Socio-Economic Rights and Accountability Project, SERAP, has urged President Bola Tinubu to direct the Attorney General of the Federation and Minister of Justice, Mr. Lateef Fagbemi, SAN, and appropriate anti-corruption agencies to promptly probe the allegations that over N128 billion of public funds are missing or diverted from the Ministry of Power and the Nigerian Bulk Electricity Trading Plc., Abuja.


















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The grave allegations are documented in the latest annual report published by the Auditor-General on 9 September 2025.




SERAP said, โAnyone suspected to be responsible should face prosecution as appropriate, if there is sufficient admissible evidence, and any missing or diverted public funds should be fully recovered and remitted to the treasury.โ
SERAP urged him to โuse any recovered diverted funds to fund the deficit in the 2026 budget and to ease Nigeriaโs crippling debt crisis.โ
In the letter dated Sunday, by SERAP Deputy Director, Kolawole Oluwadare, the organisation said: โNigerians continue to pay the price for the widespread and grand corruption in the power sector.


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There is a legitimate public interest in ensuring justice and accountability for these grave allegations.โ
SERAP said, โTackling corruption in the power sector would go a long way in addressing the persistent breakdown of transmission lines in the country, and improving access of Nigerians to regular and uninterrupted electricity supply.โ
According to SERAP, โThese allegations suggest a grave violation of the public trust, the Nigerian Constitution 1999 (as amended), the countryโs anticorruption legislation and international anticorruption obligations.โ
The letter, read in part: โAccording to the recently published 2022 audited report by the Auditor-General of the Federation, the Federal Ministry of Power failed to account for over N4.4 billion [N4,404,647,938.53] โtransferred to Mambilla, Zungeru and Kashimbilla project accounts by the Ministry.โ
โThere was โno evidence of how the funds were expended.โ The Auditor-General fears โthe money may have been diverted.โ He wants the money recovered and remitted to the treasury.
โThe Ministry also paid over N95 billion [N95,415,183,701.83] to โsome contractors for various projects.โ But โthere was no document on the payments, and no evidence that the projects existed and were executed.โ
The Auditor-General fears โthe money may have been diverted.โ He wants the money recovered.
โThe Ministry paid over N33 million [N33,557,959.00] โfor foreign travelsโ, but โwithout any approvals.โ The money was paid as estacode, flight tickets, visa fees and other allowances to enable the minister and his aides to attend the World Utilities Congress at Abu Dhabi and the Huawei innovation land exhibition in Dubai.
โThe travels โwere never approved by the Secretary to the Government of the Federation or the Head of Civil Service.โ The Auditor-General fears โthe money may have been diverted.โ He wants the money recovered and remitted to the treasury.
โThe Ministry failed to account for over N230 million [N230,795,255.27] being โexpenditure on the GIGMIS platform.โ The Auditor-General fears โthe money may have been diverted.โ He wants the money recovered and remitted to the treasury.
โThe Ministry also paid over N282 million [N282,672,576.53] as โnon-personal advances to various staff of the ministry for the procurement of goods and services.โ But the โpayments were beyond the statutory threshold of N200,000.00.โ The Auditor-General fears โthe money may have been diverted.โ He wants the money recovered.
โThe Nigerian Bulk Electricity Trading Plc., (NBET) Abuja, also โirregularly awarded contracts for over N427 million [N427,491,866.16]. There was โno evidence of advert placements in the procurement journalโ.โ
โThe Auditor-General fears โthe contracts may have been awarded to incompetent contractorsโ, resulting in โloss of government funds.โ He wants the money recovered and remitted to the treasury.
โNBET โirregularly transferred over N7 billion [N7,620,840,000.00] into purported sub-accounts of unnamed beneficiaries.โ There was also โno authority for such payment, contrary to the Financial Regulations.โ
โNBET claimed it paid over N9.3 billion [N9,336,986,697.17] to Egbin Power PLC as outstanding payment on GenCos for Power Sector Reform Programme.โ
But there was no document to authenticate the genuineness of the transactions.โ The Auditor-General fears โthe money may have been diverted.โ He wants the money recovered.
โNBET paid over N8 billion [N8,027,355,487.20] โto some beneficiariesโ but โwithout entering the transaction into the payment vouchers register and the vote book.โ The Auditor-General fears โthe money may have been diverted and misapplied.โ He wants the money recovered and remitted to the treasury.
โNBET also reportedly โawarded contracts of over N420 million [N420,665,525.65] to eleven ineligible consultants.โ The payments were for various consultancy services such as technical support on power plant capacity testing of 5 power plants.โ But there was โno evidence that the services paid for were rendered.
โWe would be grateful if the recommended measures are taken within 7 days of the receipt and/or publication of this letter. If we have not heard from you by then, SERAP shall consider appropriate legal actions to compel your government to comply with our request in the public interest.
โSection 13 of the Nigerian Constitution imposes clear responsibility on your government to conform to, observe and apply the provisions of Chapter 2 of the Constitution.
โSection 15(5) imposes the responsibility on your government to abolish all corrupt practices and abuse of power.
โArticle 26 of the UN Convention against Corruption, which Nigeria has ratified, requires your government to ensure โeffective, proportionate and dissuasive sanctionsโ including criminal and non-criminal sanctions, in cases of grand corruption.โ
Source : Vanguard News
