2018 BUDGET: CANCER, HIV/AIDS TREATMENT FUNDING AMONG THOSE CUT BY SENATORS, REPS
By: Admin
Funding
for cancer treatment and HIV drugs were amongst those either cut or completely
removed by the National Assembly in the 2018 budget signed by President
Muhammadu Buhari on Wednesday.
After
signing the budget into law, President Muhammadu Buhari accused the National
Assembly of distorting the spending plan and increasing their own budget.
According
to the president, the lawmakers effected cuts amounting to N347 billion in
allocations to 4,700 projects and introduced fresh 6,403 projects of their own
valued at about N578 billion.
Documents
containing details of projects whose funding were reduced and projects inserted
into the budget by the lawmakers, revealed that the bulk of the additional
subheads cut across mainly the legislators’ constituencies.
They
include projects by the Federal Capital Territory Administration, Federal
Ministries of Health, Transportation, Education, Power, Works & Housing,
Industry, Trade and Investment as well as Service Wide Vote.

Also,
in a country where cancer is ravaging due to lack of treatment centres, about
N700 million provided for the establishment of chemotherapy centres in 10
teaching hospitals across the country was reduced to only N300 million.
So
far, there are only three diagnostic centres established by the Nigerian
Sovereign Investment Authority (NSIA) for cancer treatment in the country at
Lagos University Teaching Hospital (LUTH), Aminu Kano Teaching Hospital (AKTH)
and Federal Medical Centre, Umuahia (FMCU).
The
provision of over N2.07 billion allocated for the procurement of
anti-retroviral drugs for HIV patients and other living with AIDS was slashed
to N1.1 billion.
About
N6 billion provided for strategic intervention services in some tertiary health
institutions to cater for the people’s health was cut by 80 per cent, leaving
only N1.2 billion.
Again,
out of about N1.43 billion allocated for distribution, transport and
maintenance of cold chain supply systems for drugs preservation in national and
state hospitals was cut by over 85 per cent to only N208.5 million.
In
Works Ministry, out of about N7.3 billion allocated for the dualisation of the
South-South section of the East West Road was cut by over 34 per cent to N4.78
billion.
Equally,
about N5.5 billion of about N6.9 billion allocated for the provision of
electrical power and water supply, construction of protective fences along the
Abraka, Oria, Oruwhorum corridor for the Itakpe-Ajaokuta-Aladja railway system
was cut off.
The
construction of Enugu Airport terminal building, which got over N2.03 billion
allocation in the draft budget was reduced by 74 per cent to only N530.1
million.
Further
review of the documents showed that apart from 22 projects in the Niger Delta
area valued at about N2.017 billion completely removed from the budget, most of
the over 6,400 inserted included those in the lawmakers constituencies not part
of the N100 billion constituency projects for which separate provision have
been made.
These
projects include the ones the president said should be under the purview of
state and local governments’ responsibilities for which the federal government
should not be burdened.
Most
of these projects are categorised under supply of industrial sewing machines,
building of fish feed mills, supply of tricycles/motorcycles and Volkswagen
Golf cars for community youth and women for empowerment programmes; purchase of
grinding machines for women and youth, provision of boreholes in some rural
communities; training and empowerment of non-violent ex-agitators; purchase and
distribution of drilling hand pumps in some local communities.
Other
items include provision of medical services outreach for aged displaced
persons; supply of generators, sewing machines and clippers for youth
empowerment and purchase and supply of utility vehicles for Ideato Youths;
provision of complete set of grinding machines; construction and installation
of solar street lights in some rural communities; erosion control works in some
rural communities.
Also
covered by items inserted in the budget by the lawmakers included training of
youth and women in fishery, piggery and feeds farming in some rural
communities; construction of cassava, rice, soya bean processing mills in some
rural communities; youth and women empowerment in agriculture in some rural
communities; provision of access roads in some rural communities; building
culverts and drainages across some rural roads; upgrading of pathways and
driveways in some housing estates.
The
others include provision of entrepreneurship training of some youth in the
rural areas; training of artisans as youth empowerment; supply of transformers
for some rural communities; empowerment and post-harvest training for farmers
in some rural communities; construction of fish ponds to empower youth in the rural
communities; purchase and supply of some agriculture and farming equipment;
capacity building on fruits and vegetable processing; purchase of motorcycles
for extension work and procurement of fertilizers for farmers; strategic
training and empowerment of local farmers; renovation of some selected primary
and secondary schools in some local communities; supply of furniture in some
designated primary and secondary schools and construction of VIP toilets in
primary schools.
(PremiumTimes)
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