discounted the N240 billion FAAC refund, the next successive government will fall back to the experience Okowa had in 2015.

  “So, unlike the other oil producing states, who fully discounted their refunds, Okowa decided to be his brother’s keeper, take a percentage of the N240 billion and leave the rest for the incoming government to access over a period of four years.

  “Besides, if we had gone ahead to discount the N240 billion in full, we would have been able to clean up all our outstanding debt,” he stated.

  Tilije noted that every government financed its budgets from FAAC receipts, Internally Generated Revenue (IGR), borrowings and sundry facilities, charging the social media to always report facts.

  Ifeajika, on his part, stressed that the state government was transparent and had nothing to hide.

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