Kaduna State Governor Malam Nasir El-Rufai has defended the cancellation of Ramadan gift by his administration, saying the process was fraudulent.
El-Rufai last week announced the discontinuation of the practice of distributing food items and gifts during Ramadan. But the decision has been criticised in many quarters.
The governor, while hosting religious leaders explained that the state is broke, and needs to tighten its finances to serve the people better.
The governor, who spoke yesterday through his aide on Media and Publicity, Samuel Aruwan said: “The government stopped issuing contracts to so called ‘super’ politicians to supply foods, beverages and other essentials as Ramadan gifts across the state because the process is entirely fraudulent with nothing tangible to show for it, except playing to the gallery to score cheap political goals and fraudulently enrich a few individuals.”
Aruwan added: “It is a known fact that the so-called feeding of the poor during Ramadan is a window created to loot the public treasury with impunity using religion as a cover.
“Findings have revealed how it is mainly prominent politicians and influential personalities that benefit from the Ramadan and Christmas gifts instead of the so called ‘poor’.
“Food stuffs, bought with public resources, are distributed to prominent government officials and other personalities, while the poor in whose name those foods are procured queue in droves for crumbs and are constantly subjected to several forms of hardships and degrading circumstances after such sham gestures. The hundreds of millions of naira involved have not translated into visible feeding points in Kaduna.”
Aruwan explained further that, “the state government will no longer tolerate the siphoning of government resources in the guise of gifts to prominent politicians, public servants and famous figures, or the feeding of indigent persons during religious occasions; neither will it be involved in sponsoring people.
“The governor is committed to always helping the needy in a transparent and sustainable manner. He is focused on providing sincere leadership, and that includes taking steps against the looting of the public treasury in the guise of feeding ordinary citizens who are deprived of social justice and basic amenities.
“The governor’s position is simple. He will not dip his hands into the public treasury or aid the swindling of public funds using religion as a cover. Instead his generosity to the poor will continue in his private status as a Muslim. His commitment to Zakat is constant and has been done for decades without any form of publicity.
“The governor encourages people of means to do the same in their private capacities, and not abdicate their religious duty to care for the less well-off to the government.
“This year, Malam Nasir El Rufai and his friends are pooling resources to provide Ramadan feeding as private individuals to the vulnerable in our society.
“This is a healthy way of building a caring society, and if more widely adopted by people of means, will certainly provide for more persons than a fraudulent system of government provision that at best reaches only a few.”
Meanwhile, prominent Islamic scholar in the state, Sheikh Ahmad Gumi, backed El-Rufai’s decision to cancel Ramadan welfare packages to religious bodies.
Gumi hailed the governor’s decision, saying the Ramadan package was not mandatory or compulsory.
According to him, “the government should focus more on the welfare of its civil servants rather than distributing package to other people during fasting period.”
Sheikh Gumi said it was wrong for any state government to owe its civil servants their monthly salaries.
He said if the economic situation in the state stabilises, the government can revisit the feeding programme.
(The Nation)
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