Betta Chimaobim Edu (born 27 October 1986)[1] is a Nigerian medical doctor turned politician. She served as national women leader of All Progressive Congress.[2] She was Cross River State Commissioner for Health until her resignation in 2022.[3] She was also National Chairman of the Nigeria Health Commissioners Forum.[4][5][6]
In 2015, Edu became the youngest person to be appointed Special Adviser to the Executive Governor of Cross River State Benedict Ayade on Community and Primary Healthcare.[9]
In 2020, she became chairman of the Cross River State COVID-19 Taskforce.[10] In August that year, she was appointed National Chairman of the Nigeria Health Commissioners Forum.[11] Edu is a Fellow of the Royal School of Public Health in and the African Institute of Public Health Professionals.[12] Betta Edu became the youngest national woman leader of the All Progressives Congress (APC) in March 2022.[1]
In August 2023, Betta was sworn in as minister of humanitarian affairs and poverty alleviation and the All progressives congress replaced her as National women leader.[21][22][23]
Controversies
₦585 million fraud
In 2020, Edu was accused of posting fake photos of ventilators.[24] The Cross River state chapter of the Nigerian Medical Association passed a vote of no confidence on Edu over accusations of professional misconduct in the context of the COVID-19 pandemic.[25] Edu claims the vote of no confidence was political.[26] In 2022, during her campaign to become National Women Leader of the APC, Edu was accused of procedural misconduct.[3]
On 8 January 2024, she was suspended from her position as the minister of humanitarian affairs and poverty alleviation by President Bola Ahmed Tinubu for allegedly diverting ₦585 million in ministry funds to a personal bank account.[27][28] President Tinubu asked the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) for a thorough investigation.[29]
The investigation that followed suggested a theft of public funds many times larger. In April 2024, the EFCC's chair, Olanipekun Olukayode, wrote, "As it is now, we are investigating over 50 bank accounts that we have traced money into." The approximate average amount in each of Edu's bank accounts that the EFCC had by then traced and seized seems to have been about ₦600 million, for a total, across her 50 or more accounts, of some ₦30 billion. According to a BBC publication the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission had recovered an equivalent of $24million from accounts allegedly linked to Edu. As of the EFCC's April 2024 update, Edu has not been legally charged or fired from her position.[30]