
The committee was made up of a member from the Commissioners’ Forum, the Customs, State Accountants-General and the Minister of state for Finance etc.
On the submission of the report yesterday, FAAC simply approved the removal of the subsidy. According to the chairman of Commissioners’ Forum, Mr Timothy Odaah, the approval would be sent to President Goodluck Jonathan for ratification.
Mr. Odaah noted that the fuel subsidy has not solved the problem for which it was introduced in the first place, adding that only a few privileged individuals are benefiting from it to the detriment of the majority of Nigerians.
Meanwhile, the revenue in March dipped by N52.387 billion as the gross revenue for the month is N614, 368 billion against N666,745 billion.
This according to the Accountant General of the Federaltion was due to the vandalisation of the oil pipelines and oil theft.
In a comunique, N614.368 billion was collected as gross revenue for the period as against N666.745 billion collected in February.
The decline in the gross revenue collected for the month under review was attributed to decline in mineral revenue which resulted from the shut-in at Qua Iboenterminal and shut down of Fracados.
The statement signed by the Accountant General of theFederation, Mr Jonah Ogunniyi Otunla also attributed the decline to oil theft and some repair works on pipeline leaks at Bonny and Brass.
However, the three tiers of government shared N641.380 billion as the shortfall was augumented with the N7.617 billion refunded by the NNPC and the N36.549 billion from the Subsidy Reinvestment Programme (Sure-P)
Out of the N530.095billion statutory allocation for March, the Federal Government recieved N249.084 billion (52.68mper cent), the state governments got N126.339billion , amounting to 26.72 per cent while the 774 local governments shared N97.402 billion (20.60 per cent ) among themselves.
The oil producing states also shared N57.270billion 13 per cent derivation fund among themselves.
Similarly, out of the N80.775billion availble as Value Added Tax (VAT), the federal government received 15 percentbamounting to N9.116billion, states got 50 percent valued at mN30.388bilion while the localmgovernment counciks recieved the remaining balance of N21.271billion.
But the removal is subject to the ratification of President Goodluck Jonathan.
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