Education
State House To Spend N15bn On Bulletproof Vehicle Tyres, SUVs, Office Complex
The State House has budgeted N15.09 billion for the purchase of tyres for bulletproof vehicles, Sport Utility Vehicles, operational vehicles, and plain cars, and the construction of an office complex for Special Advisers and Senior Special Assistants.
The House also proposed a total sum of N5.49 billion as a provision for the annual maintenance of the Presidential Villa.
These details were disclosed in the newly released 2025 Appropriation Bill by the Budget Office of the Federation on Thursday.
Investors King had reported that President Bola Tinubu presented the budget titled “Budget of Restoration: Securing Peace, Rebuilding Prosperity” to a joint session of the National Assembly on Wednesday, outlining an ambitious N49.70 trillion spending plan.
The budget prioritises defence, infrastructure, and human capital development, with a projected deficit of N13.39 trillion to be financed through borrowing.
Tinubu had disclosed his administration’s commitment to strengthening security and revamping the nation’s infrastructure while addressing the lawmakers.
In the appropriation bill document, the State House, which serves as the administrative hub for the executive arm, will spend N164m for the purchase of tyres for bulletproof vehicles, plain cars, jeeps, platform trucks, and other utility and operational vehicles.
Out of the sum, N1.1bn was earmarked for the replacement of SUV vehicles, and N3.66bn for the purchase of State House operational vehicles.
It stated that N127.86m will be spent on the procurement of SUVs for Mr President and the Vice President.
This cost will be undertaken under the office of the President.
Similarly, N285m will be spent for the purchase of motor vehicles under the office of the Chief of staff to the president, while the Chief security officer to the President got an allocation of N179.63m for the purchase of security and operational vehicles.
Further checks showed that N2.12bn was allocated for honorarium and sitting allowances and proposed spending of N1.83bn for the construction of an office complex for Special Advisers and Senior Special advisers.
The proposed 2025 Appropriation Bill under review by the National Assembly has an allocation of N4.91trn for defence and security while infrastructure will receive N4.06trn for projects such as the Lagos-Calabar Coastal Highway and the Sokoto-Badagry Highway.
The President also announced significant allocations for education and health. Education will receive N3.52trn, which includes funding for Universal Basic Education and nine new higher institutions, while the health sector will get N2.48trn to improve healthcare systems and provide essential drugs for public hospitals.
The budget is based on key economic assumptions, including a projected decline in inflation from 34.6 per cent to 15 per cent and an improvement in the naira exchange rate from N1,700 per dollar to N1,500 per dollar.
This proposed expenses are coming at a time many Nigerians are wallowing in abject poverty.
Concerned stakeholders have been calling on governments to tighten their belts and reduce cost of governance.
They had argued that a situation where elected officer holders will be spending largely and extravagantly and expecting citizens to sacrifice will not be tolerated.