Tag: Dogara

  • Budget padding: Court to hear Jibril’s case February 20

    A Federal High Court sitting in Kano on Wednesday fixed February 20 for hearing in the suit challenging the suspension of a former chairman of the House of Representatives Committee on Appropriation, Abdulmumini Jubril.

    The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports that the Clerk of the House of Representatives and Speaker of the House, Yakubu Dogara are the respondents in the case.

    NAN reports that some constituents in Kiru/Bebeji Federal Constituency are challenging the legality of Jibril’s suspension.

    The counsel for the plaintiff, Mr. Bashir Muqaddam, had earlier applied for a date to enable him respond to issues raised in the preliminary objection filed by the defence counsel.

    According to him, the defence counsel wanted the consolidation of the two suits – the one filed by the constituency in Kano and the other filed by Jibril in Abuja.

    The defence counsel, Mr. Kalu Onuha, said he had no objection to the application for adjournment.

    The presiding Judge, Justice Sulaiman Akoko, thereafter picked February 20 for hearing in the matter.

     

  • Budget 2017: Dogara accepts Buhari’s assent conditions

    Budget 2017: Dogara accepts Buhari’s assent conditions

    The House of Representatives yesterday accepted to comply with the conditions given by President Muhammadu Buhari that details of the 2017 budget be debated on the floor and passed before he can sign the budget into law.

    The Speaker in his welcome speech on the resumption of members from the Yuletide recess said the House “must brace up and work assiduously and conscientiously to give Nigerians a budget that will not only lift us out of recession but kick-start the needed expeditious journey into prosperity.

    “We pledge to reform the budget process. To this end, therefore, we would ensure that the procedure and process of consideration and passage of the 2017 budget is transparent, inclusive and professionally handled. The details of the budget should be debated and passed in Plenary to avoid those needless pitfalls that normally characterise the budget process.

    “Critical bills designed to stimulate and streamline our economy such as the Public Procurement Act amendment, Federal Competition Bill, Petroleum Industry Bill (PIB), and others will receive expeditious consideration. Important Bills on Constitution alteration and Amendment to the Electoral Act also deserve expeditious consideration and passage,” he said.

    Dogara further said the economy must be the central focus of the House this year and that the 2017 Budget remained the major tool to rejig the economy. “Measures to get Nigeria out of recession must be the critical aspect of our legislative activities.

    According to the Speaker, this year is the year to pass critical bills before active politicking starts.

  • 2017 Budget: Dogara accepts Buhari’s conditions for assent

    The House of Representatives on Tuesday accepted to comply with the conditions given by President Muhammadu Buhari that details of the 2017 budget be debated on the floor and passed before he can sign the budget into law.

    The Speaker of the House of Representatives, Yakubu Dogara, in his welcome speech on the resumption of members from Christmas/ New year recess, said the House “must brace up and work assiduously and conscientiously to give Nigerians a budget that will not only lift us out of recession but kick start the needed journey into Nigeria’s prosperity.”

    “We pledge to reform the budget process. To this end therefore, we would ensure that the procedure and process of consideration and passage of the 2017 budget is transparent, inclusive and professionally handled. The details of the budget should be debated and passed in plenary to avoid those needless pitfalls that normally characterize the budget process.”

    It would be recalled that the Special Assistant to the President on National Assembly Matters, Senate, Ita Enang, at an event in September last year, said President Buhari might not assent to appropriation bills passed by the National Assembly except details of the budget was passed on the floor of both chambers of the National Assembly and also captured in the votes and proceedings of that day.

    Dogara said the economy must be central focus of the House in 2017 and that the 2017 budget remains the major tool to rejig the economy.

    “Measures to exit Nigeria out of recession must be the critical aspect of our legislative activities.”

    “This is in addition to other fiscal and monetary policies. The recent fiscal measures including import prohibition of certain items and the increase or decrease of tariff on some items should receive appropriate legislative scrutiny to ensure that the economy and the interests of our people are protected. We must ensure that we take no prisoners in accomplishing this task,” the speaker added.

     

  • Jibrin to  Dogara: Return  $600,000 you  took from Ibori

    Jibrin to Dogara: Return $600,000 you took from Ibori

    •You’re wrong, Speaker tells sacked committee chair 

    Sacked Chairman House of Representatives Committee on Appropriation, Abdulmumin Jibrin (APC, Kano), claimed yesterday that his fight against corruption in the Green Chamber has the backing of two international organisations.
    He did not name the two organisations but challenged House of Representatives Speaker Yakubu Dogara to publicly acknowledge the funding of his emergence as Speaker by former governor of Delta State, James Ibori.
    Jibrin, in a statement, alleged that Dogara collected $600,000 from ex-convict Ibori to realise his speakership ambition.
    Dogara swiftly denied the allegation, saying he has no affinity with the former governor.
    Jibrin had said: “It is such a shame that Speaker Dogara denied the fact that former Governor James Ibori provided huge support to his emergence as Speaker by mobilising members from Delta State and some from the Southsouth and Southeast to support him.
    “Since he has disowned Ibori, he should at least have the honour to return the $600,000 Ibori donated to his speakership campaign. I am sure he cannot deny the fact that he collected that money cash!
    “We have secured funding from two reputable international organisation to establish an online platform that will serve as a central point to disseminate budget fraud and corruption acts and publish evidence and also hold lecture series and sensitization programs on budget fraud and corruption across the country.
    “Our first event will hold in Kano on 9th January 2017 with 5000 youths across the country in attendance. Our anti corruption crusade with be ruthless in 2017.
    “I remain very proud that despite the organised witch hunt against me using the institution of the house they have not been able to establish any offense that I have committed during the course of discharging my duties in the 5 years I have spent in the house.
    “It is noteworthy that no member of the house has formally accused me of corruption or abuse of office as I have consistently done against the Speaker and others.
    “?I have said repeatedly that I will remain committed to this fight against budget fraud and corruption for the rest of my life even if iam alone. It is a commitment iam ready to die for!”
    Jibrin was suspended by the House for bringing the institution into disrepute by his allegations of budget padding against some Principal Officers of the House and nine Committee Chairmen.
    But in a reaction last night, Dogara, speaking though his Special Adviser on Media and Public Affairs, Turaki Hassan, said:”For the records, we want to state that the Rt. Hon. Speaker was elected by the votes of members of the House of Representatives. There may well be silent supporters and well wishers of the Honourable Speaker from far and near some of whom he may not be aware of.
    “Rt Hon Yakubu Dogara does not have a relationship, political or otherwise with formers Governor James Ibori of Delta state to warrant the insinuations in the statement credited to Senator Nwaboshi, and had never had one.”

  • 2017: Be resilient, hopeful, Dogara, Lasun tell Nigerians

    2017: Be resilient, hopeful, Dogara, Lasun tell Nigerians

    Speaker of the House of Representatives, Yakubu Dogara, has urged Nigerians to be resilient in the face of the current hardship in the country, saying 2017 will bring succour to their sufferings.
    Also, his deputy, Sulaimon Lasun Yussuff, has enjoined Nigerians to remain committed and hopeful in the ruling All Progressives Congress (APC).
    In a New Year message to Nigerians, issued by his Special Adviser on Media & Public Affairs, Turaki Hassan, the speaker assured that some positive results of the new policies and initiatives of the present government will begin to manifest in the new year leading to an improved quality of life for the citizens.
    His words: “The All Progressives Congress government of President Muhammad Buhari is fully aware of the hardship faced by Nigerians. As members of the same government, we can assure that in the new year, succour will come the way of our people as we work to provide long lasting solutions to the myriad of problems.
    “On our part, the National Assembly shall also go to work as the central institution of democracy through which the will of the people is expressed. As parliamentarians we cannot afford to be observers or mere onlookers but actors. Our work is more urgent now than ever before because the change we seek must not be anchored on the quicksands of expediency but on the enduring solid rock of legislative frameworks that deal with corruption, eliminates gender based violence, strengthens democratic institutions, reinforces human rights and good governance.
    “We shall also not fail the nation in ensuring effective scrutiny of the National government for effective implementation of all legislative frameworks especially the 2017 budget.
    “Be assured that the House of Representatives is not resting on its oars to pass legislation that will provide support for the actualisation of the lofty ideas of the change promised by this government,” Dogara said.
    The Deputy Speaker, Sulaimon Lasun Yussuff, in a statement by his Chief Press Secretary, Wole Oladimeji, assured that 2017 will be better, adding that the House of Representatives will cooperate with the executive in ensuring that the standard of living of Nigerians is improved.

  • Case against Dogara suffers setback

    Case against Dogara suffers setback

    THE absence of Justice Idris Koko of Federal High Court 2 sitting in Kano yesterday stalled the case against the National Assembly and Speaker of House of Representatives Yakubu Dogara by Kiru/Bebeji federal constituency over Abdulmumini Jibrin’s suspension.
    Justice Koko was said to have travelled to Abuja for the Judges’ Conference, and later proceed for Christmas and New Year vacation.
    The constituency’s lead counsel, Bashir Muhammad Muqadda, said: “We seek N2 billion for our client, Abdulmumini Jibrin Kofa, as payment for damages to his reputation. When we resume on January 18, the case will come up for mentioning. “

  • Buhari, Dogara condole with victims’ families

    Buhari, Dogara condole with victims’ families

    President Muhammadu Buhari and House of Representatives Speaker Yakubu Dogara have commiserated with families of victims of the collapsed building, belonging to Reigners Bible Church International in Uyo, Akwa Ibom State capital.

    The President’s condolence message is contained in his twitter handle.

    He said: “This evening, I spoke with Governor Emmanuel to commiserate with him on the tragic collapse of the Reigners Bible Church in Uyo.

    “I asked the governor to convey to the people of Akwa Ibom State the deep sorrow felt by me, and by the country on this tragedy.

    “I pray that the souls of the deceased will rest in peace, and that the injured will experience quick recovery.

    “Any tragedy that affects any part of Nigeria affects all of us. Our thoughts and prayers continue to be with the people of Akwa Ibom.”

    The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports that a number of deaths had been reported while many of the church members  were injured.

    A statement at the weekend by the Personal Assistant to Governor Emmanuel on Information, Mr Ekerette Udoh, said the governor was at the church when it collapsed.

    The statement said the governor supervised the rescue operations and evacuation of the injured to hospital.

    It added that the state will constitute a panel to ascertain the causes of the collapse.

    Dogara, in a statement yesterday in Abuja by his spokesman Turaki Hassan, described the incident as a big tragedy.

    He called for a comprehensive investigation into the causes of the collapsed church.

    The Speaker said those responsible for the tragedy must be brought to justice to avoid a future recurrence.

    He added that the government department responsible for approving and enforcing the building plans for the collapsed church must also be investigated.

    Dogara prayed for the repose of the souls of those who died and quick recovery for the injured.

    He hailed Governor Udom Emmanuel for supervising the rescue operation, despite being among those rescued from the incident.

  • Eid-el-Maulud: Saraki, Dogara, Ambode, others felicitate with Muslims

    Eid-el-Maulud: Saraki, Dogara, Ambode, others felicitate with Muslims

    •Nigerians urged to pray for unity, peace, love

    Senate President Abubakar Bukola Saraki, House of Representatives Speaker Yakubu Dogara, Lagos State Governor Akinwunmi Ambode and Cross River State Governor Ben Ayade yesterday led other eminent citizens in felicitating with Muslims on Eid-el-Maulud celebration.

    They urged Muslims to imbibe the injunctions of Prophet Muhammad (SAW), which teaches humility, gratitude and charity towards one another as well as pray for unity, peace, love, harmony and mutual co-existence.

    Saraki, who spoke in a statement to mark this year’s birthday of Prophet Muhammad (SAW) by his Special Adviser on Media and Publicity, Yusuph Olaniyonu, urged Nigerians to, irrespective of their faith, seize the opportunity to practice Prophet Muhammad’s precepts of piety, tolerance, justice and peaceful co-existence in effort to overcome the current national challenges.

    “With the economic hardship in the country, there is no better time in applying the teachings of the holy Prophet on how to live a life of simplicity, charity and lending a helping hand to the needy in our midst,” Saraki said.

    Dogara urged the Muslim faithful to use the occasion to imbibe and promote the virtues of humility, love, peace, harmony and mutual co-existence, which the prophet exemplified.

    A statement by his Special Adviser on Media and Public Affairs, Turaki Hassan, said this year’s Eid-el-Maulud comes just a couple of weeks before the end of the year 2016, hence Muslims and  all Nigerians should seize the opportunity to offer special prayers for the unity, progress and prosperity of Nigeria to overcome its economic challenges.

    Ambode called on Muslims to offer special prayers for greater peace, unity and continuous progress of Nigeria.

    The governor, in a statement yesterday signed by his Chief Press Secretary, Mr. Habib Aruna, enjoined Muslims to follow the exemplary leadership of the Holy Prophet by promoting peaceful existence.

    Ambode urged Nigerians to shun ethnic, political and religious differences and work towards building a safer and better Nigeria, adding that the celebration of the birth of the Prophet should renew the faith and bond of unity as one people and one nation, irrespective of diversity.

    “On the occasion of the commemoration of the birth of the holy Prophet, it is imperative to reflect on his teachings and uphold his legacies of unity, integrity, peaceful coexistence and love for one’s neighbour, which are indispensable in our quest for meaningful development and the profitable management of our diversity,” he said.

    He urged Muslim to internalise the virtues of honesty, selflessness, charity, tolerance, good neighbourliness, justice, equity and fairness which Mohammed (PBOH) preached, saying such will go a long way to engender national development.

    Ayade enjoined Muslims to use the occasion to preach and show love to one another.

    In his goodwill message signed by his Senior Special Assistant on Media and Chief Press Secretary, Mr. Christian Ita, Ayade said: “May this wonderful occasion of the birthday of the Holy Prophet Mohammed bring about love, peace and prosperity to our beloved country, Nigeria. As we celebrate the holy Prophet’s birthday, your prayer for the peace and unity of our dear country is needed now more than ever before.

    Urging Nigerians to rally round President Muhammadu Buhari to pull the country out of the recession, Ayade said: “As committed faithful, let us harness our creative energies, our love for one another towards the development of the country by aligning with our President, Muhammadu Buhari, to help Nigeria pull through recession”

    Lagos State House of Assembly Speaker Mudashiru Obasa called for increased love and more understanding among Nigerians, irrespective of their religious affiliation for a peaceful co-existence and growth of the country.

    Obasa said the country would keep growing if the citizens display love and understanding among themselves and to the government.

    He said: “The Prophet was a man of peace and he shared the message of love and peace through the religion of Islam throughout his life time. He showed understanding for the various faiths and beliefs in Madinah during his lifetime and he never discriminated against any religion, groups or persons during his life, “we should emulate and imbibe these qualities from the Holy Prophet so that our country will continue to grow”.

    The immediate past Abia State Governor and the senator representing Abia Central, Theodore Orji, has urged Muslims to use the Eid-El-Maulud period to pray for ideas that will make Nigeria a global brand worthy of celebration.

    Orji said such supplication, when granted by Allah, would earn the country and the citizenry respect and position among the leading countries of the world.

  • Dogara: Championing interfaith dialogue

    For many devout Christians, the idea of combining the practice of their faith with active partisan politics is so antithetical that the mere thought of it is seen as a sign that one has backslidden. This is because active partisan politics, especially in Nigeria, is said to be a dirty game and adjudged to be associated with the things that Christianity vehemently preaches against: lying, covetousness, stealing and mentioning God’s name in vain, amongst others.

    Therefore when a group of politicians under the aegis of Northern Nigeria Christian Politicians converged on Abuja penultimate Saturday to honour the Speaker of the House of Representatives, Yakubu Dogara and the Secretary to the Government of the Federation, David Babachir Lawal, many critical observers were quick to dismiss it as an incongruous gathering. Not a few also wondered aloud about the capacity of politicians to hide under any guise to advance their cause.

    Never one to miss such an opportunity to articulate his thought, Speaker Yakubu Dogara would use the forum to hit squarely at the very issue that has continued to draw the northern part of the country backward: distrust among Christians and Muslims.

    “There are those who said look, time has come for the North to go back to those days of Sardauna where those who call themselves, or are referred to as the core North, will deliberately fashion out ways of patronizing their Christians brothers in the North,” he said.

    Dogara, who praised the efforts of some notable northern Muslim political leaders in cementing the hitherto fractured relations between the two dominant religious groups in the north, admitted that had northern Muslim leaders prevailed on their Reps not to vote for him, he would never have emerged as Speaker.

    It is his belief that the support he got from northern Muslims and the appointment of Engineer Lawal as SGF by President Muhammadu Buhari, is sending strong signals to all northern Christians that there is now as open invitation to them from their Muslim brethren for a renewed friendship that will foster unity and religious tolerance in the region, as in the days of the late sage and Premier of defunct northern region, Sir Ahmadu Bello, the Sardauna of Sokoto.

    As the speaker noted, one can say without fear of contradiction that it takes only a person of President Muhammadu Buhari to appointment a Lawal, a Christian from Adamawa State as the SGF, which is the first time such a plum position is ceded to northern Christians despite strong opposition from those who believed in maintaining the status quo.

    “It may interest you to know that among Sokoto State members, we lost only two votes. If all the members from Sokoto State alone had decided to vote for my opponent, there is no way we would have won that election. And in Zamfara, we lost one vote. But what does that speak to us? It speaks volumes: It’s an invitation to all of us to go back to the ways of our founding fathers. What ways?  When we used to work together and when we used to live together as brothers and sisters. That is the only way that we can live in peace which is a key ingredient for development. Without peace, we cannot even practice our religion. And as long as we don’t enjoy peace in our region, there is no way that we will experience development because even if we are developed, lack of peace will destroy it. Syria is a case in point. So that is the challenge before us. As they open their arms to embrace us, we should also open our arms to embrace them so that we can write a new political history” he told the gathering amidst thunderous applause.

    “For some of us who think Nigeria is a mistake, or that the North, having aggregated so many ethnic groups and then two dominant faith, is a mistake, I want to advise us to have a rethink.” According to him, “the one who put together Nigeria and the North is God and He has a purpose or reason for putting together the North or Nigeria that way. Therefore, anyone fighting for the disintegration of this country will not succeed because I believe God has a plan for Nigeria and likewise, anyone fighting to eliminate any faith in Northern Nigeria or for the destruction of Northern Nigeria will not succeed because I believe God has a plan for northern Nigeria too and until God is done with his plan, the north will remain as it is and similarly Nigeria will remain as it is. If anyone can upturn that, it means he is greater than God”. Gladly no one is greater than God.

    On his emergence as Speaker, he noted that Rt. Hon. Aminu Waziri Tambuwal, supported by many prominent northern Muslim leaders, worked tirelessly to bring about the present leadership of the House so as to give a sense of belonging to northern Christians in the APC government. Coincidently, whereas Dogara, hails from same place as Tafawa-Balewa, Tambuwal is not only from Sokoto just as Sardauna, he is also the governor there. It is worth recalling that just as Sardauna was able to galvanise support and rally people from all ethnic and religious groups in the north and even appointed northern Christians such as Sunday Awoniyi, Jolly Tanko Yusuf and others of blessed memory as his close aides and associates, Tambuwal too, seems to be treading Sardauna’s noble path in his time.

    This writer recalls with nostalgia, that on August 18, 2014, Tambuwal, then Speaker of the House of Representatives, along with the then Sokoto Governor Aliyu Wamakko, on the invitation of Dogara, visited Tafawa-Balewa to launch constituency outreach programme for his Bogoro/Das/Tafawa-Balewa Federal Constituency, the first of such visits by any top ranking northern Muslim political leaders in our recent history.

    They went not for politicking but with a strong message: peace and unity. When he mounted the rostrum to speak at the event, Tambuwal reminded the people of the long term relationship between Tafawa Balewa and the Sokoto caliphate which started with the late Premier Sardauna and Prime Minister Tafawa Balewa and urged the people to embrace peace. Less than one year after, Dogara, with the support of Tambuwal and others became Speaker of the House of Representatives.

    This is why the speaker appealed to his Christian brethren to, as a matter of necessity, reciprocate the gestures extended by our Muslim counterparts and forge a new era of northern unity as it existed in the days of Sardauna and Tafawa-Balewa. Not only that, he also had a strong message to the rather disparate Christian groups in northern Nigeria, “your growth will remain stunted for as long as you fail to provide a leadership for yourselves that is focused and ready to lead.”

    “We really need leadership and this event speaks to leadership. Without leadership, you cannot achieve anything. And if we thought in the Christian community in the north that progress is automatic, then we are mistaken.”

    “Alexander the Great said something which was quite true of his time and even now. He said he is never afraid of an army of lions led by a sheep but that he is always afraid of an army of sheep led by a lion. So that tells you that without leadership we cannot make progress. Leadership is so central and important that with the wrong leadership we won’t make progress. Therefore, as a community, we cannot afford to just stay without leadership, without organisation, without a platform where we articulate visions and how we can pursue them and hope that we can make progress. If we do that, we will be deceiving ourselves”.

    It is Dogara’s conviction that working together, we can forge a strong union and take back the region to the good old days when it was the envy of others.

     

    • Hassan is Special Adviser on Media & Public Affairs to Speaker Dogara.
  • Dogara: sack governors who hijack council funds

    Dogara: sack governors who hijack council funds

    Governors who refuse to conduct council elections should be removed from office for gross violation of the Constitution, House Speaker Yakubu Dogara has said.

    He accused governors of violating the 1999 Constitution by undermining local councils’ independence.

    The Speaker accused governors of using local government funds instead of making the money available to the councils.

    He described the state/local government joint accounts as “evil”, adding that governors have emasculated councils and turned them into cash cows.

    According to him, it is unfortunate that most governors have “pocketed” Houses of Assembly, making them toothless, hence their inability to impeach governors who violate the constitution.

    To Dogara, failure to conduct council elections amounts to “serious violation of the provisions of the constitution”, which he said was “one of the biggest grounds for impeachment”.

    He said: “As a matter of fact, joint account is one of the biggest evils because it gives the authority to local government ministries in the state.

    “In most states, especially in the north where we don’t have oil and co, the ministry of local government in the state is regarded as the ministry of petroleum resources.

    “So we all know when funds are allocated to the councils. Instead of getting to the councils, they are hijacked at that (state) level and appropriated according to the whims of the powers that be.

    On what is to be done, Dogara said: “We will have to make this local government system a bit independent.

    “I am not saying absolute independence because we may not achieve that since ours is a strong federation. It is not a weak federation like what you have in the United States where councils and states join their own money and then appropriate it and pay royalties in taxes to the federal government.

    “So, what we can therefore do is make sure that in the spirit of the constitution, the local government administration is democratically-elected to ensure that by provision of the constitution, that any local government that is not democratically constituted will not have access to any funding from the federation.

    “That was the problem we had, there was this issue of Lagos creating more councils and then President Olusegun Obasanjo decided to deny them allocation from the federation account before the courts said you are just a trustee, you can’t do that. As a matter of fact, the money does not belong to the Federal  Republic of Nigeria. So, we must cure that

    “We talked about financial autonomy, which is the biggest. We want to guarantee that by ensuring that councils submit their respective account numbers to the federal government where money meant for them are paid directly without any intervening authority or third party on the chain so that council authorities and citizens that live in those local governments will know that this is what is coming.

    “The money is published every month so they know. And to be able to achieve this, I did talk about the state legislators needing some form of autonomy and we want to give them that. That will definitely be in the proposal that will be going out to them to vote on. We talked about ensuring democracy, credible elections at the third tier of government and we agreed, it was your suggestion actually, and I concurred that state independent electoral commissions have never worked and will never work. So our best bet is to make sure that they are eliminated.”

    As a way out of the problem, the Speaker said any state whose councils are run by caretaker committees should not get federal allocations.

    “What we are trying to say is, okay,  if your local government administration is caretaker, you cannot draw funds from the federation account. That should be a provision of the constitution itself,” he said.

    Dogara wants State Independent Electoral Commissions (SIECs) abolished. The Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) should conduct council elections, he said.

    In an interview, Dogara said the constitution provides that the local government officials must be democratically-elected, but very few of them have elected executives running their affairs.

    “It is a system that is in crisis. Since 1999 when we had this latest advent of politics, I don’t want to go back to the days of military regime, you will attest to the fact that there is hardly any local government that has lived up to its constitutional mandate and the reasons are quite obvious,” he said.

    According to him, in other democracies such as Brazil, India and the United States, there are democratically elected leaders for the councils’ executive, legislature, courts and police.

    “But in Nigeria, the governor will sit in the state executive meeting and they will come up with a resolution that they have sacked an elected council executive and then they appoint council caretaker committees. And to be candid, that is a gross violation of the constitution.

    “I don’t know if the framers were able to anticipate that that may likely be the situation that most of the governors will violate the powers that were assigned to the states with respect to local governments under the constitution.

    “That has become the norm rather than the exception, where majority of the councils in Nigeria, even as we speak in this era of change and the promise All Progressives Congress (APC) made, you will be surprised that majority of the area councils are run by caretaker councils and there is no where in the constitution where caretaker is mentioned,” Dogara said.

    The speaker said the joint account is “one of the biggest evils” bedeviling local government areas.

    His words: “In most states, especially in the North where we don’t have oil and co, the ministry of local government is regarded as the ministry of petroleum resources.

    “So, we all know when funds are allocated to the councils, instead of getting to the councils, they are hijacked at that level and appropriated according to the whims of the powers that be.”

    The solution, Dogara said, is a Constitution amendment to make councils less subject to laws passed by the state assemblies.

    “For us to tackle this problem, since they are constitutional, it means that the only avenue we have is to embark on constitution amendment. If we don’t get it on that level, I don’t think it is going to work,” he said.

    According to the Speaker, for councils to have financial autonomy, they must maintain an account with the Accountant-General of the Federation where monies due them will be paid directly, thereby eliminating joint accounts.

    He said the constitution has to be very clear on how council executives are composed to avoid situations where states unilaterally suspend a council chairman or councilors.

    Dogara said if councils become efficient, the best hands would want to contest elections as chairmen and councilors.

    He said when financial autonomy and independence is achieved, councils would still, to some extent, be under states’ jurisdiction regarding healthcare, basic education, policing, among others.

    On the House’s role, he said: “The aspect we will be looking at is to ensure that all local government councils in Nigeria are democratically run, not run by caretaker councils appointed by the state executive. That is one big area that we are looking at.

    “The second area is democratically elected council legislators, not caretaker committees, so that they will be saddled with the responsibility of passing laws that will give the council the powers to effect all latitudes given to them under the 4th schedule of the 1999 constitution. We talked about financial autonomy, which is the biggest.

     ”We want to guarantee that by ensuring that councils submit their respective account numbers to the federal government where money meant for them are paid directly without any intervening authority or third party all the chain so that council authorities and citizens that live in those local governments will know that this is what is coming. The money is published every month so they know.

     ”State legislators need some form of autonomy and we want to give them that. That will definitely be in the proposal that will be going out to them to vote on.”

    On why SIECs should be abolished, he said: “State independent electoral commissions have never worked and will never work. So our best bet is to make sure that they are eliminated.

    “From the proposal that will come out from us, you will discover that the state independent electoral commission will be removed from the provisions of the constitution but it is left for the state assemblies, two thirds of them, to agree with us.

    “Once we do that, we will transfer the powers of organising elections in the third tier of government to INEC which appears to be doing a better job than the state electoral commission, and that is by popular consensus anyway.

    “So, that is what we want to do in regards to the councils and the motivation is to ensure that we have a sustained basis at the local level where developmental activities can take place to stem the tide of rural-urban migration which has become a big problem in this country.

    “When we do that, we will improve on the quality of the pool of professionals that will serve at the local level. That therefore means that it will escalate developmental activities across the nation. That is what we are doing.”

    Dogara recalled that in the seventh assembly, effort was made during the constitution amendment to vest council with financial autonomy. He said 20 state assemblies endorsed it, but because two-thirds of the states was needed, the amendment could not scale through as it fell short by four states.