Tag: Hon. Yakubu Dogara

  • Reps investigate alleged killing of 97 Nigerians by Cameroonian Gendarmes

    Reps investigate alleged killing of 97 Nigerians by Cameroonian Gendarmes

    The House of Representatives Thursday began investigation over the alleged killing of 97 Nigerians in the ceded Bakassi Peninsula, by Cameroonian Gendarmes.

    To this effect, the House Committee on Foreign Affairs has been mandated to investigate the matter and report back to the House for further legislative action.

    This was sequel to the passage of a motion brought under matters of urgent national importance by a member Hon. Babatunde Kolawole titled: “Alleged killing of 97 Nigerians by Cameroonian Gendarmes.”

    The lawmaker, while moving the motion said: “last week there were several media reports that 97 Nigerians have been killed in Bakassi by Cameroonian Gendarmes because they could not afford a N100, 000  ( Hundred Thousand Naira) levy on each fishing boat.

    “This is in spite of the clauses in the Green Tree Agreement signed between Nigerian and Cameroonian Governments which protect our citizens in the ceded areas from harm.

    “Apart from this recent attack, there have been reports of harassments, rape and killings of Nigerians by the Gendarmes over the years with the Nigerian government seemingly doing little or nothing to stop it.

    “If nothing is done to stop this ugly development, other Nigerian lives would be at stake as the Gendarmes may continue to kill Nigerians at will without fear of recriminations.”

    Kolawole said that though there are reports that the Federal government has summoned the Cameroonian Ambassador over the killings, there is need for the House as the People’s parliament to send a clear signal that “we will not sit and watch while the lives of our citizens are wasted with impunity.”

    Members were in support of the motion, and some lawmakers decried the attitude of the Cameroonian Gendarmes perceived use of excessive force against Nigerian citizens in the ceded Bakassi region.

    However, the Chairperson of the House Committee on Foreign Affairs, Hon. Nnena Elendu- Ukeje cautioned the lawmakers saying that the issue is still in the realm of speculations and hence it should investigated before coming to a definitive conclusion.

    The Speaker, Hon. Yakubu Dogara subsequently referred the motion to the House Committee on Foreign Affairs for further investigation.

  • Reps probe Abuja Investment Company over un-remitted N2bn Proceeds

    Reps probe Abuja Investment Company over un-remitted N2bn Proceeds

    The House of Representatives Wednesday mandated its committee on Federal Capital Territory (FCT) to investigate the activities of the Abuja Investment Company Limited (AICL) with a view of exposing an alleged diversion of funds and inefficiency.

    The AICL management is alleged to have diverted proceeds worth N2 Billion from 13 subsidiaries and affiliates which led to the recent dissolution of the management team by the Minister of the Federal Capital Territory.

    The resolution of the House was sequel to the passage of a motion by two members, Shehu Aliyu Musa and Nkole Ndukwe with the title: “Call for the investigation of the activities of Abuja Investment Company Limited on non-remittance of over N2 billion proceeds to Federal Capital
    Territory.”

    While moving the motion Ndukwe said that despite rapid growth in investments, “the company, which is wholly owned by the Federal Capital Territory Administration ( FCTA), is not remitting the required revenue to the FCT treasury.”

    The lawmaker further states that “with over $100 million currently under its management, AICL has grown to become a world class investment firm with diversified subsidiaries and affiliates.”

    He gave the names of the subsidiaries and affiliates companies as: Abuja Property Develop Company Limited (AIPDC) with 100 percent shareholding; Abuja Urban Mass Transport Company Limited ( AUMTCO) with 100 percent shareholding; Abuja Market Management Limited ( AMML) with 95 percent shareholding; Abuja Technology Village Free Zone ( ATVFZ) with 51 percent shareholding; Abuja Film Village Ltd with 50 percent shareholding; Gas Farm Project with 50 percent shareholding; and Abuja Leasing Company ( ALC) with 20 percent shareholding.

    Others are:  Power North AICL Equipment Leasing Company with 20 percent shareholding; American Hospital with 20 percent shareholding, ASO Savings and Loans with 10  percent shareholding; Abuja Power Company Ltd with 10 percent shareholding; Capital Hotels ( Sheraton Hotels and Towers, Abuja) with 6.51 percent shareholding, and Abuja Downtown Mall with 5 percent shareholding.

    When the Speaker, Hon. Yakubu Dogara called for a voice vote on the motion, it scaled through without dissent.

    It was thereafter referred to the House Committee on Federal Capital Territory for investigation on the alleged diversion of funds and the committee was given three weeks to report back to the House for further legislative action.

  • Dogara: NASS will raise teachers’ retirement age to 65

    Dogara: NASS will raise teachers’ retirement age to 65

    …To upgrade working conditions

    The National Assembly will increase the retirement age of Teachers in the country from 60 to 65 years to retain more experienced teachers in public schools, Speaker of the House of Representatives, Hon Yakubu Dogara, has said.

    Dogara who spoke when he received a delegation from the Nigeria Union of Teachers (NUT) in his office, he said the House supports an upward review of teachers’ retirement age for Nigerian children to benefit from.

    His words: “We have done it for the tertiary institutions and the judiciary, so nothing should stop us from taking the bull by the horns. They say that wine gets better with age, it was the same consideration that motivated us to raise that of university lecturers, raise that of judges. So this is something we can pursue.

    “Thankfully, it doesn’t require constitutional amendment; it is something we can achieve by amending the existing law. That is the responsibility of the parliament and we assure you that we will do something about that so that the benefit that comes with experience and wisdom will not be lost,” he stated.

    According to him, the welfare and working condition of teachers must also be upgraded to enable Nigerian citizens compete with the global world and produce citizens that can achieve development that the country seeks.

    He said: “If we don’t have people who will sacrifice their time and energy to impart knowledge on our children, then like I said, we have lost the future. This government which is a government of change must be prepared to change the narrative by ensuring that teachers are motivated and the condition in which they work are conducive at all levels, so that they can deliver on their professional calling.”

    The union’s request for salaries of teachers to be handed over to state governments or paid from first-line charge from the federation account, the Speaker said, should be channeled through the Universal Basic Education Commission to the Constitution Review committee of the House of Representatives for consideration.

    The National President of NUT, Comrade Micheal Alogba Olukoya, earlier in his speech, appealed that the union prefers such an arrangement.

    He said: ” We want the responsibilities of paying the salaries of Teachers be handed over to State Governments in which case the salaries component of the revenue allocation of the Local Governments will have to be transferred to the states and restructure the fiscal allocation of our national resources in favour of the states to guarantee uninterrupted and unfettered primary education in Nigeria.”

    The union also requested that teachers’ salaries be paid from first-line charge from the federation account through the Universal Basic Education Commission.

    “We teachers of Nigeria in primary and secondary schools do seek and demand that our retirement age be raised to 65 years to increase the teacher retention rate in our schools. This will help to check the rate at which experienced teachers are being lost in the school system whereas younger and prospective teachers are not recruited to take their place,” Olukoya said.

  • Dogara writes Sultan, Bauchi governor stops him from renovating mosques

    Dogara writes Sultan, Bauchi governor stops him from renovating mosques

    Speaker of the House of Representatives, Hon. Yakubu Dogara, has asked the Sultan of Sokoto, Sa’adu Abubakar, to step into what he described as an unnecessary crisis created by the Bauchi state governor, M.A Abubakar over the renovation of mosques in Bogoro, Dass, Tafawa Balewa Federal constituency.

    According to the letter, Mr Doagra said he had embarked on renovation and reconstruction of mosques in the constituency but the Governor got a wind of it and directed the District Head and the council chairman to stop the work or lose their jobs.

    It was however gathered that the people of the towns said the work must continue but the Governor insisted the Speaker must not be allowed to carryout the renovation so as not to take the credit.

    In his letter to the Sultan, Dogara said as a Christian, nothing in “my religion teaches me to discriminate or worsen the condition which other adherent worships”.

    Mr Dogara asked the Sultan to intervene in the matter “ to have the mosques renovated and for the governor to restore the District head of Dull to his stool”.

    The Speaker said he hopes the intervention of the Sultan will bring sucour to the people of his Federal constituency and encourage peaceful co-existence which the Sultan is championing.

    Similarly, the Governor recently directed that local education authorities not allowed federal lawmakers to build schools or renovate existing ones in a letter seen by Naij.com.

    It would be recalled that a council chairman even threatened to demolish school built by a Reps member from Azare.

  • Saraki, Dogara renew hostility against anti-graft batlle

    Saraki, Dogara renew hostility against anti-graft batlle

    Nigerians are angry with Senate President Bukola Saraki and the Speaker of the House of Representatives, Yakubu Hon. Dogara, for mocking the anti-corruption crusade of President Muhammadu Buhari. Observers believe their disposition development has called to question the loyalty of the leaders of the National Assembly to the ruling All Progressives Congress (APC), which they belong. Assistant Editor LEKE SALAUDEEN reports.

    The cold war between the executive and the legislature is far from being over. At a recent book launch in Abuja, the leaders of the National Assembly took a swipe on the Federal Government’s anti-corruption fight. Senate President Bukola Saraki claimed that the anti-graft war was sensational and selective while the Speaker of the House of Representatives, Hon. Yakubu Dogara, insisted the war was only dealing with the symptoms of corruption.

    Analysts could not understand why the leadership of the National Assembly chose to castigate the executive in public. They noted that this is the first time in the history of democratic governance where both arms of government controlled by a party would disagree openly on a policy that is contained in the party’s manifesto.

    They described the attack on the policy as the climax of party indiscipline and disloyalty, since both of them were elected on the platform of the APC. The questions being asked are: What moral justification do they have to subject the party’s programme to public ridicule? Assuming they are not satisfied with the method deployed by the executive to fight corruption, can’t they use party’s internal communication lines to express their reservations and make suggestions?

    Prior to this development, both chambers had held the executive into ransom for what they described as the failure to implement parliamentary resolutions. As a result, the legislators had refused to consider proposals from the executive. The face-off took its toll on governance; it slowed down the decision-making process and also heightened political tension. For instance, the list of Resident Electoral Commissioners (REC) and ministerial nominees forwarded to the Senate were kept in abeyance. Why should the National Assembly dominated by the APC members be playing the role of the opposition? Can’t they resolve their differences at party caucus level, rather than working at cross-purposes?

    Afenifere chieftain Senator Ayo Fasanmi said the comments of both leaders were very unfortunate. He said they are trying to recant the statement to safe face. To the elder statesman, no amount of denial would absolve them from anti-party activities; it is on record that they branded President Muhammadu Buhari’s fight against corruption a ruse.

    Fasanmi said anyone saying Buhari’s anti-graft war is not on course needed to re-examine himself, considering the huge success recorded in recovering the public fund looted by the Peoples Democratic Party members (PDP) and their collaborators in the civil service.

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    He said: “President Buhari should not be distracted by the antics of forces of corruption. He should get along; he should not be discouraged. Fighting corruption in Nigeria is a difficult task that must be done if we don’t want corruption to kill this country.

    I made bold to say that Buhari is on course; the forces of corruption will capitulate whether they like it or not. The progressive forces which Buhari personify will overwhelm the forces of corruption in this country. If not for Buhari, only God knows what would have become of Nigeria if we had continued in the era of stealing-is-no-corruption.

    Public Affairs analyst Dr Friday Ibok described the APC as a ruling party that is not in power in the legislature. He said the power was eroded by personal interests. He said: “You should remember how Saraki and Dogara emerged as leaders of both chambers. They were not the ruling party’s candidates; they defied the party’s instruction and with the support of members of the PDP, they sailed through. How would you expect them to respect party supremacy?

    “The APC got it wrong from day one when Saraki and Dogara defied the party instruction and there was no sanction against them. That is why they talk any how; criticise the party’s policies in the public with impunity. Such will never happen in a disciplined party. There is what we call collective responsibility. You can disagree within the party, but not without. If they are not satisfied with Buhari’s style of fighting corruption they should write him a memo, detail their observations and suggestions on how to improve on the anti-graft war.

    “To me, Saraki and Dogara have exhibited political immaturity and indiscipline by criticising the party’s programme openly. The support of the PDP members for the Senate President and the Speaker of the House, who are APC members against the position of the APC government is not just because the PDP lawmakers voted for them, but it is part of the script written before they agreed to join forces with some APC lawmakers to weaken the avowed crusade against corruption and win back power in 2019.”

    On what should be done to restore normalcy within the party, Ibok warned against what he described as the personalisation of the problems of the party and advised the leaders of the APC to handle the anti-party activities of Saraki and Dogara with extra care so that it will not destabilise the party.

    A lawyer and civil right activist, Mr Monday Ubani, said he was not surprised that the leaders of National Assembly are mocking Buhari’s anti-corruption fight, because they have never supported the president in his effort to expose the corrupt politicians.

    Ubani cited the treatment of the Acting Chairman of the Economic and Financial Crime Commission (EFCC), Mr Ibrahim Magu, when he appeared before the Senate for confirmation and the non-passage of bills sent to the National Assembly by the executive that would have enhanced the fight against corruption. He said some of them have been lying there for more than a year without consideration by the federal lawmakers.

    He added: “Nigerians are in support of the anti-graft war of President Muhammadu Buhari’s government. Corruption has retarded the development of this country; the enemies of progress are saying no; they won’t succeed. Now that Buhari is out there for medical attention, they are beating their chest that the fight against corruption would not succeed. Many of them are praying that Buhari should not come back alive. We are praying for him to get over his health problems and return home to continue his good work.”

    However, Ubani wants the anti-corruption war extended to all sectors. He said: “It should not be restricted to politicians alone. The police still collects bribe openly from motorists on the road; the immigration and customs officials still demand for bribe at the points of entry and departure; to obtain national passport the immigration officers collect gratification; the Road Safety corps members still get kick-backs from those who apply for driver’s licence.” He said the anti-corruption fight should look in the direction of the civil servants who are enmeshed in corrupt practices.

    Ubani added: “We should build a system that will sustain the fight against corruption like it is being done in advanced democracies. We should involve people in the fight and that is why I like the whistle-blowing policy of this administration. Since it was introduced, the EFFC has made many discoveries and recoveries of looted funds. The policy is working, because people are carried along by the government in its anti-corruption crusade.”

    A banker, Usman Abubakar, agreed with Ubani that the legislature is not on the same page with the executive on the fight against corruption. He said the reason being that some of the members of the Senate were former governors with baggage. They will resist any attempt to wage war against corruption, he emphasised.

    Abubakar said they kicked against Magu because he would not spare anyone in the course of investigating corrupt officials, no matter their status. He added: “He was treated shabbily when he appeared for confirmation; he was not allowed to defend himself against the report of the Directorate of State Service (DSS) that alleged him of corrupt practices.”

    He said Nigerians should not be surprised that Saraki and Dogara are mocking the anti-corruption crusade, because both of them emerged as leaders of both chambers in a questionable manner. He said they were not the party’s nominees.

    Abubakar said: “Only God knows how much they used to bribe the PDP legislators to clinch the leadership positions. We should blame President Buhari for the leadership problem in the National Assembly. If he had shown interest and come out to support the APC nominees for Senate President and the House Speaker, we won’t find ourselves in this terrible situation whereby members of the ruling party have constituted themselves into opposition; thereby undermining the efforts of the executive. The APC senators perform the role of opposition to the delight of PDP members.

    “To me, the Eighth National Assembly is the worst in the history of democratic governance in this country. The Senate President, Saraki is facing a criminal charge before the Code of Conduct Tribunal (CCT) over false declaration of asset. He goes from the hallowed Chamber of the Senate to face trial and return to the Senate to preside over the proceedings. Saraki has desecrated that office. In other climes, when people holding public office are alleged of crime and charged to court, they will step aside till the trial is over and the judgment delivered.

    “What I find intriguing is that Saraki has the gut to be telling Buhari how to fight corruption. He should be told that this is not the first time Buhari is fighting corruption in this country. When he was a military ruler between December 1983 and August 1984, Buhari clamped down on corrupt politicians of the Second Republic and purged them of the stolen public funds and assets. If we were under military rule, the likes of Saraki would have known his fate by now.”

    Civil rights activist Mashood Erubami described Saraki and Dogara’s negative comments as a product of the opposition forces, which the fight is actually targeted.

    He said the criticisms were coming from those who are being tried for the offences of corruption, but are being slowly tried due to the connivance of the bar and the bench. He said the case are not being speedily disposed. He said they should have been banned from politics and clamped into jail, to serve as a deterrent to others.

    Erubami said the notion that the current anti-corruption crusade has failed because no suspect had been convicted is not true, because of open conspiracy between certain institutions of government that are determined to frustrate APC/Buhari focussed anti-corruption fight. That explains why despite the criminal justice adjudication system, cases are still taking longer time than necessary to be determined.

    He said: “Presently, there are forces that have constituted themselves into opposition in the police, EFCC, the legislature, the judiciary including the bar that is waging counter offensives against the anti-corruption struggle of the Buhari administration. They are against the anti-corruption war and are currently fighting back the crusade to sanitise the society, using their monopoly without discretion to debar accountability through weakening the anti-corruption institutions.”

    Erubami, who is also the President, Nigeria Voters Assembly (VOTAS), said: “Any individual or institution found to be siding the derailment of the processes of enforcing deterrence against commission of the crimes of corruption, one of which is prosecution and imprisonment when found culpable, cannot be said to be favourably disposed to fighting corruption which obviously has been the main reason why conviction has been hard to come by. More so because some of the judges who are expected to dispense justice equitably are themselves very corrupt.”

  • Reps pass ‘Anti- Almajiri’ Bill

    Reps pass ‘Anti- Almajiri’ Bill

    …seek better welfare, promotions for Teachers

    The House of Representatives on Wednesday passed through second reading a bill that makes provisions for rehabilitation of delinquent children and “to force delinquent children to acquire the said education at any of the special schools across Nigeria.”

    The new proposed law is title: “A bill for an Act to amend the compulsory, free universal basic education Act, 2004 and for other related matters 2017.”

    The consolidated bill sponsored by Hon. Nasir Garo (APC Kano) and Hon. Mohammed Mahmud also seeks to provide for, amongst other things, the enhancement of the welfare of teachers by ensuring that before states access the federal government grants, the states are made to fulfill their obligation to the teachers by ensuring that eligible teachers due for promotion and salary increment are promptly paid their entitlement to encourage efficiency.

    The bill also while amending Section 2 of the Principal Act inserts a new sub section (5) that states: “it is hereby made compulsory on all children or wards to make themselves available for education pursuant to Section 2(1) of this Act, and where a child turns delinquent, he or she shall be forced to acquire the said education a any of the special schools across Nigeria.”

    The Amendment bill also seeks the return of unused federal government block grants to the federation account ; make provisions for rehabilitation of delinquent children and to make parents who are resident abroad but whose children reside in Nigeria liable to obligations imposed by the Act.

    “The Commission Shall return all unused federal government block grant, pursuant to section 11 (2) of this section to the federation account not later than the end of every appropriation year as enacted by the National Assembly from time to time.”

    The amendment bill also provides comprehensive definition for free services, stakeholders and child or ward as captured in the Principal Act, and generally enrich the Principal Act whose fundamental objective is to eradicate illiteracy in Nigeria.

    Section 11 of the Principal Act as set out in the bill is to be amended by inserting a new subsection 2 (a) to read that: ” such state shall ensure that teachers who are eligible for promotion are duly considered and promoted.”

    A new sub section 2 (b) is also inserted into Section 11 to read: ” Salary increment for teachers shall also be implemented by such state to deserving teachers.”

    Apart from Section 11, the bill further seeks to amend Sections 2, 4,7, and 15 of the Principal Act.

    After the Second reading of the bill the Speaker of the House of Representatives, Hon. Yakubu Dogara refers it to the House Committee on Basic Education Services for further legislative action.

  • Photos: Buhari with Osinbajo, Saraki, Dogara ahead of London trip

    Photos: Buhari with Osinbajo, Saraki, Dogara ahead of London trip

    President Buhari ahead of his London trip received Vice President Yemi Osinbajo, Senate President Bukola Saraki, Speaker Yakubu Dogara and Zamfara Governor Abubakar Yari .

    Buhari and Osinbajo
    Buhari, Saraki, Osinbajo, Dogara, Yari

  • El-Rufai to NASS: I don’t share public funds like you

    El-Rufai to NASS: I don’t share public funds like you

    Kaduna State Governor, Mallam Nasir Ahmad El-Rufai has fired back at the House of Representatives and its Speaker, Hon. Yakubu Dogara over the National Assembly budget controversy, saying, he doesn’t share Kaduna State money like NASS shares public funds.

    The House of Representatives had on Tuesday descended heavily on Governor El-Rufai for challenging them to make their budget public, saying that what El-Rufai himself declared was not his security votes, but Kaduna State Security budget, daring him to publish his personal security vote like they have published the Speaker’s salary’s pay slip.

    Meanwhile, El-Rufai in reaction to the National Assembly members said, he does not have security votes; aside the security budget of the state he earlier published, which according to him is properly expended and accounted for.

    El-Rufai however faulted the legislators for what he called ‘unnecessary distraction’ to a simple request for a transparent National Assembly budget.

    In a statement he issued through his spokesman, Samuel Aruwan in Kaduna on Thursday, El-Rufai also faulted the salary pay slip of Hon. Yakubu Dogara, saying, “the figures in the pay slips presented for the Honorable Speaker are in stark contrast to the declaration by The Economist regarding the earnings of NASS members. One of the claims cannot be right”.

    Talking about security votes, El-Rufai said, contrary to general belief, he does not have a security vote. “The Kaduna State Government has presented details of its security budget. What was presented represents the only security vote for the entire government. As the figures show, there is no security vote for the Governor of Kaduna State.

    “This may be a shock to those used to the notion of security votes as barely disguised slush funds, but we do not operate such a system in Kaduna. Our budgets specify what is voted as assistance to security agencies, and its expenditure is properly recorded and accounted for. These are not monies given to or spent by the governor.

    “If the leaders of the NASS have security votes allocated to or personally collected by them, they might wish to disclose such. Our security spending does not operate like the NASS system of sharing public funds in such an opaque fashion that even NASS members do not know how their entire budget is broken down or what the leadership gets as its ‘running costs’.

    “The figures in the pay slips presented for the Honorable Speaker are in stark contrast to the declaration by The Economist regarding the earnings of NASS members. One of the claims cannot be right.

    “The House of Representatives has responded with predictable tetchiness to a simple and clear demand that details of the National Assembly budget be made public. It is inconceivable that an important institution, vested by the Constitution with representation, lawmaking and oversight powers, has for at least seven years ignored the imperative to set an example of transparency, despite being severally urged to do so.

    “Despite the rush to personal attacks on a matter of public policy, we cannot allow the enthronement of the republic of distraction. It is important that everyone who is interested in protecting and advancing democratic discourse should stay focused on the issue. It is strange that persons entrusted with high office will justify their abdication of the responsibility to be transparent in such cavalier fashion. We don’t believe that most of our esteemed legislators will construe a demand for transparency as aimed at undermining the National Assembly.

    “However, notwithstanding the intemperate response of the spokesman of the House of Representatives, the demand that the NASS budget be made public will not go away. It is not personal, and there is a strong civic constituency that is demanding it. The sooner all of us in public life recognized that the game has changed, and that segments of civil society and indeed everyday citizens of Nigeria, are much more aware, astute and advanced than the state of our politics, the better for our democratic health.

    “Since the NASS began conceiving its budget as a single-line item, how many legislators, not to mention other citizens, have seen the details of the budget? Can anyone recall seeing the spending patterns and details in any published audited accounts of NASS recently? By contrast, all state governments present their audited accounts to their state Houses of Assembly as required by law. The federal statutory agencies that NASS cites as not having their budgets reflected in the National Budget submit details of their budgets to the NASS for review and approval.

    “How, in the 21st Century, can we have any national institution that is comfortable with not being subject to any oversight, audit or external scrutiny. The constitutional principle of checks and balances was not introduced for purposes of idle luxury, but to ensure that every institution exercises its power in an accountable manner.

    “We reiterate our call for the NASS to download and analyze our budgets and actual spending which are all publicly available. In Kaduna State, the state government has been a net creditor to the local government councils, some of which cannot pay salaries without assistance by the state government. We do not retain local government funds nor impose contracts on them. Our policy announcements in this regarded were widely reported and appreciated.

    “The spokesman of the House of Representatives may wish to respond to what is written, rather than what is imagined. The KDSG statement of Monday, 10th April 2017, clearly stated that N100bn is bigger than the capital budgets of many states. That is a statement of fact.

    “In dragging the memo Malam Nasir El-Rufai submitted to President Buhari seven months ago into this matter, the spokesman of the House of Representatives betrays no recognition that it is the conduct of those that leaked private communication that bears condemnation.

    “When NASS hopefully eventually releases its budget details, the public will be hoping to see specifics on personnel costs, overheads and capital expenditure. Rather than restrict the budget details to only 2017, the current leadership of NASS should fulfill the obligations of transparency by releasing the breakdown of the NASS budget since 2015. That way, Nigerians, including members of the NASS, will get to know what the budget of that institution is.

    “The NASS leadership has been promising ad infinitum to publish the breakdown of the opaque, one-line budget. It should simply do so. Prompt release of the 2015 and 2016 breakdowns, along with the proposed figures for 2017, would be a good way to start.

    “As things stand today, even if Malam Nasir El-Rufai refrains from further commentary on this matter, the genie is already out of the bottle. The public will not accept a secretive NASS, or any other branch of government for that matter,” the Governor said.

     

  • Procurement Act: CISLAC petitions Dogara, committee over mobilisation fees

    Procurement Act: CISLAC petitions Dogara, committee over mobilisation fees

    An advocacy group, Civil Society Legislative Advocacy Centre (CISLAC) has petitioned Speaker of the House of Representatives, Hon. Yakubu Dogara and the House Committee on Public Procurement to suspend moves to increase contract mobilization fee from 15 to 50 per cent.

    CISLAC mobilisation Director, Auwal Ibrahim during a briefing, yesterday in Abuja, stressed that such decision would amount to promoting corruption in the procurement processes.

    Auwal argued further that the development is contradictory to provisions of the extant laws, adding that the Act was setup during administration of the former President Olusegun Obasanjo as an instrument to check corruption.

    The House is on the verge of reviewing the Public Procurement Act (PPA) 2007 to reflect an increase in the mobilization fee to 50 per cent, removal of the Finance minister as chairperson of the public procurement council and plans to include national defense and security agencies in procurement processes.

    He explained that, “As contained in the extant law, a mobilization fee of 15 per cent to contractor is to enable the contractor to move their equipment to site, while another 30 per cent payable after an inception report, otherwise referred to as interim performance certificate is submitted.”

    “This is followed by another 50 per cent payment when half of the work is done and a balance of 5 per cent is payable after completion of the work. This is the standard worldwide and any contract that fails to meet up with the above is deemed to have commit an offence and punishable under section 58.

    “From the above, it is very clear that payments to contractors are in sequence to guide against abandoning the work and not drag government into unnecessary controversies. The recommendation therefore to give up to 50 per cent mobilization fees will not only further encourage corruption. The 15 per cent as contained in the law (Section 35 of the PPA) is purely a mobilization fees, which implies assisting or mobilizing the contractor to site, and not advance payment,” Auwal added.

    However, the group advised President Muhammadu Buhari to constitute and inaugurate the National Council for Public Procurement (NCPP) in order to sincerely fight corruption and sustain the change agenda.

    CISLAC added that the bill as read on the floor of the House should be discarded because it is allegedly against the principle of transparency and accountability.

  • Tinubu, a dogged fighter for democracy — Dogara

    Tinubu, a dogged fighter for democracy — Dogara

    The Speaker, House of Representatives, Mr Yakubu Dogara, has eulogised Sen. Bola Tinubu, a former governor of Lagos, on his 65th birthday.

    In a statement issued on Tuesday by his Special Adviser on Media and Public Affairs, Mr Turaki Hassan, the speaker described Tinubu as a leader, man of vision, and dogged fighter for democracy.

    According to Dogara, Tinubu has continued to make invaluable contributions to democratic governance in Nigeria.

    “He is undoubtedly one of the leading lights of our modern democracy and I can only say this based on the part I have touched.

    “I see him as someone who is demonstrating the attributes of a true, but not a regional leader.

    “Some, who thought he had everything cut out for him in the South-West and may not be able to play on a more national platform, got it wrong.

    “They saw how he, together with some other committed leaders in this country, midwived a political organisation that so many pundits believed could not see the light of the day.

    “In the history of this country, for the first time, an opposition party which was built on some blocks, including Tinubu, succeeded in wrestling power from the hands of the ruling party.”

    The speaker prayed for Tinubu to age gracefully and in good health.

    “Some of us who have come to see him as a mentor will continue to learn more and drink from the fountain of his wisdom,” Dogara added.