National News
FG approves N500bn security emergency fund as FAAC deducts ₦952bn from May revenue
The Federal Government has approved a N500bn national security emergency intervention fund aimed at strengthening the country’s response to rising security challenges, even as fresh disclosures show that a total of ₦952bn was deducted from the Federation Account Allocation Committee (FAAC) revenue for May 2026 before statutory sharing among the three tiers of government.
According to documents and sources familiar with the FAAC proceedings, the deductions included N250bn for a Military Intervention Fund, N252bn for an Infrastructure Development Fund for states, and N450bn set aside for a Non-Oil Excess Revenue Account. The combined deductions significantly reduced the distributable revenue for the month, which stood at N2.3tn.
The move comes amid escalating insecurity across parts of the country, with government officials describing the intervention as a proactive shift from reactive crisis spending to structured emergency preparedness. Cross River State Governor, Bassey Otu, confirmed that the security allocation was part of broader fiscal adjustments approved during FAAC’s 158th meeting presided over by Vice President Kashim Shettima.
Officials said the N500bn security fund will be deployed for rapid-response operations, intelligence support, troop logistics, surveillance systems, and other emergency security needs across states and federal security agencies. The funding will be drawn directly from federation revenue before monthly disbursement.
The decision has drawn mixed reactions from stakeholders. While economists and policy analysts welcomed the intervention as necessary given persistent threats ranging from insurgency to kidnapping and banditry, they cautioned that transparency and accountability would be critical to its success.
Chief Executive Officer of Economic Associates, Dr Ayo Teriba, said increased security funding was unavoidable, stressing that Nigeria must close existing gaps in troop strength, equipment, surveillance infrastructure, and personnel welfare. However, he warned that Nigerians would expect clear accountability in the management of the funds.
Similarly, Professor Akpan Ekpo of the University of Uyo described the initiative as essential for economic stability, noting that insecurity remains a major deterrent to investment and national development.
However, concerns have also emerged over the scale and structure of deductions from federation revenue, with analysts noting that nearly one trillion naira was carved out before allocation to the Federal Government, states, and local councils.
The development comes as the Department of State Services (DSS) rejected proposals for foreign funding in its proposed Security Trust Fund, warning that external contributions could compromise intelligence operations and national sovereignty.
Security challenges continue to intensify across Nigeria, including insurgency in the North-East, banditry in the North-West, kidnapping incidents in the North-Central, separatist tensions in the South-East, and oil theft in the Niger Delta.
The Tinubu administration has repeatedly defended its security spending, saying reforms under the Renewed Hope Agenda are designed to strengthen military capability, improve intelligence gathering, and enhance inter-agency coordination.
Meanwhile, economists and security experts maintain that while funding is important, the effectiveness of the new intervention will depend largely on transparency, oversight mechanisms, and measurable impact on ground-level security outcomes.
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