Alleged misappropriated N17.1b: ‘Current NSITF management not under probe’
The Nigeria Social Insurance Trust Fund ( NSITF ) has said the 2018 Audit Report by the Office of the Auditor General of the Federation (OAuGF), which raised 50 queries on misappropriation of N17.158 billion, has nothing to do with its current management, which came into office on June 1, 2021. A statement yesterday in Abuja by the agency’s General Manager for Corporate Affairs, Ijeoma Okoronkwo, said the current probe by the Senate Committee on Public Accounts was in exercise of its statutory oversight functions. But it added: “It is overly important to inform the general public that what is under investigation are not new infractions but a cumulative financial violations under the management that ran the agency between 2012 and 2017.” The statement also said: “These infractions are not new. They have, in fact, been subject of probe since the Office of the Auditor General of the Federation first raised the red flag in 2015. “We make it clear, therefore, that the negative trails of these breaches have nothing to do with the present management beyond assisting the Senate Committee to carry out its oversight functions, knowing full well that government is a continuum. “On record, the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) has probed and taken the former Chairman of the Board and five other senior officials, including the Managing Director and three directors, to court over some of the issues.
Alleged misappropriated N17.1b: ‘Current NSITF management not under probe’
The Nigeria Social Insurance Trust Fund ( NSITF ) has said the 2018 Audit Report by the Office of the Auditor General of the Federation (OAuGF), which raised 50 queries on misappropriation of N17.158 billion, has nothing to do with its current management, which came into office on June 1, 2021. A statement yesterday in Abuja by the agency’s General Manager for Corporate Affairs, Ijeoma Okoronkwo, said the current probe by the Senate Committee on Public Accounts was in exercise of its statutory oversight functions. But it added: “It is overly important to inform the general public that what is under investigation are not new infractions but a cumulative financial violations under the management that ran the agency between 2012 and 2017.” The statement also said: “These infractions are not new. They have, in fact, been subject of probe since the Office of the Auditor General of the Federation first raised the red flag in 2015. “We make it clear, therefore, that the negative trails of these breaches have nothing to do with the present management beyond assisting the Senate Committee to carry out its oversight functions, knowing full well that government is a continuum. “On record, the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) has probed and taken the former Chairman of the Board and five other senior officials, including the Managing Director and three directors, to court over some of the issues.