SaharaReporters has obtained information detailing the significant
financial cost of trips undertaken by President Muhammadu Buhari and his
entourage. The president’s trips since assuming office at the end of
May, 2015 have now stretched to 14.As SaharaReporters reported two days
ago, Mr. Buhari’s frequent foreign trips have drawn increasing criticism
from politicians and pundits who question the wisdom of the trips at a
time when several domestic crises, including a crushing fuel scarcity,
incessant attacks by Boko Haram terrorists, and blackouts demand urgent
and focused attention.
According to financial information
obtained by our investigators, an average two-day long presidential trip
costs between $350K and $500K. For instance, during Mr. Buhari’s recent
trip to Tehran, the capital of Iran, the estacode for accompanying
Presidency officials was $105K. In addition, transportation costs stood
at $45K, accommodation 200K, honorarium $10K, contingency 20K, with
media coverage costing $10K.
The breakdown for the forthcoming
trip to Paris is as follows: the estacode for accompanying Presidency
officials is $130K, transportation $55K, accommodation $270K, honorarium
$10K, contingency 20K, media coverage $10K. The total cost for the trip
is $495K
In the course of our investigation, SaharaReporters
found that President Buhari is scheduled to make an immediate trip to
South Africa. In fact, the trip is planned to follow immediately from
Mr. Buhari’s visit to Paris, France. The cost of the forthcoming South
African trip is as follows: Estacode for accompanying Presidency
officials $110K, transportation $35K, accommodation 220K, honorarium
$10K, contingency 20K, and media coverage $10K, for a total of $405K
A
source at the Presidential Air Fleet (PAF) said they have a separate
budget for fueling the planes as well as allowances for the presidential
air fleet commander, pilots and the air stewards. The Office of the
National Security Adviser funds those expenses.
So, the costs
uncovered by our investigators cover only personnel from Aso Rock Villa,
aides, protocol officers, members of the press, security personnel, a
cook, a luggage officer and a steward. The estacode did not reveal what
President Buhari receives per night, as that expense is handled
separately and secretly. In addition the Minister of Foreign Affairs and
five members of his entourage who usually accompany President Buhari
are not included in the costs as they get paid from the ministry's
budget.
SaharaReporters also discovered that the amounts for
honorarium ($10K), contingency ($20K) and media coverage ($10K) are
fixed for all trips. The State House Chief of Protocol handles
honorarium and contingency while Femi Adesina, a senior assistant on
media, handles $10K for “media coverage.”
Critics have come down
hard on President Buhari for engaging in international junkets at a time
of rising disillusionment, with Nigeria mired in a crippling fuel
scarcity, continuing violence by Boko Haram, and an economic downturn
that has put pressures on banks and numerous businesses.
Mr.
Buhari has only visited four Nigerian states since coming to power. His
much-anticipated visit to Lagos three days ago to launch anti-crime
helicopter, boats and vehicles did not materialize, but led to a traffic
meltdown.
A Facebook posting by SaharaReporters calling President
Buhari a “junketer-in-chief” was widely shared and elicited viral
response on social media.
Two sources at the Presidency told
SaharaReporters that some of Mr. Buhari’s handlers were pressuring him
to postpone his trip to South Africa in order to calm public anger.
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