Tag: NASS

  • NASS frustrating anti-graft war, group alleges

    A group, Voice of Northern Christian Movement of Nigeria, has attributed the delay in passage of 2016 budget to ploy by some forces in the National Assembly to frustrate the anti-corruption war of President Muhammadu Buhari.

    The forces, the group alleged, have been working against the budget passage because the President has refused to play ball with them.

    Its Executive Director, Pastor Musa Dikwa, said Senators and House of Representatives members should line up behind the President’s resolve to fight corruption instead of pursuing personal agendas.

    He reminded them that they were elected by Nigerians to fix the nation and not to line their private pockets.

    Dikwa, in a statement yesterday, also called on the masses not to leave the war alone to the President but back Buhari’s resolve to rid the nation of graft.

    He pointed out that several powerful forces in the nation were bent on frustrating the determination of Buhari to stop their looting spree.

    Dikwa said: “The National Assembly is frustrating the President’s war. Because he has refused them to play ball with them, they are up in arms against him.

    “That is why the budget has not been passed. Some powerful forces have vowed they will stand against the budget to incapacitate the President.”

    He called on Nigerians to join the President in fighting looters instead of complaining.

    According to him: “We should support the President because he is really suffering in the hands of powerful forces.

    “We shouldn’t leave him alone to the war but support him because he is trying to recover our loots.

    “The masses should support him. It is not his battle but a national war. We should back him with everything within us.”

  • 2016 Budget to be passed March 17 – NASS

    2016 Budget to be passed March 17 – NASS

    The National Assembly has said  the 2016 Budget will be passed on Thursday, March 17.

    The Chairmen of the Senate and House of Representatives Committee on Appropriation, Senator Danjuma Goje and Hon. Jibrin Abdulmumin in a joint press briefing Wednesday said reports from both chambers would be laid on Wednesday, March 16.

    On the 17th, the reports will be considered and passed.

    While speaking on the issue, Senate Chairman Appropriation, Goje said the two chambers have interacted with the various Ministries, Department and Agencies (MDA’s), adding that a lot of hard work had been put into the 2016 Budget proposals.

    His words: “The various sub committees of the two chambers have interacted with the various MDA’s, the Committees have produced their reports and all the Committees of the two chambers have fully submitted their reports.

    “We have been working very hard round the clock at the same time at the weekends and we will continue to do that until we finish the compilation of our reports.

    “The essence of the press conference is to give Nigerians a progress report.”

    Chairman House Committee on Appropriation Abdulmumin  Jibrin said the reports from the various sub committees will align with the National Assembly guidelines.

    He said: “After all consultation with the leadership of the House and Senate we can confirm to you that all things being equal we should be able to lay our report of the 2016 Appropriation bill before the House and the Senate on the 16th of March and the consideration, hopefully should be done on the 17th.

    “So it is safe for us to conclude that the 2016 Appropriation bill will be passed on the 17th of March 2016.

    “We are going to open in the next few days’ consultation with the relevant stakeholders in this process, most especially the executive arm of government.

    “Particularly in the case of the House, we are going to engage the Minister of Budget and Planning, Minister of Finance, DG Budget office.

    “Most importantly we are working hand in hand with the Senate and things are looking up, we are putting in our best on a daily basis.

    Recall that the Budget passage was previously postponed by the National Assembly because of various discrepancies discovered in the appropriation document by the two chambers.

  • Like NBA like the NASS

    SIR: The recent invitation and subsequent arraignment of a prominent lawyer, Rickey Tarfa, SAN, by the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) offers an uncanny parallel with the trial of the Senate President, Senator Bukola Saraki.

    The two public figures who are deemed innocent until prima facie cases are established against them have taken undue shelter in esprit de corps even when such blinded solidarity is in breach of ethical fecundity.

    The Nigeria Bar Association (NBA), never given to frivolity and abrasive pursuits before now, is gradually derailing from its core values with its leading lights leading almost a hundred lawyers to court in solidarity with a colleague whose trial has not even begun.

    What would be the position of NBA if at the end of the day the EFCC findings,  now in public domain eventually lead to the conviction of the senior advocate? Would that not amount to a collateral professional blunder?

    The same misguided esprit de corps subsists in the case of Bukola Saraki with the Code of Conduct Tribunal. The mass representation of the majority of the Senate at Saraki’s every court appearance casts a slur not only on the integrity of the National Assembly (NASS), but also impugns upon the moral sensibility of the Nigerian public.

    The best that is expected from the two institutions is to present a team of legal representation at the trials if they so incline and eschew the unwieldy obstructionism veiled in solidarity.

     

    • Bukola Ajisola,

    Victoria Island, Lagos

  • NLC, NASS, govt meet over reversal of electricity tariff

    NLC, NASS, govt meet over reversal of electricity tariff

    The Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC) Wednesday assured Nigerians that organised labour has commenced the process of compelling the Nigeria Electricity Regulatory Commission and operators of the nation’s power sector to reverse the recent increase in electricity tariff.

    President of the Congress, Comrade Ayuba Wabba said in a statement made available to The Nation in Abuja that organised Labour held series of meetings with the leadership of the National Assembly and the Government with a view to effecting the tariff reversal.

    He expressed gratitude to Nigerians for turning out enmass across the country to protest the increase in tariff, pointing out that organised labour still believe that Nigerians should not be made to pay for the inefficiencies of operators of the power sector.

    The statement reads:”The leadership of the Nigeria Labour Congress and our colleagues in the Trade Union Congress wish to express our profound appreciation and gratitude to Nigerian workers and people for coming out en mass across the country on the nationwide protest rally we called to voice our opposition to the 45 percent increase in electricity tariff which came into effect on February 1, 2016.

    “We wish to, in particular, commend our civil society allies who stood firmly with organised labour through the planning and execution of the February 8th rally. We thank Nigerians from all walks of life who saw the wisdom of our action and identified with the campaign.

    “Since the nationwide rally, the leadership of organised labour and our colleagues in civil society have been meeting with the leadership of the National Assembly, with the Senate President, Dr Bukola Saraki, and the Speaker of the House of Representatives, Hon. Yakubu Dogara, being present to underscore the importance they attach to this issue which affects every household in the country.

    “We are also having a meeting with the Federal Government under the Chairmanship of the Secretary to the Government of the Federation (SGF), Babachir David Lawal, Minister of Labour and Employment Senator Chris Ngige with a view to annulling the 45 percent tariff increase.

    “We wish to assure all Nigerians that we are focused on the main objective of our campaign to ensure that the tariff increase does not stand.

    “As we have argued in the course of the rally, we maintain that Nigerians should not be compelled to pay more for darkness, against the background of the flagrant disregard of the terms on which the distribution companies (DISCOs) and generation companies (GENCOs) were awarded our common patrimony in the name of privatisation.

    These companies have failed, for instance, to provide prepaid metres as stipulated in the terms of their contract. They have instead continued to violate this special clause by charging and forcing consumers to pay the arbitrary tariffs they have imposed, even as they fail most of the time to provide them the required electricity.”

    NLC President commended the governor for having the courage to reverse his action and recall the about 6000 workers wrongly sacked and expressed the hope that the committee set up to implement the agreement reached between labour and the government will faithfully carry out its assignment.

    He said: “The leadership of both NLC and TUC also wish to express appreciation to all affiliate industrial unions for mobilising their members to turn out in massive numbers for our action of closing down government and commercial activities in Owerri, the lmo State capital on February 10, 2016 to press home our demands for the recall of about 6000 lmo State workers in government parastatals wrongly sacked by the state governor, Rochas Okorocha.

    “While we thank the entire people of Imo State for their uncommon understanding and solidarity with our actions to protect the fundamental rights of workers in the state, we wish to acknowledge Governor Okorocha for having the courage to reverse himself once we convinced him that his action was unlawful and wrongheaded.

    “It is our hope that the committee put in place to implement the agreement entered into between us and the lmo State government will faithfully implement the terms of the agreement so that we could put behind us the ugly and unpleasant situation created by the purported sacking of the workers.

    “Our hope is that governments in other states, or even at the federal level, will learn from the lmo State case, to avoid creating situations that will bring organised labour to be at loggerheads with them on account of unjust and anti-worker policies.”

  • ‘NASS may pass 2016 budget by mid March’

    ‘NASS may pass 2016 budget by mid March’

    There are indications that the 2016 Appropriation bill may be passed by the second week of next month.

    Chairman, House of Representatives Committee on Appropriation, Abdulmumin Jibrin made the disclosure Monday  while receiving report of the House Committee on Federal Road Safety Commission (FRSC) on the defense of the budget of the Commission.

    Jibrin, who restated the need for extension of time for the consideration of the budget proposal, also disclosed that relevant Ministers, whose jobs are related to the Budget would be invited to throw light on identified grey areas.

    “I can confirm to you clearly that the extension of time is to allow appropriation committee to do a necessary cleaning up. Taking this into consideration, the budget will be passed by the second week of March.

    “The passage of the budget has not been suspended indefinitely. What we say is that due to the errors discovered, we will need additional time to take a second look at the budget and to also take on the Minister of Finance and the Minister of Budget and National Planning,” he said.

    Jibrin also gave Ministries, Departments and Agencies (MDA) of government that are yet to present and defend their budget proposals  till Thursday to make their presentation or risk zero allocation.

  • ‘Saying NASS pads budget is an insult to us’

    ‘Saying NASS pads budget is an insult to us’

    Hon. Abdulmumin Jibrin is the Chairman, House of Representatives Committee on Appropriation. In this interview with a select group of reporters, including Victor Oluwasegun, he speaks on various aspects of the 2016 proposed budget.

    You appear quiet on this budget, why?

    I don’t completely agree with you that we have been quiet about the budget. We’ve been very active. We have done a lot of work and want to speak through our actions. We’ve done the first reading, debated for three consecutive days and it has passed the second reading. It has been committed to the Committee on Appropriation and in line with the tradition of the House, gotten all the chairmen of the 96 committees and discussed the timetable.

    Also, in line with the rules of the House, the 96 committees will present reports and recommendations on their various budgetary allocations; which means that they will also do their budget defence before us; that will take us another one week. Then we shall commence critical activities in the whole of this process, which is harmonizing with the Senate.

    The benchmark and exchange rate that was used is no longer feasible, don’t you think this two aspects should be reviewed?

    I agree with you completely and it is also our general thinking in the House that the benchmark for oil at $38 per barrel, has gone below that figure. I’m sure that during this budget period, we will engage with the Committee of Finance and relevant committees and should be able to fix the benchmark at a very safe figure that should be more realistic. It is one of our concerns. The aspect of the non-oil projections look very realistic, but going by history, we must be extremely disciplined to ensure that the projections are met. On the aspect of the exchange rate, it is an exclusivity of the CBN which gives justification for the fixing of exchange rate. We do not interfere, but we will engage the apex bank so that we can discuss the feasibility of any adjustment. There is also the aspect of the budget deficit financing, we are concerned about that, so we are going to engage the executive, particularly the Minister of Finance and the Minister of Budget and Planning to make sure how the deficit is going to be financed. Generally, the position of the National Assembly is to reduce domestic borrowing significantly, so we expect that a chunk of the borrowing should come from external sources. Already, the economy is struggling and you will put more weight in terms of drawing more money from the local economy. What is important to us is that we are able to pass a budget that the executive will implement.

    Do you think the issue of financing the budget from the non-oil sector is feasible?

    If you look at the budget details, the most ambitious projection is coming from the non oil sector. If you look at the sectoral allocation in terms of capital allocations in the budget, what the committees are going to do is to prioritize the capital expenditure which is geared towards diversifying the economy so we can get more funds from non-oil sector. Also, very important is that the government has introduced the TSA, which is working now but has been a bit of a challenge in the past. But I think the MDAs are gradually keying in. I think the TSA has put a lot of discipline. Even as chairman of Finance Committee, it has always been my position that we have enough potential from our MDAs to locally be able to raise sufficient funds to finance our budget and match up with expenditure equal to the amount they raise year after year. We are seeing that it is gradually reducing, but we need to take it a step further. Some of these MDAs that do not bring their budgets for appropriation to NASS must start submitting them so that the Budget Office, Federal Executive Council will have an idea of the expenditure of these agencies and be able to compare it side by side with the revenue.

    What is the House doing to ensure that loopholes through which money are siphoned by MDAs are blocked?

    The House has been in the vanguard to block loopholes. We try to make sure that the revenues lost through such loopholes are reduced and this budget is not going to be an exception. The committees have been told to be on the watch-out and they are looking at areas where monies are being wasted and ensure such are taken away from the budget.

    The NASS has the yam and the knife, now the present budget came to N6.08 trillion, yet the MDAs are complaining that the size of the money allocated to them is small, do you have the intention of increasing their budgets?

    Traditionally, money has never been enough for any agency, so it is not new for them to always ask for more. So, we have decided that in order to reduce the areas of friction, we advised the committees to stick to their envelopes so no committee will expand its budget and they will operate within the envelope that has been allocated to that MDA. I do not see the size of the budget growing more than has been brought, but what they have been given the latitude to do is to be able to move the money within the capital and recurrent sub-heads. That is not moving within capital and within recurrent. So, if you are moving money within recurrent, it is strictly overhead. There is also the aspect that we have always been uncomfortable which has to do with personal budgets. If there is concrete evidence that such personal budget has been inflated, so the Appropriation Committee will work with the relevant House committee to ensure that it is pruned down to what we think is the appropriate sum. Since the budget is coming from the executive we expect that they have consulted with the relevant MDAs before it was brought to us. Talking about the zero budgeting system, I think what they are trying to do is to make sure it takes off this year. It is going to be a gradual process; you may not see the future very much in the budget now because it is new, but at the end of this budget period, we will be able to review the process and see if they can retain it.

    The Senate saw, hidden in the education budget, N10b, has the House found anything like that in any of the MDA budgets?

    In every budget, you will have such instances and it is not in every such instance that the action is deliberate. We must also realise that the budget is prepared by humans and so you have to give a bit of flexibility. Sometimes, figure do not tally, in such instance, we pick out this and ensure that they are properly reflected and cleared away from the budget, but again, this time around, the committees of the House, are all doing a very thorough job because they are engaging the MDAs at the moment and I am sure wherever there are such issues, they will be able to deal with it.  We always take exception when people say the National Assembly pads the budget, it is a complete insult to us. We do understand that what comes from the Executive is a proposal, and it is the NASS that is constitutionally empowered to pass the budget; we have the constitutional power to move, amend the way we deem fit, that is going to be in the interest of Nigerians and the budget will be implementable. The issue of padding should not even come up. As at today, nobody from the executive arm of government has used the word padding of budget by the legislature. We at NASS are very conscious of the time limit and also minimize the areas of conflicts with the Executive.

    On production cost of oil?

    One very important aspect that swallows a large chunk of the money in the budget is the cash call and production costs. Many people take their eyes away from production costs. But it is critical; this is because every year we pay an average of one trillion naira as cost of production. So, it is important that this time around, we need to sit with relevant authorities in the oil and gas sector to see the details of this production cost, to ensure the country is not just being shortchanged. We are just mopping a lot of money from the first line charge just to give to our foreign partners.

  • ‎ EFCC seeks NASS approval for recruitment of 750 staff

    The Chairman of the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC), Mr. Ibrahim Magu, on Tuesday requested the support of the National Assembly to recruit additional 750 staff of different cadres.

    Magu said the recruitment of the additional staff will aid the commission in its effort to fight corruption effectively.

    The EFCC chief made the request while presenting the commission’s 2016 budget proposal before the Senate Committee on Anti-Corruption and Financial Crime in Abuja.

    He noted that the request became necessary following the present administration’s renewed efforts to rid the country of corruption.

    He said, “We have made the proposal to recruit that number of staff to increase our staff strength in order to build up our capacity to do the work.

    “The expectation is very high, so we have to put in the proper manpower development to enable us handle our duties.’’

    Magu also urged the National Assembly to approve N220million for the purchase of operational vehicles as contained in the commission’s 2016 budget proposal.

  • NASS budget and Obasanjo’s unending sanctimoniousness

    NASS budget and Obasanjo’s unending sanctimoniousness

    Former President Olusegun Obasanjo has a mind seething with many contrivances. One of these contrivances is his customary habit of inveighing, through his bothersome letters, against what he perceives as other people’s failings. He never sees his own failings, nor thinks much of them. Middle of January, in the same mood as he is wont and with the same fierce and unrelenting temper he had embraced since his youth, he wrote a letter addressed to the National Assembly leadership in which he decried their budgetary profligacy and callousness. He didn’t have much to anchor his rage on, but he singled out the plan of the legislators to buy N4.7bn cars for themselves, notwithstanding the parlous economy. The former president knew his letter and the views expressed therein would resonate with the emotive and impulsive public, for the issue of buying cars, which he described as insensitive and unnecessary, and which President Muhammadu Buhari briefly, emotionally and superficially addressed during his last media chat, remains on the front burner, triggering angst and snickers.

    Chief Obasanjo’s letters troll public mood in a sinister manner. His biographers will probably remember exactly when he acquired the habit of exploiting moods. But the public will remember some of his contentious letters, not to talk of the acidity of the words he deployed with pleasurable and malevolent frenzy. He wrote twice or thrice in recent times to, but chiefly against, Wole Soyinka, professor of literature and Nobel laureate, on wide-ranging issues spanning politics, religion and morality, all designed vaingloriously to enhance his own image, steal the professor’s thunder — and steal a march on him too — and depict the former president in far more superior ethical light than he merits. He was not always successful, considering how unsparing Professor Soyinka is of bunkum, but he was satisfied achieving a stalemate and reveling in the noxious publicity that often accompanied both the letters and the stalemates. The former president also wrote many times to other less fortunate victims, including his former party chairman, Audu Ogbeh, and former president Goodluck Jonathan. What is clear is that though the letters lacked soul and oomph, Chief Obasanjo always carefully selected his targets to derive maximum publicity advantage and dividend.

    The former president contrived last week’s letter in the same mould as the others he had written over the years. It was bitter, vengeful, rambling and sanctimonious. Apart from the core of the letter– his so-called concern about the legislators’ insensitivity to the country’s parlous economy — the former president undergirded the letter with a number of other self-serving complaints. They had allocated to themselves salaries and allowances in excess of what the Revenue Mobilisation, Allocation and Fiscal Commission (RMAFC) approved for the legislature, he whined; and collecting constituency funds without applying them to the purposes for which they were meant was irresponsible. Chief Obasanjo doubtless has legitimate concerns about some of the issues he raised in his latest letter, and unfortunately the national legislature itself has never really proved to be a responsible body mindful of the weighty role and responsibility entrusted to it. But to embalm such concerns in a provocatively mocking letter when other media would have sufficed is nothing but caviar to the general.

    In their deeply cynical responses to Chief Obasanjo’s gratuitous attack on their bona fides, both the Senate and House of Representatives dismissed the former president as misdirected and ill-motivated. Not only did they question his timing, wondering whether he did not have the 4th and 5th NASS in mind, they also questioned his integrity and read into his diatribe a vendetta propelled by the traumatic rejection he faced when he pushed his third term agenda. The legislators are wasting their time responding to Chief Obasanjo. Surely they can’t have forgotten that the old soldier gradually mummifying in their presence is inured to insult. He shrugs off the worst invectives as if they are nothing more than a feather duster on his skin. After giving a brief and elegant reply to the old general, the Senate President, Bukola Saraki, has indicated that at a later date, he would send a formal response to the ex-president. It is hard to imagine why he needs to do that. Yes, Chief Obasanjo is a former president who appears to be concerned about the well-being of the country. But beyond that, the legislature does not owe him any explanation. He has attacked them and, like the current federal government is attempting to do, is instigating the country against them. To that extent, the lawmakers owe the country explanations on how they intend to spend their budgetary allocations. For, after all, the people are suspicious of their representatives and distrustful of their intentions.

    While the NASS needs a better appreciation of the harshness of the times the people they represent live in, and must necessarily be more realistic and frugal in their spending habits, they must by their display of patience and commonsensical approach to the economic and social exigencies of the moment resist the attempt by the executive arm, of which Chief Obasanjo is a vestige, to undermine or weaken them in the esteem of the electorate. That is why they need to discipline their spending culture and bring it in subjection to the dictates of the moment. But it is also important that the country should not be carried away by the criticisms of the former president. His observations are not entirely altruistic. The former president was fortunate to preside over Nigeria when oil price rose and peaked at a dizzying height. While he liquidated Nigeria’s external debts using questionable economic parameters and paradigms, he virtually laid the foundation for the country’s ruination in the years that followed his presidency.

    The country remembers that he dedicated almost his entire time in office to propounding and nurturing appalling economic policies. His years as a military head of state between 1976 and 1979 saw him as an impressionable, gullible and fanatical proponent of nationalisation; but his years as an elected president contradistinctively saw him exercise a dangerous volte-face, dedicating his entire presidency to selling off everything the country owned under an equally poorly reasoned pot-pourri of privatisation programmes. The country has not recovered from his brusque and unwise economic measures. But rather than reflect on his policies that miscarried very badly in his years in office, the former president has carried himself extravagantly and without substantiation as the best thing that has ever happened to Nigeria.

    Chief Obasanjo’s economic policies were in many parts obnoxious and unworkable, but they were the least of the troubles that accompanied his presidency. Throughout his two terms in office, he undermined virtually every democratic institution, including the legislature and the judiciary, in favour of the executive. He was a dictator at heart, and he nurtured that habit extraordinarily at the expense of the country. Where he could not browbeat his opponents, he induced them; and where he could not induce, he harassed and oppressed. And if the oppression and harassment failed, he attempted to instigate the country against the evidently underperforming lawmakers. It was, therefore, in one final act of desperation that in 2007 the legislature, which had heedlessly and enthusiastically connived at his many anti-democratic measures, rose up as one man to put an end to the many buffooneries of his presidency.

    As this column has maintained over the months, had Chief Obasanjo laid the right foundation for Nigerian democracy in 1999 when God and man gifted him the role of a pathfinder; had he ruled like a philosopher-king, thoughtful, reflective and innovative; and had he abjured all forms of depredatory habits and established a honest and altruistic culture of leadership, he would not today need to question the integrity of federal lawmakers nor denounce their profligacy. Indeed, had he been the man for the moment in 1999, Nigeria would not have voted into office the late Umaru Yar’Adua, nor embraced Goodluck Jonathan, nor yet engaged in the jinxed pirouette of returning to the democratic starting block every time there is a change of office. The consequence of Chief Obasanjo’s dereliction of responsibility is that both democracy and the rule of law are still either alien to the country or embraced only when it is expedient. Nigeria has Chief Obasanjo to thank for this galling abnormality. He casts aspersion on the legislature and at other times views the judiciary contemptuously, but comparatively, despite their weaknesses, profligacy and incompetence, the legislature and the judiciary have kept democracy alive.

    It is important that the public put Chief Obasanjo’s objurgatory letters in perspective. He often does not mean well, even when his criticisms and observations are a true reflection of reality. He does not know as much as he pretends to know, though he carries himself with statesmanlike airs. His appreciation of issues are often coloured by selfish motives, but no man ever preaches altruism with as much fervour as he does. And no man ever sought publicity and advantage over others, whether friend or foe, as much as he does. Let the country engage their lawmakers, but let it not be on Chief Obasanjo’s self-seeking terms. And let the presidency not imagine that in Chief Obasanjo, they have an ally and defender. For when the spirit takes hold of him, he is quite capable of launching scathing attacks on President Muhammadu Buhari as he has brutally savaged the legislature. He did it to former military ruler Ibrahim Babangida, who civilly ignored the attack; he did it to late military ruler Sani Abacha, who felt so incensed he sought his life; he did it to Dr. Jonathan, who watched helplessly as his reputation ebbed under the old soldier’s withering blows; and he did it to many others: laureate, politicians and sundry personalities, not minding whether he was right or wrong. His constant and exuberant malfeasances, not to say his personal follies and foibles, nevertheless make him unqualified to be the country’s conscience.

  • Nagging question on NASS election

    SIR: The dust raised by the election of Senator Bukola Saraki and Honourable Yakubu Dogara as President of the Senate and Speaker of the House of Representatives, respectively is yet to settle. Some of the beneficiaries of the outcome are still gloating, while the losers remain angry. The Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) sees it as a boost to its flagging destiny, while the All Progressives Congress (APC) is still struggling to put its house in order. And there have been overt and covert reference to the development being a plan to cut Senator Bola Ahmed Tinubu, to size.

    As I pondered over the happenings particularly in the Senate on June 9, 2015, one question that bothers me has not been raised in the discourse so far. The question is when the APC Senators present in the Senate Chambers found that 51 of the 59 members of their party were absent at the point of election of senate, why did they not behave as their ‘brother’s keeper’ and request that things wait until the members came, or even call for their colleagues who they knew were in the same city and would only require a few minutes to join them?

    If you think this question is stupid or naïve, then consider a football match in which one of the teams just found only three or four of the players present. Will the four of them opt to start the game, only to play against the opposing team consisting of 11 players? I think not. The only way the game will end is a major trouncing by the opposing team. I am sure the four team members would rather prefer a walk-over if the game cannot be rescheduled. If Saraki and his APC colleagues had refused to cooperate, my take is that the Clerk would not have had the boldness to continue with the election when, as we being made to understand

    This is why whichever way you look at it, the event of that day will not pass a morality test, and I doubt if it will pass legal test in spite of what anyone says. It is also the reason that treachery cannot be dismissed with a wave of the hand.  APC needs to be vigilant in the interest of millions of Nigerians who expect so much.

     

    • P. O. Olatunji,

    Sagamu, Ogun State.

  • N4.7b car saga: NASS under attack

    N4.7b car saga: NASS under attack

    National Assembly members have come under attack from a cross section  of  Nigerians over its planned  purchase of N4.7billion exotic cars purportedly for  committee work.

     Each federal legislator has already collected N8bmillion as car loan.

    President  Muhammadu Buhari has already expressed opposition to the plan and offered to meet with the leadership of the two chambers  to reverse the decision.

    Senior Advocate of Nigeria (SAN) Chief Ladi Williams cannot  understand why the National Assembly is embarking on such purchase against the background of the present state of the economy.

    He said: “These people are behaving as if they have no regard for the abject poverty in the country. Is the issue of car the only thing they can discuss when we have the menace of Boko Haram, Biafra and daunting economic problems weighing down on the nation?

    “The president should look for loopholes in the constitution and stop them from doing this. The money should be ploughed back into agriculture, healthcare and other things that can improve the lives of the poor masses.”

     Former Lagos State Police Commissioner, Alhaji Abubarkar Tsav  called the NASS move ‘too bad.’

     “It is too bad for them to come up with such plan especially now that the country and the people are going through hard times. I don’t think the president has the power to stop them but he can persuade them to rescind the decision,” he said.

     The president of Ohanaeze Youth Council, Mazi Okechukwu Izigusoro described the plan as anti-masses. He scolded the lawmakers for not taking into cognizance the state of the economy and plight of the masses when they mooted the idea.

    His words:“The lawmakers, by this demand ,have shown that they are not perturbed by the worrisome state of the economy and the frustration of the masses that they have sworn to defend.”

    The national leader of All Middle Belt Youth Forum , Comrade Mosses Aluh,expressed  similar sentiments,saying: “ Asking for official cars after collecting  N8million car loan is immoral and totally unacceptable.

    “This is not the change that Nigerians voted for. We,, the AMBYF would stop at nothing to make sure that the lawmakers discard the plan. We would work with other ethnic youth groups in the country to abort that cruel plan.

     The  president of the youth wing of Arewa Consultative Forum, Comrade Shettima Yerima,  described the plan as  unfortunate.”

    The Executive Director of the Port Harcourt, Rivers State-based Institute of Human Rights and Humanitarian Law (IHRHL), Anyakwee Nsirimovu, said the move is  insensitive  and asked Nigerians  more so when most  state governors  are complaining of inability to pay  the N18,000 minimum wage.

    The IHRHL  executive director   argued noted that truly-elected representatives of the people would always be considerate and not wasteful.

    Group known as Community Outreach for Development and Welfare Advocacy (CODWA)  described  the NASS move as  improper  and  “ the height of primitive accommodation of wealth at the expense of the common masses of this country.”

    CODWA’s Executive Director, Taiwo Otitolaiye told The Nation that “the law makers have not learnt anything.

    “N8m car loans for 469 members of the lower and upper chambers at this time of economic downturn in Nigeria  eats deep into our dwindling resources.“To buy cars again is double standard.African political leaders must begin to understand the concept of leadership as a rare opportunity to serve humanity.”

    The Ilorin based human rights activist  added: “We have to take a cue  from the likes of current Tanzania President who is enthroning service devoid of kleptomaniac governance.

    “The people of Nigeria should begin to learn the process of recalling erring legislatures and sacking through the ballot box Executive looters who act with impunity.”

    National Vice Chairman, South-South of the APC, Prince Hillard Eta  said NASS members “should read the times and understand that Nigeria is virtually broke and the only thing that has been fuelling and supporting the flamboyant lifestyle of old which is oil, is gradually slipping out of our hands. So prudence and responsibility must be the keynote. I urge the members of the NASS to key in to the project of Mr President.”

    Buhari in opposing the planned purchase of  N4.7b cars by NASS had said:“I turned down a N400 million bill for cars for the presidency, because the vehicles I am using are good enough for the next 10 years.”

     “If I can turn down N400 million for the presidency that I do not need any new car because of the economy, I can’t see the National Assembly spending more than  N4.7 billion to buy cars, on top of transport allowance they collected.

    “I have to revisit that story. The budget for their transport allowance comes up to a N100 billion. With the kind of money that goes into the National Assembly, we have to look at it conscientiously and see how we can live within our means,” he said.

    The Senate alone  plans to buy 120 units of Toyota Land Cruiser, 2016 model  among other cars.

    Defending the plan, spokesman for the Senate, Senator Aliyu Sabi, said the automobiles were part of the necessities which the Red Chamber  usually provides to committees to enable them function without depending on external bodies for effective performance of oversight functions.

    “The vehicles are not meant for individual Senators. They are purchased for the use of the committees,” he said in a statement.

    “For those who may want to find out what happened to the ones bought in the past, we cannot expect that after four years, the vehicles will still be in the condition to effectively serve the present committees.

    “The best practice in government institutions and even private organizations is for official vehicles allocated to top officials after four years of use to be sold at the depreciated value.

     “We have been very frugal, responsive and responsible in our spendings. We have also cut down on several expenses. However, there are certain expenses and purchases that are normal in government and any organisation generally. The legislature is not an exception. “