The immediate past chairman of the Federal Inland Revenue Service, FIRS, Muhammad Nami, has disclosed that the agency gave N5 billion to fund the activities of the presidential committee on tax and fiscal policy reforms.
Mr Nami stated this while reacting to a report by an online newspaper on Thursday.
The report had alleged that Mr Nami gave approval worth N11 billion after he was asked to proceed on pre-retirement leave by President Bola Tinubu.
According to him, the reported sum was part of N16 billion worth of outstanding commitments to the service, which was included in his hand-over notes to his successor.
He, however, said no payment was made by the service after the termination of his appointment.
“First and foremost, I want to categorically state that after my exit as FIRS Executive Chairman, I made no such approvals as claimed in the report,” he said.
“Fundamentally, it is important to note that no payment was made by the service after the announcement of my pre-retirement leave, as claimed by this story.
“An approval for payment in the service is one step of a journey to payment. It is the custom that when a new executive chairman resumes office, he will review, validate, and make final authorization before any payments can be made.
“It is important to note for the record that all decisions reached and extant liabilities/ commitments of the service during my stay in office are contained in the handover notes I made available to my successor, Mr. Zacch Adedeji. He is fully briefed on everything. For clarity, the items listed in the Cable Newspaper Report were part of the N16 billion outstanding commitments contained in our handover note.
“The N5 billion paid to Joint Tax Board was paid to fund the activities of Presidential Committee on Tax and Fiscal Policy Reforms two months before I left office. It was paid after we received a letter to that effect from the office of Mr. President signed by Zacch Adedeji himself.
“The report maliciously attempts to portray a picture that I hurriedly left the country on September 16th after these so called “suspicious approvals” were made.
“Again, nothing can be further from the truth. If I traveled out of the country on the 16th of September, how then did I attend the handover ceremony with Mr. Zacch on the afternoon of Monday 18th September 2023? That handover ceremony was covered by the media, and can be cross-checked.
“It is disappointing to see the Cable, a revered online newspaper, attempt to sensationalise events that took place in the ordinary course of my work in office, making them seem as if they were done in bad faith,” Mr Namu lamented.
Defending his time in office, the ex-FIRS boss said every decision he made was “within the ambit of the law and within the lawful powers I exercised then as executive chairman”.
He also disclosed that despite inheriting N1.4 billion at the FIRS, he left N129 billion in the purse of the service.




