|
Budget
2012 (3) - The Security Spending Spree
By Nasir Ahmad El-Rufai
Newsdiaryonline Fri Feb 3 ,2012
We
continue our detailed review of the 2012 Budget proposals today
looking closely at the amounts earmarked for the office of the
NSA, the SSS, and the NIA. Our objective is to appreciate the
huge amounts allocated and ask the standard quantity surveying
question - is Nigeria getting value for its money? A security
consultant familiar with Nigeria Gordon Duff wrote recently in
www.veteranstoday.com that our security services budget for
Rolls Royce and end up buying Volkswagen Beetle when procuring
services and equipment. Is it plausible?
Are the amounts spent purchasing security for the Nigerian
citizen, or are they making a few "security chiefs" and their
appendages so stupendously rich, thereby exacerbating the income
disparities, inequalities and injustice amongst us which in turn
have contributed to the insecurity in our land? How are security
budgets made up? How are they spent? Is there any oversight and
accountability like other public funds? We will raise these and
other issues, providing some insights about practices and
spending processes for improvement.
First,
some history of our civil security services. The first internal
security organization in our country started as a department of
the Nigeria Police Force,and the regional police units. The most
important function of these officers was collecting information,
however innocuous - that is what is called 'intelligence'. They
were plain-clothes policemen living and working in their
communities, in constant touch with traditional rulers, hotel
owners, motor park and market managers, and even commercial sex
workers as informants. These 'informants' are placed on modest
payrolls - which the bulk of security vote is supposed to be
utilized for. There was a similar outfit within the Nigerian
Army which evolved into the Intelligence Corps. Nigeria was a
safe and secure place to live in then. The system worked for
most of the citizens, until quite recently.
This system and practice continued intact until the
assassination of General Murtala Mohammed (may his soul rest in
peace) on February 13, 1976. Abdullahi Mohammed, then a colonel
and governor of Benue-Plateau State was recalled by General
Obasanjo and tasked with the job of establishing a national
security organization. That led to the birth of the NSO which
became not only the coordinating body and clearing house of
civil and military security and intelligence matters, but the
main operational body of internal security and intelligence. The
Research Department of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs focused
on external counter-intelligence but with a dual reporting
relationship to the NSO and the Foreign Minister.
The national security and intelligence system was restructured
in the late 1980s under the Babangida administration creating
three separate operating services reporting to Aliyu Mohammed,
then a brigadier, as Coordinator of National Security (CONS),
the precursor to the current NSA position. The old NSO was
renamed the SSS, the old Research Department became the NIA, the
Defence Intelligence Agency was then created, while the Police
and Military maintained the remnants of their old intelligence
services and remained internal to them. This remains the
operating structure today to a large degree, with the change of
title from CONS to NSA under Babangida. The NSA's profile rises
or falls depending on the occupant of the office, personal
closeness to the president, type of administration and how
insecure the administration feels about its legitimacy!
Three
points need to be grasped from the foregoing (1) over 90 percent
of security effectiveness is proactivity arising from getting
quality information, in advance (2) intelligence work is a
thoughtful, patient process not the gun-toting and arresting
culture we now see, and certainly NOT the extra-judicial killing
of people that are intelligence assets and (3) the system worked
well when quiet, analytical, 'below-the-radar' professionals did
their work as operatives, while coordination is undertaken by
experienced political appointees with deep intellect and good
judgment, who enjoy the trust and confidence of the nation's
leadership. Looking
at these, and the current focus of the sector leadership on
spending partly explains the gaps we see, and the high levels of
insecurity in our nation.
Now back to the budget and spending priorities. The budget of
each agency consists of three components
- personnel costs, overhead and capital.
The overhead is sub-divided into two - regular overhead
which I assume is for stationery, snacks, tea, coffee, diesel
for generators, and other maintenance and the "operations vote".
None of these components is broken down, so while we know
that the Villa wishes to spend nearly a billion on food and
snacks this year, the NSA's expenditure on coffee is a state
secret - a manifest absurdity! The 'operations vote' is another
name for that notorious "security vote" for which no records or
receipts are kept, i.e. a slush fund for the officials to spend
as they please! For
each of the services, this amounts to several millions daily.
The capital components itemize what our intelligence services
spend their investment money on - buildings, equipment and
infrastructure to get their job done. We will now look at these
in some detail and then encourage the reader to draw some
conclusions.
The office of the NSA is supposed to advise on, and coordinate
national security matters. Its direct involvement in operations
is quite limited. It is therefore inexplicable that it
has N2.69 billion as a lump-sum regular overhead with lessthan
100 staff in one location. This means the NSA intends to spend
about N27 million per employee or N7.35 million every day
including weekends on running his Abuja office. The NSA's
security vote(operations vote)
is extra - it is N950 million this year, about N2.6
million every single day of monies that are never recorded,
accounted for or audited! The capital budget is some N29 billion
to be spent on satellite communications including training (N8.9
billion), data signal centre/equipment (N14.4 billion), Iridium/Thuraya
communication platform (N3.2 billion), 12 Jeeps with motorized
direction finder (N373 million), Cyber-Security (without any
enabling legislation yet) (N150 million) and Presidential
Communication Network (N2 billion).
What
should interest us and citizens and our national assembly
members is that similar provisions were made in the 2011 Budget
for all these items, so what have we spent so far and when will
the budgeting cycle end and the "ongoing projects" completed?
Are we getting value for money? Except for Iridium which there
is enough comparative data, there aren't enough details on the
other items to say no for certain and since security
procurements are usually exempted from open,competitive bidding,
'due process' and procurement audits, we can all draw our
conclusions.
The
SSS proposes to spend
about N46 billion in 2012. About half of this will go to
paying the 15,000 or so staff of the service - about N1.56
million per head. The regular overhead to run the SSS offices in
Abuja and all the states of the federation is a N4.14 billion.
Compared with the NSA's overhead, the SSS provision looks
modest! The "operations vote", that is what the SSS can freely
spend on informants and intelligence is a mere N700 million for
operations in 36 states, the FCT and headquarters compared with
the NSA's N950 million in one advisory/coordinating location.
There is something amiss here!
The
capital budget of the SSS is nearly N18 billion, a nearly
tenfold increase from last year's. The SSS intends to spend N1
billion on vehicles, cellphone location tracking system
(N1.3bn), counter surveillance jammer (N500m), VSAT project
(N1.675bn), advanced explosive detectors (total of
N3bn), arms and ammunition (N500m) and construction of
various office and residential buildings all over the country
for N6bn. Should SSS staff live in special "provided"
accommodation? Should they not live within the communities they
are located, enabling blending and more effective intelligence
gathering? These are policy questions that require serious
consideration.
The
NIA intends to spend about N41bn this year - N23.6bn for
personnel costs, about N3bn for overhead and about N14.8bn for
capital projects. The regular overhead to run NIA's Abuja office
and its agents abroad is some N2.6bn, about the same as the
NSA's office. The operations vote is N450m, less than half of
the NSA's! Again, there is something that does not add up here.
The NIA plans to spend a whopping N530m to buy computers
(N146m), active and counter-measures equipment (N142.5m), GSM
monitoring equipment (N104.5m), Access control system for Abuja
office (N101m) and covert photographic equipment for N36m). If
each computer and software bundle costs an average of N150,000,
it means the NIA intends to buy nearly 1,000! There must be
something to explain here.
The
NIA wants to purchase its own firefighting engine for about N14m
and upgrade its fire alarm system for N46m!. The agency intends
to purchase encrypted fixed satellite terminals (N128m), 115
Bgan terminals for N100m,
and an assortment of satellite communications equipment,
interception systems and accessories for over N1.5bn! Bomb
detectors, metal detectors and cyber-security (again!)
investments will cost over N1bn. Servers, storage, central power
backup and virtual private networks will cost about N2bn.
'Training and technical presentation tools' for Abuja and
our 135 missions abroad will cost another N2bn.
The
NIA intends to buy P.90 Belgian rifles for N1m each instead of
the average retail price of about
$1,900. Russian-made AK-47 assault rifles retail for
between $400 and $600 in the open market, with the East European
version as cheap as $100 each. We hope the N63,750 NIA proposes
to spend will purchase the more expensive, original
Kalashnikovs! In all the NIA will spend N286 million buying such
rifles, pistols and ammunition of various kinds. Ongoing
construction projects to be undertaken in the year include
residential buildings (N2.28bn), Schools (N2.7bn), three
entrance gates at the headquarters (N100m), the expansion of its
clinic (N100m), and the rehabilitation of gym and shooting range
(N321m).
Back
to the value-for-money question. Are the prices that we are
paying for these items the right prices? Those amongst us that
are quantity surveyors, cost engineers and procurement experts
would opine that we are paying way above international market
prices for many of these items. However, a more pertinent
question is whether the duplication of investments in satellite
communications, GSM/GPS tracking and interception systems in the
NSA, SSS and NIA budgets (details above) are not wasteful and
proof of coordination failures! Clearly, the investments need to
be streamlined with all the services connected to a 'situation
room' in the NSA's office and the Villa, not what appears to be
here - each agency pursuing its investment agenda independent of
the other, and buying similar stuff that are probably
technically incompatible.
Unless we target our
resources to real needs, increase transparency and
accountability in security spending as suggested by General
Muhammadu Buhari in December 2011, and eliminate duplications
and copy-cat procurements in our budget, we will continue to
lose the value of these investments. When the spending is
supposed to be for our security, it might simply end up in the
pockets of officials and contractors, while the citizens get
insecurity as the result. Security must not be seen as an easy,
money- making machine. This is what it appears to citizens these
days. We can do better. Our leaders must do better. There is no
better time to act than right now, that security is on
everyone's mind.
Budget 2012 (2) - Three
Billion Daily for Insecurity? By Nasir Ahmad El-Rufai
|