Dave Umahi, recently said the government needs to import construction equipment worth €1.2 million to effectively perform rehabilitation works on the Eko Bridge in Lagos State.
The House of Representatives has faulted the Minister of Works, Dave Umahi for transitioning himself into a contractor regarding the importation of construction equipment worth €1.2 million (about N1 billion) to effectively repair the Eko Bridge in Lagos State.
Dave Umahi, recently said the government needs to import construction equipment worth €1.2 million to effectively perform rehabilitation works on the Eko Bridge in Lagos State.
The minister made the announcement during a working visit to Third Mainland, Carter, Falomo, Iddo, Eko, Marina and Iganmu bridges in Lagos, alongside some directors and contractors.
However, the Deputy Spokesman for the House of Representatives, Hon. Philip Agbese, speaking on the executive and legislative relationship on MaxFM, Lagos on Wednesday stated that they found it shocking that Umahi was talking about importing equipment to fix Eko Bridge.
He noted that the singular declaration set off alarm bells and queried why the minister was the one importing the equipment for a bridge that had either been or would be awarded to a contractor.
Agbese urged Umahi to come clean about the deal since he should not be the one importing the equipment needed for the repair of bridges.
According to him, it raises multiple red flags in addition to signposting inefficiency on the part of the minister, who should have outsourced inefficiencies to focus on the important mandate of providing policy directions.
According to Agbese, he has to see to it that things are done the right way and becoming a procurement officer, contractor, consultant and minister all at the same time is not the way things are done at the level.
He said, “As lawmakers with oversight functions, we find it shocking that the Minister of Works, Engineer David Umahi is talking about importing equipment to fix Eko Bridge. That singular declaration set off alarm bells.
“There are so many questions. Is the equipment for only Eko Bridge or it can be repurposed to fix other bridges in need of repairs? Is the €1.2 million for the equipment captured in the budget and properly appropriated?
"Why is he the one importing the equipment for a bridge that has either been or would be awarded to a contractor? Is that exercise the best use of government time and taxpayers’ money?
“Will the proposed importation comply with the Procurement Act? Is there compliance with extant legislation of the land? These are just a few of the questions that the minister has to answer.
“More importantly, the minister being a former governor of Ebonyi State, I think it is time someone told him that the federal level runs with the requisite checks and balances among the three arms of government so he cannot run that ministry the way he managed his state.
“He has to see to it that things are done the right way and becoming a procurement officer, contractor, consultant, and minister all at the same time is not the way things are done at this level.
“First, he should come clean on the procurement processes and understand that as a minister he is not a contractor. The minister should then retrace his steps to ensure that whatever he is doing is properly appropriated for, following which he should ensure that he does not engage in activities that constitute a distraction to the job he has at hand.”
“Nigerians do not want to see a situation where stories will be flying about how someone illegally enriched themselves by becoming an emergency contractor. And we know such stories usually emanate after the office holder must have been done with his tenure. Engineer Umahi should spare the country such a horror show,” Agbese added.
He warned the minister against abusing the priority that President Bola Tinubu gave to the ministry to engage in wasteful spending of scarce resources as the current government is a regime of consequences as the president himself has made clear.