Over three months after leaving office, some ministers in the last administration of ex-President Goodluck Jonathan are yet to return their official vehicles.
Such vehicles include pilot cars with which they get easy passage on the highway and cars attached to their families.
The Federal Government has, however, written some of the ex-ministers to return the official vehicles to the ministries.
Some of the former ministers claimed they had not returned their official vehicles because of outstanding salaries, claims and severance package.
Fifteen former ministers are yet to surrender the vehicles assigned to their former offices.
The government is believed to have asked permanent secretaries in the ministries to write the former ministers.
The government threatened to compel the ex-ministers to handover the vehicles or face sanctions.
A Presidency source said: “Some of the ex-ministers are yet to return their official vehicles, especially the Sport Utility Vehicles (SUVs), which they were using. It is amazing that some of them are still using pilot vehicles for passage.
“While some of them claimed they are still entitled to such perks for about three months after leaving office, a negligible few handed over their vehicles before May 29.
“Some of them said they had not fully disengaged because they had outstanding eight-month salaries, allowances, claims and severance package to collect from the government.
“We have about 15 of them who have not fully complied with the directive to hand over their official vehicles.
It was learnt that the memo has started having effect. Some ministers last Thursday returned some vehicles.
A former minister in the Ministry of Power was said to have returned 15 vehicles to the pool.
The source added: “The vehicles included some which were hijacked from the parastatals or agencies under the ministry.”
A former minister said: “They are talking of vehicles when some of us have not been paid for eight months. Most of us have outstanding claims and legitimate allowances to collect.
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