The Socio-Economic Rights and Accountability Project (SERAP) has urged the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) givernor, Olayemi Cardoso, explain whereabouts of the missing N3 trillion of public funds announced by the Auditor-General of the Federation (AGF).
SERAP said the grave allegations were documented in the annual report published by the Auditor-General in the 2022 annual report published by the AGF.
According to him, the CBN should identify those responsible for the missing public funds and hand them over to the Independent Corrupt Practices and Other Related Offences Commission (ICPC) and the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) for further investigation and prosecution.
SERAP urged him āto ensure the full recovery and return of any missing public funds to the treasury without further delay.ā
In the letter dated 15 November 2025 and signed by SERAP deputy director Kolawole Oluwadare, the organisation said: āThese grim allegations by the Auditor-General suggest grave violations of the public trust, the provisions of the Nigerian Constitution 1999 [as amended], the CBN Act, and anticorruption standards.ā
SERAP said, āThese grave violations also reflect a failure of CBN accountability more generally and are directly linked to the institutionās persistent failure to comply with its Act and to uphold the principles of transparency and accountability.ā
According to SERAP, āThese violations have seriously undermined the ability of the CBN to effectively discharge its statutory functions and the public trust and confidence in the bank. The CBN ought to be committed to transparency and accountability in its operations.ā
The letter, read in part: āAccording to the Auditor-General, the CBN in 2022 failed to remit over N1 trillion of āthe Federal Governmentās portion of operating surplusā into the Consolidated Revenue Fund (CRF) account.ā
āThe Auditor-General fears that the money may have been ādiverted.ā He wants the money recovered and remitted to the treasury.ā
āThe CBN in 2022 failed to recover over N629 billion paid to āunknown beneficiariesā as part of the Anchor Borrowersā Programme, a programme āmeant to support farmers to ensure sustainable food production in the country.āā
āBut āthe numbers of beneficiaries who collected the money are unknown.ā The CBN has also failed to ārecover the money.ā The Auditor-General fears āthe money may have been divertedā, which could have ācontributed to the difficulty in sustaining food security in the Nation.āā
āHe wants the money recovered and remitted to the treasury. The CBN has also failed to recover over N784 billion ābeing 32 unpaid, overdue loans and interventions disbursed by the Bank between 2018 and May 2022.
āThe Auditor-General said āthere was no evidence that the Bank was doing enough to recover the loans/interventions, which ought to have been paid.ā He wants the money recovered and remitted to the treasury.ā
āThe CBN in 2022 also spent over N125 billion āon questionable intervention activities.ā The CBN claimed it spent the money āon intervention activities in connection with national security, the federal government, state securities, armed forces and to build the capacity of the financial sectorā.ā
āBut the Auditor-General is concerned that the money may have been spent āwithout the approval of the National Assembly.ā There was also no document to āsupport the expenditure.āā
āThe āexpenditure also may not have been in the public interest and consistent with the objectives of the CBN in section 2 of the CBN Act.ā The Auditor-General fears the money may have been ādiverted.ā He wants the money recovered and remitted to the treasury.ā
āThe CBN in 2022 also āunjustifiablyā spent over N1 billion to buy 43 operational vehicles for the Nigeria Immigration Service (NIS). The āspending is unjustified because there is no connection with buying operational vehicles for the NIS and the objectives of the CBN as stated in section 2 of the CBN Act.ā
āThe NIS also āfailed to provide any evidence to show that the vehicles were actually supplied and delivered.ā There āwere also no procurement and payment records or documents.ā The Auditor-General fears the money may have been ādivertedā. He wants the money recovered and remitted to the treasury.ā
āThe CBN also awarded 43 contracts for over N189 billion but āthe contractors deliberately delayed completion of these contractsā by seeking āextension of the completion period.āā
āThe contractors then ārequested for variation of contracts due to extension of completion period.ā Following the request, the CBN paid the contractors over N9 billion āirregular variation of contract price.āā
āThere āwere no relevant procurement documents such as contract files, procurement records, and payment vouchersā for the payment. The Auditor-General fears āthe money may have been divertedā and the projects may have been abandoned.ā He wants the money recovered and remitted to the treasury.ā
āThe Katsina state branch of the CBN also failed to recover over N90 million [N90,163,610.00] being āoutstanding loans and interventions disbursed to 33 small and medium enterprises during Covid 19 in 2020.āā
āThe Auditor-General fears āthe money may have been ādivertedā or āmismanagedā. He wants the money recovered and remitted to the treasury.ā
āWe would be grateful if the recommended measures are taken within 7 days of the receipt and/or publication of this letter. If we have not heard from you by then, SERAP shall take all appropriate legal actions to compel you and the CBN to comply with our request in the public interest.ā
āParagraph 708 of the Financial Regulations 2009 provides that, āon no account should payment be made for services not yet performed or for goods not yet supplied.āā
āSection 15(5) of the Nigerian Constitution requires public institutions to abolish all corrupt practices and abuse of power.ā Section 13 of the Constitution imposes clear responsibility on the CBN to conform to, observe and apply the provisions of Chapter 2 of the constitution.ā
āParagraph 3112(ii) of the Financial Regulations 2009 provides: āWhere a public officer fails to account for government revenue, such officer shall be surcharged for the full amount involved and such officer shall be handed over to either the EFCC or the ICPC.āā
āNigerians have the right to know the whereabouts of the public funds. Taking the recommended measures would advance the right of Nigerians to restitution, compensation and guarantee of non-repetition.ā
āThe Nigerian Constitution, Freedom of Information Act, and the countryās anti-corruption and human rights obligations rest on the principle that citizens should have access to information regarding their public institutionsā activities.ā


