₦1.9 trillion has been spent on the Presidency Amnesty Programme (PAP) since 2015, with over 68% expended in 2017

Key takeaways:

  • ₦1.9 trillion spent on the PAP from 2015 to 2024, a significant amount dedicated to reintegrating former militants and fostering peace in the Niger Delta.
  • 2017 saw an extraordinary spike with ₦1.3 trillion spent, which is over 68% of the entire decade’s spending.
  • Expenditure stabilized after 2017, maintaining a consistent ₦59.6 billion - ₦65 billion annually from 2018 to 2024.
  • 2024 spending (₦65 billion) reflects only the first three quarters, meaning the final total could be slightly higher.

The Nigerian government has spent the sum of ₦1.9 trillion on the Presidency Amnesty Programme (PAP) between 2015 and 2024, with an overwhelming ₦1.3 trillion (over 68%) disbursed in 2017 alone. This indicates a significant concentration of funding in a single year, a sharp contrast to the relatively stable annual spending patterns seen afterward. The subsequent years saw a more predictable allocation, mostly hovering between ₦59.6 billion and ₦65 billion annually from 2018 to 2024.
This trend raises important questions about the financial strategy behind the program—was 2017 an anomaly driven by urgent priorities, or did the government attempt to front-load the initiative with resources in a single year? Since then, expenditure has remained steady, suggesting a shift from aggressive spending to a more structured, sustained funding model.

Source:

Office of the Accountant General of the Federation

Period:

2015 - 2024
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