Nigeria Senate has indicted the Bank of Agriculture (BOA) over N3.2 billion loan disbursed to ten vendors to purchase tractors and other equipment for allocation to end users.
The fraudulent act by BOA Management was uncovered after investigation revealed its inability to account for N3.2 billion it claimed was disbursed to 10 vendors out of the N3.6 billion provided in 2015 by the federal government through the bank.
The 2016 report of Auditor General of the Federation considered by Senator Matthew Urhoghide, led Senate Public Accounts Committee exposed the N3.2bn fraud.
The report revealed that the Ministry of Agriculture selected the 10 unnamed vendors for the Management of bank of Agriculture which the N3.2 billion was disbursed to and the loan had four years tenor. The Senate after the adoption of the report of the Committee asked for the recovery of N3.2 billion from ten unnamed vendors. The query read, “The sum of N3,200,592,007.00 (Three billion, two hundred million, five hundred and ninety-two thousand, seven Naira) was disbursed out of N3,600,000,000.00 (Three billion, six hundred million Naira) provided between 24th March, 2015 and 17th November 2015, by the Federal Government through the Bank to 10 (ten) vendors selected by the Ministry of Agriculture to purchase tractors and other equipment for allocation to end users.
“The beneficiaries were expected to make repayment through Service Provider Operators (SPOs) under a revolving fund arrangement with expected multiplication effect on the national Agricultural mechanisation agenda. The Bank was to monitor and supervise the disbursement as well as ensure recovery of the funds for further lending to new participants. However, the entire revolving fund could not be accounted for by the Bank’s Management. The Managing Director was communicated to account for all the amounts involved.”
In its response, the Bank of Agriculture claimed that the “programme was structured with a four (4) year loan tenor commencing from the date of release of the machinery/equipment to the AEHE Centre.” “Since the machinery/equipment were not released on the same day, the expiry dates of the machinery loans also vary”, the BOA stressed.