Federal Ministries of Nigeria

The Federal Ministries of Nigeria are civil service departments that are responsible for delivering various types of government service. Each ministry is headed by a Permanent Secretary who reports to a Minister in the Federal Cabinet.[1] Some government functions are provided by "commissions" or parastatals (government-owned corporations) that may be independent or associated with a ministry.[2]

Ministries

At times, ministries are amalgamated and at other times they are split. Thus Halima Tayo Alao was appointed Minister of Environment and Housing on 26 July 2007 by President Umaru Yar'Adua.[3] After a cabinet reshuffle, in December 2008 Nduese Essien was appointed Minister of Environment and Hassan Muhammed Lawal was appointed Minister of Works and Housing.[4] On 6 April 2010, Mohammed Daggash was appointed Minister of Works and Nduese Essien was appointed Minister of Lands, Housing & Urban Development.[5] The table below lists current or past ministries.

MinistryNotesWebsite
AgricultureRegulates agricultural research, agriculture and national resources, forestry and veterinary researchhttp://fmard.gov.ng/
AviationRegulates air travel and aviation serviceshttp://aviation.gov.ng/
DefenceConsists of the defence services headquarters, the Nigerian Army, the Nigerian Air Force, the Nigerian Navy, and other defence agencies and departmentshttp://www.defence.gov.ng/
EducationDirects education in Nigeriahttp://www.education.gov.ng/
EnergyTo promote sustainable energy development in Nigeria [6]https://www.energy.gov.ng
EnvironmentRegulates Environmental issueshttp://environment.gov.ng/
Federal Capital TerritoryAdministers the Federal Capital Territory (Abuja)http://fcda.gov.ng/
FinanceManages, controls and monitors federal revenues and expenditureshttp://www.finance.gov.ng
Foreign AffairsCharged with the responsibility for the formulation, articulation, and pursuit of Nigerian foreign policy trust and objectives.http://foreignaffairs.gov.ng/
HealthDevelop and implements policies and programs and undertakes other actions to deliver health serviceshttp://health.gov.ng/
Information and CultureTo establish and maintain a robust information dissemination mechanism that promotes our tourism potentials and enhances our cultural values.http://fmic.gov.ng/
InteriorTo render to Nigerians and foreigners alike, diverse internal security and other ancillary services that are highly qualitative, efficient, courteous and transparent.http://www.interior.gov.ng
JusticeBrings cases before the judiciary that are initiated or assumed by the government. Headed by the Attorney General, who is also Minister of Justicehttp://www.justice.gov.ng/
Labour and ProductivityConcerned with relations between workers and employees.http://labour.gov.ng
Lands & Urban DevelopmentFormerly part of the Ministry of Workshttp://www.landsandhousing.gov.ng
Mines and Steel DevelopmentEncourages development of the country’s solid mineral resourceshttp://minesandsteel.gov.ng
Niger DeltaCoordinates efforts to tackle the challenges of infrastructural development, environment protection and youth empowerment in the Niger Deltahttp://nigerdelta.gov.ng/
Petroleum ResourcesRegulates upstream production and downstream distribution of petroleum productshttp://petroleumresources.gov.ng/
PowerResponsible for providing social amenities such as Power across the country [7][8]https://www.power.gov.ng
Science & TechnologyCharts the course of Scientific and Technological development of the nation
Industry, Trade and InvestmentRegulates trade and investmenthttp://nid.fmiti.gov.ng
TransportationTo ensure fast, safe, efficient, affordable, convenient, integrated and inter-modal transport systemhttp://www.transportation.gov.ng
Tourism, Culture & National OrientationMerged with Ministry of Information
Water ResourcesFormed from Ministry of Agriculture and Water Resources in April 2010.[9]https://waterresources.gov.ng
Women AffairsPromotes the development of women with equal rights and corresponding responsibilitieshttps://www.womenaffairs.gov.ng/
Works and HousingTo facilitate the provision of adequate and affordable housing for all Nigerians[10][11]https://worksandhousing.gov.ng
Youth and Sports DevelopmentTo Formulation, Implementation, Monitoring and Evaluation of Policies and Programmes on Youths and Sports Development towards Wealth Creation, Youth Empowerment, Physical Fitness and Well-being, Achieving Excellence in Sports, National Unity and Sustainable Development.https://youthandsports.ng/

Commissions

CommissionNotesWebsite
Federal Civil ServiceExecutive body that has the authority to make appointments and transfers, and to exercise disciplinary control over all Federal Civil Servantshttps://web.archive.org/web/20140512230804/http://fedcivilservice.gov.ng/
National Sports
National PlanningResponsible for formulating medium term and long term economic and development plans for the Nationhttp://www.npc.gov.ng/
Police Affairshttp://www.policeaffairs.gov.ng/
Police Formation and Command
State House
NIDCOMNigerians in Diaspora Commission, provide for the engagement of Nigerians in Diaspora in the policies, projects and participation in the development of Nigeria and for the purpose of utilising the human capital and material resources of Nigerians in Diaspora towards the overall socio-economic, cultural and political development of Nigeria and for related matters.https://nidcom.gov.ng/about-nidcom/

See also

References

  1. "Government Ministries in Nigeria and their ministers with their state of origin". Commonwealth of Nations. Retrieved 2009-12-21.
  2. "PERMANENT SECRETARIES". Office of the Head of Service of the Federation. Archived from the original on 2010-08-10. Retrieved 2011-05-27.
  3. "Yar'Adua names cabinet". Africa News. 27 July 2007. Archived from the original on 2011-09-28. Retrieved 2009-12-15.
  4. Nosike Ogbuenyi, Abimbola Akosile and Sufuyan Ojeifo (19 December 2008). "Yar'Adua Renews His Mission". ThisDay. Retrieved 2009-12-17.
  5. Golu Timothy (10 April 2010). "New Ministers: Jonathan's Cabinet In Focus". Leadership. Archived from the original on 13 April 2010. Retrieved 2010-04-16.
  6. https://www.energy.gov.ng/
  7. https://www.power.gov.ng/
  8. "Why I split Ministry of Power, Works and Housing — Buhari". 12 September 2019.
  9. George Oji (7 April 2010). "Jonathan Takes Over Ministry of Power". ThisDay. Retrieved 2011-02-27.
  10. https://worksandhousing.gov.ng/
  11. "Why I split Ministry of Power, Works and Housing — Buhari". 12 September 2019.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.