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Six Nigerian states are yet to publish their audited financial statements for the 2024 fiscal year. Five of them are already past their statutorily implied deadlines, FIJ has found.

The states are Akwa Ibom, Kaduna, Ogun, Oyo, Plateau and Rivers. In Akwa Ibom’s case, its amended 2021 audit law gives the auditor general up to nine months to publish the report online after submitting it to the House of Assembly. The accountant general has six months to present the books, followed by a 90-day audit and submission period.

In the other five states, audit laws differ in the year they were enacted or updated, but the process is similar.

READ ALSO: 30 States Spent N11.75bn on Int’l Trips in Q1 2025 Only to Attract Zero Foreign Investment

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S/N State Geopolitical Zone 2024 Financials Published? Legal Publication Deadline
1 Abia South-East Yes
2 Adamawa North-East Yes
3 Akwa Ibom South-South No (9 months) 9 months
4 Anambra South-East Yes
5 Bauchi North-East Yes
6 Bayelsa South-South Yes
7 Benue North-Central Yes
8 Borno North-East Yes
9 Cross River South-South Yes
10 Delta South-South Yes
11 Ebonyi South-East Yes
12 Edo South-South Yes
13 Ekiti South-West Yes
14 Enugu South-East Yes
15 Gombe North-East Yes
16 Imo South-East Yes
17 Jigawa North-West Yes
18 Kaduna North-West No (6 Months) 6 months
19 Kano North-West Yes
20 Katsina North-West Yes
21 Kebbi North-West Yes
22 Kogi North-Central Yes
23 Kwara North-Central Yes
24 Lagos South-West Yes
25 Nasarawa North-Central Yes
26 Niger North-Central Yes
27 Ogun South-West No (6 months) 6 months
28 Ondo South-West Yes
29 Osun South-West Yes
30 Oyo South-West No (6 months) 6 months
31 Plateau North-Central No (6 months) 6 months
32 Rivers South-South No (no Legal basis) No legal basis
33 Sokoto North-West Yes
34 Taraba North-East Yes
35 Yobe North-East Yes
36 Zamfara North-West Yes



The accountant general must submit the financial documents to the audit office within three months after the financial year ends. The auditor general is then required to audit the report, send it to the House of Assembly and publish it immediately.

The Ogun State Audit Law (2021), Rivers State Audit Law (2021, as amended), Akwa Ibom State Audit Law (2021), Oyo State Audit Commission Law (2021) and Plateau State Audit Law (2021) all set out these requirements. In Rivers, however, publishing the audit is left to the discretion of the auditor general.

In past years, these states have published their audits between June and August. Some have also been ranked among the lowest in transparency. The CJID Openness Index, released in July 2024, placed all six in the bottom tier along with 10 others.

On Friday, FIJ reported Akwa Ibom’s repeated disregard for budgetary transparency despite binding provisions in its Fiscal Responsibility Law.

READ ALSO: Akwa Ibom Hides Spending Details in 3-Page Budget Report Again

Only two states — Yobe and Ekiti — scored above average for transparency and accountability in 2024, with 73 per cent and 54 per cent, according to the Subnational Audit Efficacy Index, published by the Paradigm Leadership Initiative.

The annual assessment, which measures financial transparency and policy adoption across Nigeria’s state governments, shows a familiar trend: stagnation or decline.

The post It’s Past Deadline, 5 States Fail to Publish 2024 Financial Statements appeared first on Foundation For Investigative Journalism.