PDP maintained that efforts by the state government to explain the issues are becoming an exercise in futility.
The Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) has stated that the Sokoto State government is to come out clean on the controversial N1.2billion project which is reported to be for the construction of new boreholes or the repair of old ones.
The PDP called out the state government in a press statement signed by the publicity secretary of the party, Hassan Sahabi Sanyinawal, on Thursday.
PDP maintained that efforts by the state government to explain the issues are becoming an exercise in futility.
SaharaReporters had reported the State Governor, Aliyu Ahmad announced the award of drilling of 25 boreholes at the cost of N1.2billion.
The development has generated a lot of backlashes from citizens who accused the state government of inflating the contract price.
Reacting, the PDP in Sokoto said: “The attempt by the Sokoto State Commissioner of Information in far away Abuja to mitigate the scandal over his principal’s self-declared expenditure of N1.2 billion on the repair of 25 boreholes in the state and the questionable award of contract for the fencing of streets in Sokoto Metropolis has again proved to be an exercise in futility.
“The confusion created by the contradictory explanations on two different occasions between the State Commissioner of Environment and the State Governor, as to whether the contract is for the repair of or the construction of new facilities is yet to be resolved”.
The statement further said, “Sambo Bello Danchadi, Sokoto State Commissioner of Information has granted an interview to the Daily Trust Newspaper in Abuja, to cause a new twist to the imbroglio, by ascribing the crisis to what he described as “a slip of tongue” by his principal, the State Governor, Ahmed Aliyu, on the status of the project, which had not been admitted by the Governor himself in his previous effort to explain away the scandal.
“In his feeble and belated attempt at damage control, Danchadi simply repeated the unsubstantiated claim of his boss that the project is a tripartite intervention involving the state and federal governments and the World Bank.
” But he too failed to meet the demand of proof by going to the Daily Trust empty-handed, without the relevant documented evidence of the true status of the boreholes project, which includes the contract award papers, MOU, specific locations, and costs breakdown of the boreholes in question.
“The persistent question is, even if the project was a joint initiative and the boreholes were newly constructed, would the Federal Government and World Bank be so imprudent, as to pay N48 million for the drilling of a single borehole? Or was Governor Ahmed Aliyu’s quoted contract sum also inadvertent?”
“The issue with this explanation, which is already being raised by generality of the people, is whether spending billions on fencing off the streets of Sokoto should be the greater priority on security than committing adequate resources to dealing with banditry in Eastern Sokoto and other areas of the state ravaged by insecurity.
“This clearly indicates the cluelessness or lack of commitment of the Sokoto State Government to the problem of banditry in the state. It is indeed, a gross lack of concern for the plight of the unfortunate communities in the state that are living in peril and constant terror of bandits.
“An equally salient issue with the street fencing project that the Commissioner ought to have addressed is the implication of the details of the contract award document obviously being circulated by the state government.
” The letter by its dating, indicated that the job was awarded in March 2024 but the fences were already being installed as early as February 2024 and the State Government’s social media handlers had already started covering them on Facebook.
“This fact raises the weighty issue of pre-emptive contract awards, a serious financial crime, which the relevant anti-graft agencies should discharge their statutory duty of investigating.
“The Sokoto State House of Assembly is also constitutionally obligated to probe this possible breach of due process and the rules guiding public procurement by the Executive, which is an impeachable offence, as enshrined in the laws of the Federal Republic of Nigeria."