A company, Systemspecs Ltd, founded by John Tanimola Osaro in 1992, got the contract to oversee the remittance of funds into the TSA. “Remita” is the flagship product of Mr. Obaro’s Systemspecs Ltd.
The company built in a demand for a 1% fee for all remittances made
into the TSA. System specs Ltd is chaired by ex-Nigerian Ambassador to
UK and chair of SURE-P program under Jonathan’s regime.
Since President Muhammad Buhari made it mandatory for MDAs to remit funds into the TSA, Systemspecs company had already been paid N8.6 billion when CBN officials claimed they detected the anomaly and forced Mr. Obaro’s company to refund the excessive remittance fee. So far, the TSA account has N1.5 trillion deposited in it, the CBN source said no commission was paid.
The Central Bank source told Sahara Reporters that the apex bank
was in the process of developing internal competency to enable it to
handle the TSA. “We at the Central Bank should be able to handle
remittances into the TSA without having to pay any so-called consultants
a bloated remittance fee,” the source said.
Sahara Reporters also contacted the former Central Bank Governor,
Lamido Sanusi, who is now the Emir of Kano, Muhammad Sanusi II. He
asserted that the CBN did not sign any contract with REMITA under his
watch. In a series of text messages, he stated that it was the Ministry
of Finance and the Accountant General of the Federation who must have
signed the contract with REMITA. The former CBN Governor added that only
Nigeria’s Finance Minister is entitled to pay commission on such
payments. He said under his tenure as CBN Governor his team kept pushing
for TSA.
According to him, the CBN’s call for the institution of TSA could
be found in the Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) meeting communiques. He
told SaharaReporters that some ministers in ex-President Jonathan’s
government resisted the TSA apparently because they were doing deals
with banks.
Sahara Reporters contacted Mr. Obaro’s company, but they did not respond to our inquiries as at the time of going to press.
No comments:
Post a Comment