The Abuja Environmental Protection Board (AEPB) has locked up the gates to the
National Hospital Abuja today. the Chairman, FCT Ministerial Special Task Force on Recovery of Debts,Shehu Lawan, said that the hospital owed the board N7,776,800 as at June 2016.
He disclosed that the FCT Minister, Muhammad Bello, constituted
the task force to recover more than N9 billion owed AEPB by various ministries,
departments and agencies as well as private and corporate bodies resident in
the FCT.According to him, the board obtained three court summons
against the hospital, but the hospital failed to comply.
Reacting to the incident, Dr. Adetayo Haastrup, the
hospital’s spokesperson, described the situation as a rude shock, a national
embarrassment and an inhuman act considering the health services rendered by
the facility.Haastrup confirmed that the AEPB told the hospital
management that the board had a court injunction to recover the debts.The spokesman also said that the hospital only received
the paper for payment of bill of the said amount in June.He explained that the NHA had made series of attempts to
pay up the bill but that the accounts kept bouncing and that the hospital management
had explained the challenges to the board.
“I believe that it should be
after exhausting such avenue and no positive response is reached that the board
should go ahead with the seal-off option. This is a government
institution with a difference because of the kind of services we render; it has
to do with saving lives, ambulances might be coming in for emergency cases.I think it is out of place
for AEPB to do this to the apex and strategic hospital in Nigeria; it is an
embarrassment.We have enjoyed a cordial
relationship with the board.
On three occasions we tried
paying the money but it was bouncing back because they are not on Treasury
Single Account (TSA).
For example, government to
government you have to be on TSA because when you send the money through the
TSA it will go, but when the money goes to the central bank it will reflect on
your TSA.
We have all been instructed
to move our account to TSA, so, when we pay, the money is being rejected
because they gave us commercial bank account number not TSA account.
We have called on the agency
supervising the AEPB to look into the matter and to have sympathy for the
patients,” said
the spokesman.
Haastrup said the hospital’s next line of action would include going to the court with the evidence of payment made earlier, among others.
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