Tag: Lawmakers

  • Lawmakers criticise workmanship at Zuma’s home

    panel of South African lawmakers expressed concern about shoddy work during a 215 million rand ($17 million) security upgrade to President Jacob Zuma’s private home and said contractors may have overcharged the state.

    The Times published a picture of a goat inside one of the 21 thatched-roof houses built for Zuma’s security detail at his home outside Nkandla in KwaZulu-Natal province. Most dwellings and a clinic were empty, the Johannesburg-based newspaper said. Lawmakers and journalists visited the area on Wednesday.

    “We were astounded to find that most of the work was still incomplete,” Cedric Frolick, the committee’s chairman, said in an e-mailed statement. “It appears that costs to implement this project were inflated.”

    Zuma, 73, has faced a public backlash since graft ombudsman Thuli Madonsela said in a report in March last year that he unfairly benefited from the renovation of his home. The lawmakers’ panel was set up to consider a finding by Police Minister Nkosinathi Nhleko that Zuma wasn’t liable to repay any of the taxpayers’ money that was spent.

    “There is absolutely no sign of the money being used sensibly,” Corne Mulder, a committee member from the opposition, Freedom Front Plus, said in an e-mailed statement. “The public has good reason to be concerned about what transpired at Nkandla.”

    While Madonsela said the makeover had cost 215 million rand at the time of her  report and the price tag was expected to rise to 246 million rand by the time the work was completed, Frolick said 206 million rand had been spent.

  • Oyo APC to punish erring lawmakers

    The All Progressives Congress (APC) in Oyo State has said it will sanction any member found to have worked against the consensus candidates for the principal offices in the National Assembly.

    In a statement by its Director of Publicity and Strategy, Olawale Sadare, the party said: “As patriotic citizens and committed change agents, the leadership and members of the APC in Oyo State are embarrassed by the  situation in the National Assembly.

    “And as a responsible and loyal chapter which appreciates party supremacy as fundamental, we identify with the position of the national headquarters of our great party which revolves around decency, discipline and national interest.

    “We are very much aware of the inglorious roles played by some of our members who conspired with some Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) elements to truncate the painstaking efforts of the APC to guide the majority members on the choice of leadership that could work with Mr. President to deliver on his promises and move the country.”

  • Why lawmakers should respect party supremacy, by Rep

    The lawmaker representing Oyo federal constituency, Prince Akeem Adeyemi, has said  members of the All Progressives Congress (APC) in the National Assembly must abide by party supremacy to aid development.

    According to the Oyo prince, who spoke in Oyo town after a stakeholders’ meeting, added that the party’s interest must supercede any other interest, except in few cases.

    He said: “The ugly incident at the National Assembly is unfortunate. Why would ambition divide us at a time we are supposed to be seen as change agents? We all contested under the platform of the party and by doing so, we have indirectly pledged to abide by all its directives. Without discipline, the party will crash.

    “However, it has happened. What we need now is to move forward. It must not be allowed to fester because we have suffered for long as a nation. Nigerians would be at the receiving end except we reconcile ourselves.  But to prevent future occurrence, every stakeholders must be called to a stakeholders meeting where all the lingering issues would be ironed out.”

    Adeyemi urged major stakeholders in the party to sheath their sword and move forward in the interest of the nation, reminding them of the sacrifices they made before the merger became fruitful.

     

  • Ashafa urges APC lawmakers to unite

    Ashafa urges APC lawmakers to unite

    Senator  Gbenga Ashafa, (Lagos East) has urged All Progressives Congress (APC), lawmakers to close ranks and settle down to work.

    Ashafa, who made this statement against the background of the misunderstanding in the National Assembly, said they have to settle down to work, given the enormity of the tasks before them.

    He said the APC Senators Unity Forum, the Senators of Like Minds and others in the 8th Senate should collapse their structures and form a united and progressive front that will work with the new leadership of the Red Chamber in the interest of the people.

    Ashafa said: “We have to realise that the hopes of Nigerians are high. The new government has amassed a lot of political capital — having been elected as a result of the massive build-up of goodwill for our various candidates in the elections and the stark disenchantment with the previous administration.

    “As a result, the goodwill of Nigerians must not be taken for granted. So, I make this call for one Nigeria and it starts with us. We should see ourselves as one Senate, united for the progress of our various constituents and translating change into policies and laws that will, in turn, yield tangible and beneficial results for everyone.”

    Senator Ashafa urged all APC members, irrespective of their political leanings, to put aside their personal ambitions for now.

  • Jega to lawmakers: Conduct major electoral reforms of Electoral Act

    Jega to lawmakers: Conduct major electoral reforms of Electoral Act

    The Chairman of the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC), Prof. Attahiru Jega, has called on the National Assembly to be decisive in reforming the Electoral Act and reviewing the Constitution.

    Mr. Jega made the call at a Dinner organised for him by the Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC) the Trade Union Congress and some Civil Society Organisations in Abuja on Friday night.

    “Electoral reform has just begun, a lot more efforts need to be done,” he said.

    “The Justice Muhammed Uwais panel has a lot of good recommendations, which are yet to be taken on board and implemented.”

    The electoral chief added that “between now and 2019, there is sufficient time and scope for us to be able to ensure that additional reform methods can come in.”

    He said INEC under his leadership “made a recommendation two years ago for amendment to the electoral act and the constitution to improve the legal framework before 2015 general elections.

    “Regrettably, it did not materialise up to the time we did the elections, and the existing legal framework is fairly good.

    “It could have been better if the legal framework had been improved.”

    Jega called on the National Assembly to continue to support INEC and give it the necessary encouragement required to improve on the good foundation that had been laid out. He pledged support to future electoral reforms and improvement in the electoral process in the country.

    He commended INEC commissioners and staff for their support and efforts under very difficult circumstances for successful elections in 2015.

    He also commended the labour movement for their continuous support to INEC and the reforms in the electoral process.

    The NLC President, Ayuba Wabba, said the reforms, which the INEC boss brought to bear on the organisation reflected in the 2015 general elections.

    “With commitment, patriotic and honest disposition, Jega was able to, through administrative wizardly, accomplish the historic success of 2015 general elections.

    “That was how Jega was able to outwit our chronic election riggers out of relevance in the innovations of the permanent voter cards and card readers,” he said.

    Wabba advised that whoever would be the next INEC boss should continue with the benchmark set by Jega. He said Nigerians would not accept a reversal of the progress made with the 2015 general elections where the will of the people was truly reflected in the ballot.

    He called for the full implementation of Uwais report, adding that it will go a long way to achieve full credibility in the conduct of elections.

    Salisu Mohammed, Chairman, Labour Party Caretaker Committee, said it was time for Nigerians to build institutions that would have enduring legacies.

    “What happened in the National Assembly is a cause for concern for all who have concern for Nigeria’s future.

    “It shows that our democracy is still in infancy and if care is not taken, we may suffer serious setback,” he said.

    Jega, who conducted Nigeria’s general elections in 2011 and 2015, is set to retire as the Chairman of INEC on Tuesday.

     

  • Lawmakers groan over Itu-Calabar

    Residents of Calabar,  the Akwa Ibom State House of Assembly and other Nigerians who daily have to ply the Itu-Calabar Federal Highway, the all important Federal single lane highway constructed in the 1970s, have appealed to the Federal Government to save the road from being  cut into two at Enen Atai Itam, in Itu Local Government Area by gully erosion.

    Raising a motion of very urgent public importance, the representative of Itu  State Constituency in the House of Assembly,  Hon. (Prince) Idongesit Ituen described the condition of the road as “life threatening”. He said gully erosion is almost cutting the road into two. Hon Ituen  said if nothing serious  is done urgently within the next few days, Cross River may be cut off from her Sout-South and South-Eastern neighbours.Supporting the motion, Hon. Onofiok Luke, representing Nsit Ubium State Constituency, wondered what ecological funds were meant for while thousands of lives were threatened. He called on President Muhammadu Buhari to act fast to have the road reconstructed and dualised to save the Southsouth, Southeastern states who are the most affected from accidents, death and waste of man-hours every day.

    Luke, however, commended Governor Udom Emmanuel for steps taken to have some remedial works done to save lives. He said the steps taken by Udom should be taken further by the Federal Government by having the whole road reconstructed into a dual carriage way.

    Members representing Etinan, Nsit Atai, Mkpat Enin, Esit Eket/ Ibeno state constituencies called on the President to help the Akwa Ibom people and other Nigerians who daily take the risk of going on that road because there is no alternative route to or from Calabar open to them.

    The Speaker, Hon. Aniekan Uko,  set up a five member committee to visit the road and report back to the House next week Tuesday.

  • Breaking the bank for lawmakers

    Breaking the bank for lawmakers

    A report that senators will draw N8.64billion as wardrobe allowance sparked a huge row last week. The tension was doused following a clarification that they would get N506,600 each as dressing allowance. Does such profligacy fly in the face of dwindling resources and some states, inability to pay salaries? No, say some lawyers who are demanding a downward review of public officials’ salaries and elimination of some allowances to save cost. They also want the laws on remuneration of public officials reviewed to reflect present realities, writes JOSEPH JIBUEZE.

    Lawmakers enjoy the best of two worlds. They do not work full time, yet the country breaks the bank for them. Last week, a report that senators would earn N8.64billion as wardrobe allowance sparked a huge uproar. In the face of cash crunch, with some states unable to pay salaries, many considered it insensitive and a rip-off.

    But, Revenue Mobilisation and Fiscal Allocation Commission (RMFAC) Chairman Mr. Elias Mbam during a courtesy visit to Senate President Bukola Saraki, said each senator would earn N506, 600 as dressing allowance.

    “It is 25 per cent of the basic salary for senators and if you apply that, every senator will receive N506, 600 per annum. House of Representatives members receive less but I don’t have the figure,” he said.

     

    What do senators earn?

     

    Based on the 2007 RMFAC approved remuneration for National Assembly members, the lawmakers’ allowances include accommodation (Senator N4m, Rep N3.97m), vehicle loan (Senator N8m, Rep N6.948m), furniture (Senator N6m, Rep N5.956m) and severance gratuity (Senator N6m, Rep N5.956m), which are due once in four years.

    Other allowances, which are payable every year, are car maintenance (Senator N1.52m, Rep N595,563), constituency (Senator N5m, Rep N1.687m), domestic staff (Senator N1.5m, Rep N1.488m), personal assistant (Senator N506,600; Rep N496,303), entertainment (Senator N202,640, Rep N198,521), recess (Senator N202,640; Rep N198,521), utilities (Senator N607,920; Rep N397,042), newspaper/periodicals (Senator N303,960; Rep N297,781), house maintenance (Senator N101,320; Rep N99,260) and wardrobe.

    Nigerian lawmakers are said to receive salaries which rank the highest in the world, according to a report by The Economist magazine. The report revealed that with a basic salary of $189,500 per annum (about N30.6m), they were the highest paid lawmakers in the world.

    According to the report, the basic salary (which excludes allowances) of a Nigerian lawmaker is 116 times the country’s GDP per person of $1,600. The $189,500 earned annually by each Nigerian legislator is estimated to be 52 per cent higher than what Kenya legislators, who are the second highest paid lawmakers, earned.

    The figures put salaries of Senators and House of Representatives members way beyond those received by fellow parliamentarians in the 29 countries whose data was analysed by the magazine. In terms of volume of cash earnings, the Nigerian legislators beat their counterparts in Britain who take $105,400 yearly, as well as those in the United States ($174,000), France ($85,900), South Africa ($104,000), Kenya ($74,500), Saudi Arabia ($64,000) and Brazil ($157,600).

    Other yearly salary details published by The Economist two years ago are those of lawmakers in Ghana ($46,500), Indonesia ($65,800), Thailand ($43,800), India ($11,200), Italy ($182,000), Bangladesh ($4,000), Israel ($114,800), Hong Kong ($130,700), Japan ($149,700), Singapore ($154,000), Canada ($154,000), New Zealand ($112,500), Germany ($119,500), Ireland ($120,400), Pakistan ($3,500), Malaysia ($25,300), Sweden ($99,300), Sri Lanka ($5,100), Spain ($43,900) and Norway ($138,000).

    Constitutional lawyer Prof Itse Sagay (SAN) said the lawmakers’ earning was based on what he called “the locust mentality”.

    “What is particularly disturbing is that the National Assembly is completely impervious to public outrage,” he said.

    According to Sagay, in spite of dismal standard of living and poverty, coupled with low income per capita, past lawmakers awarded themselves the highest salaries and allowances in the world.

    He recalled that in 2009, a senator earned N240million in salaries and allowances, while a member of the House of Representatives earned N203.7million. Converted to dollars  at then existing rates, a senator earned $1.7million while his counterpart in America earned $174,000.

    “President Obama, president of the richest country in the world, earns $400,000 per annum. The British Prime Minister earns 190,000 pounds. A senator in Nigeria, one of the poorest countries in the world, earned $1.7million per annum. It is absurd. It is, as someone called it, a feeding frenzy,” Sagay said.

     

    Secrecy of actual earnings

     

    The exact amount lawmakers earn in Nigeria is still shrouded in secrecy. Hundreds of billions voted into the National Assembly are allegedly never broken down, which should have shown at least a summary of the legislators’ exact earnings. It has also been alleged that senators allocate money to themselves way above RMAFC stipulations.

    Co-founder of Newswatch magazine, Mr Ray Ekpu, who was a member of the last National Conference, criticised the National Assembly for acting above the law on their remuneration.

    He said: “You cannot have a National Assembly that operates above the law. Right now, that is what happens. I give a few examples – we spoke to the former Head of RMFAC that is supposed to decide the salaries of public servants and he said that the National Assembly ignored the prescription of the commission and decided on paying itself what it wanted to pay.

    “That is a shame because that is an assembly that is supposed to make laws and it cannot be above the law as prescribed by the country. That is the problem. So if they do that, it is a disservice to Nigeria. And you know one of the media agencies as a way of tasting the vitality of the Freedom of Information Act has sent a letter to the National Assembly asking them to inform them on the salaries and allowances of the legislators. They have not complied with that.”

     

    Reducing cost of governance

     

    Analysts say corruption-induced wastage would not be easily stopped because its protagonists or beneficiaries are known to always put up some resistance. However, it will require a focused and determined political will on the part of the government of the day. It will involve curtailing the excesses of a powerful privileged class which has suddenly supplanted the yearnings and aspirations of teeming Nigerians with its bloated appetite for opulent and ostentatious lifestyles.

    A Senior Advocate of Nigeria, Mr George Oguntade, believes what the lawmakers earn do not reflect present realities.

    “Quite frankly, I find it difficult to comprehend the basis upon which the RMFAC has allocated so much money to lawmakers by way of allowances and remuneration, especially given the realities on ground today.

    “Laws are never static and should be continually reviewed to reflect the realities  in which society finds itself. This is the essence of the Nigerian Law Review Commission. The RMAFC clearly needs to be reviewed and amended though I foresee obstacles in the path of this given that the amenders are major beneficiaries of the law as it currently stands. I believe Nigerians should agitate for an immediate review and put pressure on the National  Assembly to give priority to this,” he said.

    Reducing the cost of governance will mean cutting down on some of the allowances, such as the one for clothing, Oguntade said.

    His words: “Many of these lawmakers are already affluent in their own right given where they are coming from and can certainly do without funds  that can be utilised in developing the country. We must not continue to delude ourselves by paying jumbo allowances to lawmakers when we can ill afford to.”

    It is also significant that richer countries pay their lawmakers far lesser. Said Oguntade: “Even countries that have the financial capability to do so do not pay much to their lawmakers. It amounts to fiscal irresponsibility and I believe the lawmakers ought to be in the vanguard of calling for the urgent review of the RMAFC. Senegal recently demonstrated fiscal responsibility when it recently voted to abolish its Senate and by so doing, save the sum of US$15million annually and divert same to infrastructural development.”

    The senior advocate believes lawmakers should not be paid salaries or constituency allowances, the purpose of which is never verified.

    “I also believe that lawmakers should only be entitled to sitting allowances as opposed to a yearly salary. As it is, they spend more time on recess than on real legislative duties and still get paid for the entire year. The country is short changed by this incongruous position and it certainly calls for a review.

    “Also, the retinue of aides of lawmakers needs to be reduced drastically. Lawmakers are only able to afford this because they get paid all kinds of allowances, including so-called ‘constituency allowances’. It is incredible that no audit is ever conducted to ascertain the projects to which the so- called ‘constituency allowances’ have been applied to.

    “Given the dwindling economy, it is imperative that the lawmakers follow the recent example of the President by agreeing to a substantial reduction in the annual funds allocated to them alone,” Oguntade said.

     

    Reducing recurrent expenditure

     

    To save cost, experts say there is need to substantially cut down on the high recurrent expenditure which had become the norm in federal budgets. Development, they said, would remain a mirage if recurrent expenditure continued to surpass capital budgetary allocations.

    Observers say implementing the 2012 Stephen Orosanye-led Presidential Committee on Rehabilitation and Restructuring of Federal Government Parastatals, Commissions and Agencies report would help save cost. The committee recommended efficient down-sizing or consolidation of several ministries, department and agencies in order to check wasteful duplicity of government functions and overhead costs.

    There have also been calls for a unicameral legislature which will be run on a part-time basis where the legislature will be constituted by Nigerians who are already gainfully employed in other vocations other than politics.

    A former senator, Smart Adeyemi: “We should run a unicameral system and one chamber, so that we can provide water, good roads, electricity and life for people rather than catering for a large number of people who are honourable members or distinguished senators.

    “The process of running government should not be more costly than what the system will give to the people. Is it not madness for a governor to appoint 70 special assistants? It is fraud!”

    There is also the need to cut down on number of aides and political appointees. President and Chairman of Council, Chartered Institute of Bankers of Nigeria (CIBN) Mrs. Debola Osibogun advised the government to cut down on the retinue of aides attached to heads of ministries, department and agencies.

    “The most important issue which the new federal government must address is the high cost of governance. If you look at the number of special advisers and personal assistants, you will notice that they have rendered the bureaucrats who are in the ministries almost redundant and they get paid. They should allow them to do their jobs and reduce the number of people they bring when they get appointed,” she said.

    The government has also been urged to focus on increasing its internally generated revenue (IGR) by harnessing other non-oil sectors. Analysts say Section 22 (1) and (2) of the 2007 Fiscal Responsibility Act has created some loopholes that mean little is remitted to the government treasury. The Nigerian National Petroleum Coorporation (NNPC) and its subsidiaries were discovered to have internally generated as high as N6.20trillion between 2009 and 2011, but made zero remittance, simply because they declared zero operating surpluses.

    It has also been suggested that a law should be enacted that will mandate government to henceforth use IGR for recurrent expenses while externally generated revenues only spent on capital projects.

    It is believed that should this law be enforced, a revenue inward-looking government should hardly waste any time in sealing off the leakages created in Section 22 (1) of Fiscal Responsibility Act of 2007 by making sure that all its IGR are paid into the Consolidated Revenue Fund Account, where no agency of government should have any drawing right to the account.

    A lawyer and a delegate to the National Conference, Chief Bisi Adegbuyi, said the law which allows parastatals to withdraw from the source, the recurrent expenditure content of their budget before remitting whatever remains to the Federation Account, must be reviewed.

    “That is the biggest drain pipe and the huge component of the recurrent expenditure content of the federal budget.  Why will NNPC withdraw from source unilaterally the amount determined by it as forming the recurrent expenditure and remitting paltry sum to the Federation Account? We need to look at such laws that impinge and impede progress.

    “When you spend 72.3 percent of your budget on recurrent expenditure, leaving 27. 7 percent for debt servicing and capital expenditure, certainly, there is no way you can improve on the welfare if the people. The cost of governance in Nigeria is humongous,” he said.

    The United States, the most powerful and richest country in the world, is said to have a comparatively slimmer and more cost effective bureaucracy than Nigeria. It has less than 20 federal ministries and secretaries of state (equivalent to Nigeria’s ministers). The British cabinet is smaller than that of Nigeria, which has a minimum of 37 due to Federal Character.

    Observers say President Buhari’s objective of economic transformation will be made a lot easier if he can find a way of reducing the huge economic and financial burden of running this country.

    Chairman, Lagos Branch of the Nigerian Bar Association (NBA) Mr Alex Muoka believes public service should be about service to humanity and not an avenue for self-enrichment.

    “I feel that representative or elective government positions should be seen as more of a call to serve than anything else. Therefore, people who vie for such offices should expect a severe drop in their income rather than the opposite.

    “The remuneration attached to such offices should be very basic and almost meagre. It is the prestige that the office carries and the clout and network that should be the payoff. Our situation is the opposite, thus some people go into government to make more money than they could ever have hoped to make from employment or business.

    “When we remove all the extravagant allowances and reduce the remuneration attached to political office, we would make it unattractive and then we would begin to attract the kind of good people with a genuine desire to serve that would move this country forward. We would also have drastically reduced the cost of governance,” Muoka said

     

    ‘Expunge some allowances’

     

    A Constitutional lawyer, Mr Ike Ofuokwu, called for the abolition of most of the allowances paid lawmakers.

    “It is ludicrous, obscene and a violent rape on the Nigerian economy for members of the National Assembly to earn wardrobe allowance where over 65 per cent of the workforce they represent are not paid their salaries for several months now.

    “The RMAFC has on its own part over the years become a white elephant project on the Nigerian nation. They should be scrapped and tried in a court of competent jurisdiction for irresponsible fiscal policies that are not in conformity with economic realities and for a deliberate and calculated attempt to bankrupt this nation. I strongly suggest that we should return to the wages and salaries commission.

    “I advise members of the National Assembly to speak in one voice and condemn this act of economic terrorism on the Nigerian state or else it will be seen as an act of parliamentary gang-up against the Nigerian workers.

    “During campaigns and even after the inauguration, we saw them all adorning flowing lace agbada and designer suits. Of what benefit other than parliamentary stealing is the wardrobe allowance? Some of them are already on salary and pensions for life. Their states are already bleeding as a result of their misadventure in the politics of their states.

    “We can now see why our legislators are the highest paid in the world. This is one of the few instances you will find them speak in one voice without a dissenting vote and without party affiliation.

    “To reduce the cost of governance, most of the allowances paid members of the National Assembly should be expunged. The job should be made part time and less attractive. By so doing, it will attract brilliant, selfless and financially independent men and women of character and morals,” Ofuokwu said.

    However, Mbam said that RMFAC would soon review downward lawmakers’ allowances, taking into consideration state of the economy, rate of inflation, capacity to pay, and the reality of the day.

    “The commission is currently reviewing the 2008 Remuneration Act and hopefully we expect it will be ready by the end of the third quarter and once we are ready, we will make it public and of course, present it to the National Assembly,” he said.

     

     

  • Make quality legislations, Ortom tells  lawmakers

    Make quality legislations, Ortom tells lawmakers

    Benue State Governor Samuel Ortom has charged the National Assembly to enact quality legislation that would enhance good governance in the country.

    He gave the charge when the Speaker of the House of Representatives, Rt. Hon Yakubu Dogara paid him a courtesy call at the Benue State Governor’s Lodge in Abuja.

    Governor Ortom listed critical areas of immediate concern as corruption, power supply and security stressing that if legislation is targeted at these areas and enforced the nation would make a quantum leap forward.

    He appealed to the Speaker to put the intrigues that led to his emergence behind him and build bridges between the leadership of the All Progressives Congress, APC, and its members.

    Governor Ortom described Rt. Hon Iorwase Hembe, member representing Vandeikya/Konshisha federal constituency who led the delegation to see him as a worthy ambassador of the state who had the vision to identify and invest in the leadership qualities of the Speaker.

    The Governor  described Rt. Hon Dogara as a humble man and urged him to sustain the virtue in his relationship with members.

    Earlier the Speaker had appealed to the Governor to invest in building people as that was the most lasting legacy that a leader could leave behind.

    He expressed appreciation to Ortom for his support and that of the members of the House from the state which he said contributed to his emergence as Speaker and urged the Governor to put landmark development projects on ground in line with the APC manifesto so that friends and well wishers could come to Benue State to celebrate with him.

    Rt. Hon Dogara urged leaders of the party to put the eschew the current bickering and hit the ground running in the provision of democracy dividends to the electorate who voted for change.

    On the other hand, the Benue State Government has signed a Memorandum of Understanding with a group of Chinese companies under the auspices of CGC Alliance for industrial and commercial revitalization of the state.

    Areas of focus include coal power plant, potable water and irrigation, renovation of agriculture service centers, construction of Makurdi-Guma road, and reticulation of water in Makurdi, Otukpo and Katsina-Ala.

    Others are airport and industrial park construction, sugar cane plantation and refineries.

    Governor Samuel Ortom signed on behalf of the state government in his office in the Benue Peoples House while Managing Director of the Group, Tony Ye signed on behalf of the companies.

    Governor Ortom expressed confidence in the ability of the group to deliver as it had successfully constructed the Otobi and Katsina-Ala water works.

    He said although the state owed CGC large amounts of money on the two projects he appealed for understanding while assuring that his administration would do its best to honour contractual agreements.

    Managing Director of the group, Mr Ye stated that various companies have teamed up under the alliance in order to handle all infrastructural projects in the state if given the opportunity and expressed appreciation to the Ortom administration for inviting them to partner in the development of the state.

    In another development, Governor Ortom has appealed to the Bill Gates Foundation to consider the whole value chain in its approach to promote the cultivation of cassava and rice in the state.

    He made the appeal when he received a delegation from Synergos Institute led by Adewale Adewale Ajabi on behalf of the foundation.

    The Governor who expressed the willingness of the state to partner with viable investors and create the enabling environment of investments to thrive pointed out that unless attention was given to the whole value chain the cassava produced would be wasted at the end of the day.

    Mr. Ajabi had disclosed that the foundation was willing to collaborate with the state government to assist in cassava and rice processing.

    He said the objective was to assist farmer to get value for their produce and to boost the economy of the state.

    Governor Ortom also received a delegation from the Mutual Union of Tiv in America, MUTA, who were in the state for a health fair.

    He assured Mr Doo Gar and Mrs Tivzenda who visited that although things were difficult the state would give assistance to the team.

  • NLC to lawmakers: slash N120b vote or face revolt

    Workers condemn jumbo pay for legislators

    Rep: budget not for us alone

    Labour insisted yesterday that federal lawmakers must further cut their N120 billion budget —in line with economic realities.

    The Joe Ajaero-led Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC) faction said the reduction of the National Assembly’s budget from N150 billion to N120 billion “is too token and not far reaching enough”.

    It threatened a mass revolt should the lawmakers and the executive fail to bring down their recurrent expenses.

    The faction’s Deputy President, Comrade Issa Aremu, who is also the General Secretary of the Textile Workers Union, advised  National Assembly members to appreciate the mood of the nation for leadership sacrifices, resource allocation for national development and common good as opposed to self-help.

    He spoke to reporters in Kaduna.

    But a House of Representatives member, Mohammed Abdulkadir, said the N120billion is not all for salaries.

    Labour said “nations prosper when their leaders are willing to sacrifice; while nations fail when leaders engage in selfish self-help agenda.”

    The factional NLC group asked: “Should 109 senators and 360 members of the House of Representatives gulp as much as N120 billion in a year, which is twice the 2015 budget of Ekiti State (N80.774 billion), a state with the population of 2,384,212 people?

    “How equitable is it for less than 500 national legislators to gulp N120 billion annually when Osun State with a population of 3,423,535 people and unfunded 2015 Appropriation Bill of N201 billion is yet to pay salaries for seven months?

    “Benue State has as many as 4,219,244 people; it budgeted N98.54 billion; Zamfara has 3,259,846 citizens and budgeted N92.80 billion; and Ebonyi, budgeted N80.02 billion for 2,173,501 people.

    “The respective budgets of these three states is half of the budget of the National Assembly. How equitable is that?

    “There has been illegal and unconstitutional concentration of scarce national resources in the hands of our legislators and Executive office holders alike that must be reversed now.

    “For instance, Kano State budgeted N210 billion in 2015. Kano State has 9,383,682 people. The budget per capital of Kano, estimated at N22,379, is miserable, compared to budget per capital of the National Assembly at N293,398,533!

    “No country can prosper with this wide and widening gap in resource allocation between the governed and some elected government officials.

    “The National Assembly members should take the advantage of the current goodwill of Nigerians in making anamend failing which they provoke mass revolt of the people.

    “NLC, therefore, is advocating that the first step is that the National Assembly budget should be reversed to 2003 budget of N50 billion, which will certainly cut the existing budget of the assembly by more than 50 per cent.

    It stressed that since 2003, “the number of members remains the same while most of their infrastructural needs have been met. Secondly, the national economy can hardly afford this legislative pay.

    “The eighth National Assembly must make a difference. It should be accountable to Nigerian people, just as many Executives have done.

    “The eighth Assembly must complement President Muhammadu Buhari in his resolve to cut cost of governance fuelled by corruption, the worse form of which is outrageous pay for public office holders.

    “They must emulate governors like Mallam Nasir El-Rufai  of Kaduna State and his deputy who have cut their pay by 50 per cent and urged the Members of the House of Assembly to follow suit.

    “Kano State Governor Abdullahi Umar Ganduje also reduced the salaries and allowances of public office holders in the state by 50 per cent.

    “Significantly the legislators must reject the Greek allowances Revenue Mobilisation Allocation and Fiscal Commission (RMAFC) generously accorded them. These allowances are unsustainable. They are not based on needs in a depressed economy.

    “For instance, why pay legislators who already collected over a million naira wardrobe allowance?

    “It will take a minimum wage earner about two years and five months to earn what legislators earn as wardrobe allowance of N506,600.

    ”The eighth National Assembly should rightly redirect national resources to priority sectors, such as education, health and road construction.

    “The assembly must also urgently review the minimum Wage Act of 2010 which, according to the Act, expires next month.

    “The Assembly should constitute the Tripartite Statutory Committee based on equal basis between government, organized labour and organized private sector,” it said.

  • N120b budget not for lawmakers only

    N120b budget not for lawmakers only

    A Member of the House of Representatives and former chairman, National Assembly Legislative Aides Forum, Hon. Mohammed Abdulkadir Mahmud (Niger State), yesterday defended the N129 billion National Assembly budget.

    According to him, the N120 billion is not for the lawmakers alone.

    He said: Under the National Assembly is the Institute for Legislative Studies, the management of the National Assembly, the National Assembly Service Commission,  individual legislators and their entitlements, the National Assembly Budget Office, legislative aides as well as the running costs of the Senate and the House Representatives chambers.”

    Mahmud added: “We are worried about the information being pushed out to give the impression that all we are here, is to make money, that is not true, but let me also state here clearly that the National Assembly, comprising of all its organs has N120billion to spend in the 2015 budget.

    “We have the management of the National Assembly and commission; they drew their salaries and allowances from that money, we have the running of the two chambers, we have the salaries and allowances of lawmakers, we have the legislative aides salaries from that money, we have committee assignments from that money, the National Assembly budget Office, all these organs draw their monies from that budget.

    “And let me state again that the car loans that people talk about are actually loans which we have to pay from our salaries before the completion of our tenure; it is not free. Look at the housing, it is about N3.5 million. Now go to town and find out the cost of renting a house in town.

    “But what some people would do is to simply divide the N120 billion by 469 lawmakers and that is not fair and I want you the media to properly inform the people, so that they would know the true position of things.”