Tag: Jubrin

  • Budget padding: Jibrin sues Dogara, others

    The former Chairman of the House of Representatives Committee on Appropriation, Abdulmumin Jibrin, has sued the Speaker of the House, Yakubu Dogara, his deputy, Yusuf Lasun and other principal officers of the lower chamber over an alleged plan to suspend him.

    In the suit marked: FHC/ABJ/CS/595/2016, which commenced by way of writ of summons and filed at the Federal High Court, Abuja, August 9, Jibrin asked the court to restrain the House of Representatives and its principal officers from suspending him as member of the House.

    Jibrin, an All Progressives Congress (APC) legislator representing Kiru/Bebeji Federal Constituency of Kano State, also filed an ex-parte motion, seeking among others, an order restraining the defendants from taking steps to suspend him pending the determination of the substantive suit.

    Listed as defendants in the suit are – The House of Representatives, the Clerk of the House of Representatives, Dogara, Lasun, Alhassan Ado Doguwa, Leo Ogor, Herman Hembe, Umar Mohammed Bago, Zakari Mohammed, Chike Okafor, Dan Asuquo, Jagaba Adams, Haliru Jika and Uzoma Abonta.

     

  • Budget padding: APC won’t sanction Dogara, Jubrin

    Budget padding: APC won’t sanction Dogara, Jubrin

    The All Progressives Congress (APC) yesterday ruled out sanctioning House of Representatives Speaker Yakubu Dogara and former Chairman of the Committee on Appropriations Abdulmuminin Jibrin for alleged budget padding.

    Deputy National Chairman (North) Senator Lawal Shuaibu told reporters at the APC secretariat in Abuja that its constitution empowers the party to take certain steps, but it would not do so in order not to unsurp the functions of law enforcement agencies.

    He said: “Article 7 (5) of the APC constitution gives us the power to do certain things. So, you see, what we are doing is the right thing. But only we don’t want that in the public gallery”.

    Shuaibu asked “what is padding? saying the party would not sanction anybody for  that. “What is of concern to us is where any member contravenes the party constitution in his conduct,” he said.

    “That is why I referred you to Article 7 (5) of our party constitution. We are not a law enforcement organisation. We don’t enforce law. We only ensure that the constitution is complied with. All members of the party are answerable to the party and answerable to their constituencies.

    “The two members that are subjected to this are elected or appointed members of the party including those that are holding public office. So, you expect the party to sit down and watch. No. We have to do our work. So, the question of sweeping anything under the carpet does not arise at all. But we don’t want to do it in the market place, in the party secretariat”.

    On the funding of the party, Shuaibu said: “We have a credible source of funding. Every member of APC in this country pays N100. So far on our data base, we have 12.7million registered members. Others are still waiting for us to just open our portal to do their membership registration.

    “Assuming those on our data base paid their membership levies, just calculate N100 of 12.7million members for you to know how much we can get. So we have our way of sourcing for fund.”

    Speaking on the complaint of hardship by Nigerians, the former lawmaker said: “You are talking of hardship. This government is just one year old. Sixteen years of destruction and you want the magic in just only one year? Nobody is talking of 16 years of the destruction that brought the hardship.

    “But when the destruction was going on, people were praying for somebody who could correct all these things and reconstruct the country. But nobody said it will just happen overnight. It is not possible. I think if you have a scratch on your hand now, it will take some time to heal. But the system destroyed so many things. It was an atmosphere where impunity was officially recognised”.

    On filling vacant party positions, he said: “There is a committee looking into our constitution, we are waiting for them. It will be a mini-convention. What we want to do is to amend some parts of our party constitution after operating this one for about two years. Where it is inadequate we want to perfect it”.

  • Budget padding: We won’t sanction Dogara, Jubrin – APC

    Budget padding: We won’t sanction Dogara, Jubrin – APC

    The All Progressives Congress (APC) has ruled out the possibility of sanctioning the Speaker of the House of Representatives, Yakubu Dogara and the former Chairman of the House Committee on Appropriation, Abdulmuminin Jibrin over allegations of budget padding.

    The APC  Deputy National Chairman (North), Senator Lawal Shuaibu, told journalists in Abuja that although the party constitution empowers the party to take certain steps on the matter, it will not play the role of a law enforcement agency.

    He said, “Article 7 subsection 5 of APC Constitution gives us the power to do certain things. So, you see, what we are doing is the right thing. But only we don’t want that in the public gallery.”

    While ruling out the possibility of imposing sanction on the feuding duo, Shuaibu added, “what is padding? The party does not sanction anybody on that. What is of concern to us is where any member contravenes the party constitution in his conduct.

    “That is why I refer you to Article 7, subsection 5 of our party constitution. We are not a law enforcement organisation. We don’t enforce law. We only ensure that the constitution is complied with. All members of the party are answerable to the party and answerable to their constituency.

    “The two members that are subjected to this are elected or appointed members of the party including those that are holding public office. So, you expect the party to sit down and watch. No. We have to do our work. So, the question of sweeping anything under the carpet does not arise at all. But we don’t want to do it in the market place, but at the party secretariat.”

  • Dogara, Jubrin and other tales

    “I have accepted a seat in the House of Representatives, and thereby have consented to my ruin, to your ruin, and to the ruin of our children. I gave you this warning that you may prepare your mind for your fate.” – John Adams, 2nd President of the United States of America (1935-1826)

    In penning these words to his wife, Abigail and their five children, Adams was obviously under the clear understanding that the legislature was the anvil upon which every hammer of public discontent descended. Aged only 39 at the time, Adams had just been elected to the USA’s first Continental Congress, as delegate from Massachusetts, in 1774.

    Although Adams, a top-notch Federalist and deep-rooted political philosopher went on to become the first Vice President, and later second President of the USA, succeeding the immortal George Washington, the ‘burden’ which comes with serving in the legislature as against the executive branch was not lost on him throughout his distinguished career.

    Back home in Nigeria, the fear which Adams nursed about public office, especially as it concerns the legislature, continues to titillate the public almost 200 years after the U.S congressman’s demise. Between the Senate and the House of Representatives, there is apparently no shortage of theatrics in-between sessions, with the state assemblies offering occasional side-shows to compliment the orchestra of spectacular comic relief. Remarkably, these brickbats, besides providing the citizenry the elixir needed  to vent pent-up anger and frustration with life itself, invariably end up with few useful lessons which, going forward, aid the institution of public service to imbibe new moral ethics – thus making living more tolerable.

    Yet, to be able to synthesize the positives embedded in any public spat for the general good, society ought to be able to discern between fact and fiction, as well as decipher truth from propaganda. After all, as native wisdom counsels, it is from the black pot that cometh the white pap!

    Sadly, in Nigeria, upon the dawn of a fresh ‘scandal’, the goal is often to applaud the accuser and hasten to convict the accused in the court of public opinion. Just name and shame the fellow(s) concerned, until they are able to prove their innocence, in an inverse application of the standard law which presumes an accused as innocent, until proven otherwise. It does not matter if the pursued, most often in front of the chasing mob, is the one now chanting, ‘thief, thief, thief’ in order to secure a get-away.

    It is against this backdrop that the Nigerian tribe of analysts, commentators and indeed, public opinion influencers ought to, unlike the Roman plebeians, seek an intense understanding of the real issues involved in the Yakubu Dogara/Abdulmumin Jubrin face-off.

    Colunmist, Niyi Akinnaso, writing in the back page of The Punch of Tuesday, August 2, captures this mind-set succinctly when he asserted thus: “Whatever the outcome of the investigation, however, the alleged culprits have fallen short of the honour and respect due to their ranks, at least in the court of public opinion”. Really?

    Although Akinnaso concedes that “to be frank with ourselves, the National Assembly is constitutionally empowered to modify the budgetary proposals submitted by the President, by deleting or adding particular items to the budget”, such realization was sadly not potent enough to dissuade him from dismissing the concerned institution as “House of Representative Thieves?”

    It is such quick-to-convict disposition and blanket condemnation that usually pitch the public against the legislature. Often, such conclusions arise out of the claim – and sometimes correct charge – that some legislators derive personal monetary and other benefits from their positions and projects which they influence into the Appropriation Act.

    Remarkably, the current attempt to rail-road the House of Representatives into committing a kind of class suicide, in pursuit of the avenging mission of a distraught member is a familiar path often trudged by legislators who held the short end of a stick after every internal struggle for power and recognition.

    If recent memory is anything to go by, an Etteh ascends the throne and a Farouk misses the all-important Appropriation Committee chair as a reward for his part in the enterprise, and all hell is let loose.  Enter a Dimeji Bankole, and a Dino (and friends) don’t get the recognition they crave, and the House snowballs into a huge mat for wrestlemania.

    But while these two instances could be regarded as internal affairs of the House, the externalisation of similar disagreement, reached a new high in the 7th Assembly under the leadership of Rt. Hon. Aminu Tambuwal, which I was a proud part of.

    Two quick instances, using the 7th Assembly’s two Presiding Officers, Tambuwal and his deputy, Rt. Hon. Emeka Ihedioha, would suffice. First, on January 6, 2014, preparatory to resumption from Christmas/New Year break, some interest groups went to town to canvass the possible removal of Ihedioha, citing the new-found-majority of the burgeoning All Progressives Congress (APC), following the defection of 37 Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) House members. As deputy chairman, Media and Public Affairs, I have to counter such move, citing, among others, Section 50(1) (b) of the 1999 Nigeria Constitution, as amended, to wit: “There shall be a Speaker and a Deputy Speaker of House of Representatives, who shall be elected by the members of that House from among themselves.”

    The same constitutional provision was to come in handy, when on October 28, 2014 Speaker Tambuwal announced his switch to the APC, and the full weight of the state power was deployed in an undisguised attempt to unseat him.

    Instructively, in spite of the clear provisions of the constitution, as stated above, many cheerleaders masquerading as analysts had, in deference to public hysteria, cried themselves hoarse on the propriety of a Tambuwal resignation.

    Sadly, under another dispensation, we are yet to see a change in attitude – one in which an arm of government is allowed to self-regulate. Speaker Dogara, and indeed, his leadership, serve only at the behest of their honourable colleagues. And the House Rules and the Nigerian constitution clearly spell out how any of them can exit their privileged position(s). I have searched through both documents and I could not find where hounding one out of office is cited as a route towards dethroning any of them.

    Though Jubrin denounces the word “padding”, he seeks to make heavy weather over claims that Speaker Dogara inserted projects into an Appropriation Bill which he authored. Oftentimes, the tendency is to play the ostrich in such matters, when in actual fact, it is generally acknowledged that primus inter pares anywhere in the world, from class monitors, to student representatives, labour leaders and even Presidents get a little more.

    Pray, who in his right senses would expect a state governor or President, who ran on the same ticket as their deputies, to wield the same amount of influence?

    I do need to point out, however, that the essence of my intervention today is neither to denigrate Jubrin nor question his integrity (members of the 7th and 8th Assembly are free to draw up their own conclusions); rather my concern centres around how to preserve the sacred institution of the legislature, rather than have its disgruntled members lie through the teeth, in a classic rehash of the ‘You Tarka me, I Daboh you’ episode.

    It would seem, regrettably, that Jubrin is perhaps too far gone in his open display of hate for Speaker Dogara, that he could gloss over the timeless warning of his presumptive hero, Goebbels, who himself asserted, “there will come a day when all the lies will collapse under their own weight, and the truth will triumph again.”

    To Jubrin and his co-travellers, that time is nigh, in September, when the honourable members of the House of Representatives will resume for plenary. Until then, he may do well to take a deserve vacation, away from the path of propaganda and the denigration of an institution which he ought to help fortify.

     

    • Hon. Ogene, a journalist, was deputy chairman, Media & Public Affairs in the House of Representatives (2011-2015).
  • House a hub of systemic corruption – Jibrin

    House a hub of systemic corruption – Jibrin

    The former Chairman of the House of Representatives Committee on Appropriations, Abdulmumin Jibrin, on Tuesday described the House as hub of systemic corruption.

    In a statement he personally signed, Jubrin gave further insight into why he was removed as appropriation committee chairman.

    He said, “Since the corrupt Speaker Yakubu Dogara made the public comment that padding is not an offense, the question on the lips of Nigerians is why then did the same Speaker said he ‘sacked’ me over padding allegations?

    “I have said it repeatedly and wish to restate that I did nothing wrong and I committed no offense. I did not abuse my office nor corruptly enrich myself in the five years I have been in the House.

    “The only reason why they wanted me out is my independent-mindedness, resistance to corruption and my refusal to ‘play ball’ on the gross abuse of office they institutionalized in the House. They simply wanted to have someone that can do their corrupt bidding. Now that I have exposed the fact that Speaker Dogara and the three others are the padders, padding is no longer an offense, Shame! Shame!! and shame!!!

    “As it stands today, these corrupt elements have infiltrated the House, making the institution a hub of systemic corruption. I repeat, there is massive individual and institutional corruption in the House of Representatives. And all Nigerians have a responsibility to avail themselves of this rare opportunity to flush out corruption in the House.

    “I have pledged my continuous support and assistance to the security and anti-corruption agencies. Let me also state that contrary to some myopic opinion that it would affect the institution of the House, it will rather free the institution of the grip of these corrupt vested interests, restore its integrity and shape it to become a pride to Nigerians home and abroad.”

     

  • Jibrin to EFCC: Arrest Dogara, Lasun, others now

    Jibrin to EFCC: Arrest Dogara, Lasun, others now

    Sacked chairman excluded us from budget work – Committee

    Former Chairman, House of Representatives Committee on Appropriation, Abdulmumin Jibrin, on Friday asked the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) and the Independent Corrupt Practices and Other Related Offences Commission (ICPC) to immediately arrest Speaker Yakubu Dogara for allegedly “padding” the 2016 Budget.

    Jibrin also called for the arrest of Deputy Speaker Yusuf Lasun, Chief Whip Ado Doguwa, Minority leader Leo Ogor and 10 Committee chairmen by the anti-graft agencies for their involvement in the alleged “padding” on a day nine members of the Appropriation Committee accused Jibrin of not carrying them along in completing work on the budget.

    Jibrin, who took to his Twitter account on Friday, claimed that Dogara and the others he asked the anti-graft agencies to arrest  for allegedly padding the budget  have been running to high places for protection.

    He said: “This is 24 hours after my lawyers requested the EFCC and ICPC to grant me a date and time to personally deliver my petition on Mr. Speaker and three others.

    “EFCC and ICPC are yet to revert to me. I decided to go personally so that in addition to the petition I can provide some further insight to them.

    “EFCC and ICPC must arrest the Speaker, the three others and few others members in my petition immediately.

    “They are running to high places, looking for cover.”

    Nine members of the Committee led by the Deputy Chairman, Emeka Azubogu, on Friday told journalists in Abuja that Jibrin hijacked the 2016 budget from them and worked on it all alone.

    They said the action of the sacked committee chairman prompted them to lodge a formal complaint with the Speaker for his removal.

    Azubogu said while there was nothing criminal in the action of the former committee chairman, it was wrong of him to have edged them out.

    He said: “He was the Chairman of the Committee, he was carrying out the job the best way he could. If you are in the open, you can’t do the work.

    “If people are calling him from everywhere making demands he would not be able to do the work. So he went in where he will.

    “When he finishes the report, it is easy to present it to the Committee and then to the leadership. If they go through and approve, it’s binding on the House.

    “He didn’t commit a crime. There are times you need to work and you need to be in a secluded place.”

    They also took exception to Jibrin’s allegation that 10 committee chairmen inserted 2,000 projects worth N284 billion into the budget.

    “He who alleges must prove. He was the Chairman of the committee. It was a personal information that he had to himself,” Azubogu said.

     

  • Budget controversies fueled by Dogara, Jubrin ego – Ndume

    Budget controversies fueled by Dogara, Jubrin ego – Ndume

    The Senate Leader, Ali Ndume, on Friday declared that the ongoing 2016 Budget padding controversies at the National Assembly are more of personal issues between the Speaker of House of Representatives, Yakubu Dogara and the sacked Chairman of House Committee on Appropriation, Abdumumuni Jubrin.

    He also said the controversies are fueled more by the media.

    There have been accusations and counter-accusations between the House of Representatives leadership headed by Dogara and Jubrin‎, when the later accused Dogara of supporting the 2016 Budget padding by N40 billion.

    Speaking with State House correspondents after Jumaat prayer with President Muhammadu Buhari at the Presidential Villa, Abuja, Ndume said the 2016 Budget was the first time the national budget would be “collectively” produced by the National Assembly ‎and the executive, which the President signed into law after satisfactorily sighting its details.

    He also pointed out that the lawmakers have the constitutional right to amend the budget anyway they deem fit.

    He said: “The issue of budget padding is more of a media hype than reality. We are not doing budget now, we only have Appropriation Act which is a law and you know the process of implementing a law. I do not know where the issue of this budget padding we are talking about is coming from.

    “If we are not to tinker with the budget as submitted by the President, then there would not have been the need to submit it to the National Assembly.

    “We have the constitutional duty to add, subtract and adjust. That was what was done. This is the first time we did a budget that was collectively produced in the sense that it was done in such a way that the Senate, House of Representatives and the Executive played different parts.

    “This time, the President took his time to ensure that he did not only sign on the budget, but also signed on budget details that he is satisfied with.

    “What is happening now is a fallout between individuals, it is more of personal thing between Dogara and Jibrin. That is not the way differences should be settled. We have an in-house process that is followed if we have such issues. I am personally involved in reaching out to the parties involved.”