Home Back

Don’t Pass Public Procurement Bill – BPP Warns Reps

The Whistler 2024/8/22
Front view of the House of Representative | Nneoma Benson
Front view of the House of Representative

The Bureau for Public Procurement (BPP) has warned the House of Representatives not to pass the bill seeking to amend the Chartered Institute of Purchasing and Supply Management of Nigeria, saying the amendment will cause conflict to the institute with the mandate of the Bureau.

Director of Civil Infrastructure, Nasir Bello made this known on Monday at a public hearing on the need to amend chartered Institute of purchasing and supply management of Nigeria Act, 2007 to be in tandem with what obtains in the procurement professional practice across the Globe and for related Mathers

Bello who represented the Director General of the Bureau said the Bureau is of the view that allowing the amendment to section 1(c) which seeks to “(c) providing training, education and examination of persons desiring to become professional procedures and procurement auditors according to the provisions of the Act whether in Nigeria or abroad” will bring it in conflict with section 5(k) of the Public Procurement Act.

He added that amending section 12 as contained in the amendment bill will also bring it in conflict with global standards and the provision of the Procurement Act, stating that the institute should rather focus on its primary role in relation to purchasing. procurement, store, materials, warehouse, logistics management or procurement chain management in Nigeria and other parts of the world.

He said, “It should not be allowed to delve into the function of the Bureau in relation to procurement and Public procurement in particular. In carrying out its mandate as stipulated in Section 5 (k) of the PPA, the Bureau has several higher institutions of learning handling courses on Procurement.

“The institute may change its name but the scope of its mandate should remain, as it is contained in its extant law,” he said.

He emphasised that, “Notwithstanding the foregoing, should the House be inclined towards allowing the proposed amendment without the Bureau necessarily conceding.

“The Bureau wishes to draw attention to the provision of Section 5(s) of the PPA which vests in the Bureau as the Regulator of Public Procurement in Nigeria, the mandate to coordinate relevant training programs to build institutional capacity.”

Bello stressed that the provision of the intended training by the Institute, especially in the area of Public Procurement, must be coordinated by the Bureau, as the regulatory Agency for Public procurement in Nigeria.

According to him, the PPA, 2007 allow the National Council on Public Procurement and the Bureau of Public Procurement as the Regulatory Authorities responsible for the monitoring and oversight of Public Procurement, harmonising the existing Government policies and practices by regulating, setting standards and developing the Legal framework and professional capacity for Public Procurement in Nigeria; and other related matters.

He said the Act is to remove all impediments that had hitherto prevented effective and efficient management of public procurement in Nigeria including the private sector.

According to him, some of the major impediments included lack of competition and transparency, non-publication of contract opportunities, non-prior disclosure of rules to be used in the selection process, lack of standard bidding documents and setting practice guidelines for procurement practitioners, allow free entry and exist and align with global best practices in line with the UNCITRAL Model Law through multi- stakeholder engagement.

He further said that the world has moved onto specialisation and sector-based professionalisation of public procurement. We now have within the same country or across different continents provisions for specialised services and their co-existence.

Chairman of the House Committee on Public Procurement, Unyime Idem said the bill is priority bill because of the important role it has played in shaping professionals in the field of purchasing and supply chain management in Nigeria and the development of high standard professional skill, ability and integrity among all those engaged in procurement practice.

Unyime said the House committee was committed on Public Procurement to upholding the legal and institutional framework for the enthronement of transparency, accountability, value for money and efficiency in the procurement of works, goods and services within Ministries, Departments, Agencies, and Parastatals as stipulated in the Public Procurement Act, 2007.

He said Strict adherence and due process compliance with the PPA, 2007 is mandatory for all MDAs, to avoid legal repercussions and ensure the efficient and ethical utilisation of public resources.

The Speaker of the House of Representatives, Tajudeen Abbas who was represented by the Leader of the house, Julius Ihonbvere said the public hearing reinforces the dedication of the House to open, participatory and consultative parliament as enumerated significantly in the Legislative Agenda and demonstrated in the recent open NASS Week organised to interface with the masses in the country.

He said effective procurement and supply processes play a vital role in economic growth and development and essentially provoke efficient public service delivery.

He said there is a need to reform the Chartered Institute of Purchase and Supply Management to modernise the profession in line with global standard practice to stimulate enhanced proficiency on the part of the practitioners and to foster greater positive results in public and private governance.

He said, “public hearing is a key legislative process put in place by the parliament to provide relevant stakeholders and other members of the public a robust window to be part of the parliamentary practice.

“In so doing, your views, feelings and aspirations are captured in the legislative framework to guarantee better legal outputs.”

People are also reading