Tag: NASS

  • Playing politics with Budget 2014

    Playing politics with Budget 2014

    President Goodluck Jonathan has postponed the presentation of the 2014 budget to the National Assembly. Correspondents VICTOR OLUWASEGUN and DELE ANOFI write on the politics of budget delay and its implications for governance.

    Anxiety is mounting as President Goodluck Jonathan prepares to present the next year’s budget to the National Assembly. The budget presentation was postponed last month, following the shifting political allegiance in the Senate and the House of Representatives triggered by the defection of many legislators from the ruling Peoples Democratic Party (PDP0 to the All Progressives Congress (APC).

    The presentation has been aborted on two occasions. The President may have read the handwriting on the wall. Although the government explaineed that the postponement became necessary because the House of Representatives was yet to conclude work on the 2014-2016 Medium Term Expenditure Framework (MTEF) and Fiscal Strategy Paper (FSP), and reconcile differences on the crude oil benchmark figure with the Senate, critics said that the delay was informed by political reasons.

    In 2011, President Jonathan presented the 2012 budget proposal before the joint sitting of the National Assembly when the House of Representatives was yet to concluded work on the MTEF and FSP. It was the other way round when the President presented the 2013 budget proposal as the Senate was still working on the document. House Spokesman Zakari Mohammed alluded to that fact when he advised the President to put up other reasons for his failure to appear before the lawmakers as promised. “It is not our fault that the budget was not presented because the House is still within the timeframe for passing the MTEF”, he said.

    Mohamed said the President was being diplomatic, recalling that the President had presented the budget in the past at a time the Senate had not passed the MTEFF.

    “Last year, the Senate was yet to pass the MTEF, but the House had passed it when the President presented the budget. But, it was not an issue then. When we look at it from another angle, the coming of the MTEF to the NASS was even belated because, according to the constitution, the MTEF is supposed to be transmitted to the NASS six moths before the end of the year. But we got this in September,” he added.

    According to Mohammed, the implementation of the budget may suffer. If this happens, he said the National Assembly will not take the blame.

    Sources said the aborted presentation may not be unconnected with the alleged plan to embarrass the President by some aggrieved lawmakers, who have sympathy for the New Peoples Democratic Party (PDP). It was learnt that some of them wanted to demonstrate to the President that he does not command parliamentary majority support. Following the defection of five of seven aggrieved PDP governors, tension had enveloped the National Assembly. In fact, many legislators allegedly boasted that they would take a pound of flesh from the party for its culture of tyranny.

    A PDP legislator from Kano State, Aliyu Madaki, however, urged the Presidency to embrace the reality. He said that the earlier the President and the PDP accept the new political reality on ground, the better for democracy in Nigeria. He said: “For me, I see this as a way forward for our democracy and with this, the future is not only bright for our democracy, but the entirety of Nigerian people. I believe Nigerians will begin to see a more vibrant federal legislature because there is a new order in place. We will leave the PDP. The injustice is too much. We will follow our governors; there’s no doubt about it. We cannot continue to stay and face injustice. This is the moment we have been waiting for, and this will eventually change the leadership in the House”.

    Already, 57 New PDP legislators have openly reiterated their determination to oppose the President, if there is a compelling reason to do so in the national interest, and in accordance with the constitution.

    Also, there are rumours that certain principal officers of the House may be removed. The Speaker, Hon. Aminu Tambuwal, is said to be working round the clock to appeal to the new power bloc to mellow down. It is believed that, when the 137 APC members and 57 new PDP members join forces, the 194 legislators may pull the rug off the feet of the PDP.

    According to sources, the APC members were initially pushing for the removal of the Deputy Speaker, Emeka Ihedioha, the majority Leader, Mulikat Akande-Adeola, the Deputy Leader, Leo Ogor, the Chief Whip, Isiaka Mohammed Bawa, and the Deputy Chief Whip, Ahmed Mukhtar Mohammed. But, ahead of the APC’s plan to unveil the strength of its members, the Speaker moved to douse the tension generated by the proposed change in the power structure. However, the Minority Leader, Femi Gbajabiamila, said the unveiling is coming soon.

    Tambuwal is popular on both sides. Therefore, he was able to persuade his colleagues to avoid any action capable of creating further division in the House.

    The Presidency and the PDP have been scheming to break the ranks of the new PDP and the APC in the House. The desperation, according to a source, was borne out of the benchmark tussle and the need to give the President a soft landing in the National Assembly. It was alleged that the legislators took bribe to toe the party line. But on December 3, Deputy House Spokesman Victor Ogene debunked the allegation that each member received a 100,000 dollars to peg the benchmark of the 2014 budget at $76.5 per barrel of crude oil.

    The benchmark has been a source of contention between the Presidency and the House, with the House insisting on $79 dollars per barrel against the Senate’s adoption of $76.5 per barrel.

    The House went into a two-hour executive session on the issue of parameters to adopt on the 2014-2016 MTEF sent to the National Assembly by the President, particularly the benchmark. Ogene said members did not fight over the issue at the closed door session as alleged by some people.

    “Seriously speaking, you all saw us when we came out smiling. The issues, I told you clearly, was between those who insisted that the benchmark remains at $79 and those who feel that that it was okay at $76.5”, he clarified.

    The lawmaker while referring to the allegations of money- for- benchmark, cautioned Nigerians against glorifying rumours, adding: “If money went round in the Senate, I’m not a senator, and I’ve not read any such report. In fact, I’ve not seen any dollar. So, if money has come from anywhere, the question should be put to the person sending the money. I will be glad to get money on behalf of my people, if you have a leeway to the person sharing the money”.

    Before the defection of the five governors, the cold war was raging in the PDP. A lawmaker said that the development was not surprising, pointing out that the PDP has always been in the minority, despite being the majority party in the House. The PDP member, who pleaded anonymity, said not many were taken by surprise by the defection, noting that, since the inception of the Seventh Assembly, Executive Bills and motions have often been resented.

    She said: “PDP has always been in the monitory. It is not a new development because of the posture of those that have defected now. Though they were in the PDP, they were never sympathetic to the cause of the party. So, it is just only the few of us that have to battle every time to see that bills and motions sponsored by the executive see the light of the day and that has been a tough battle”.

    President Jonathan has not been in the good books of the Lower Chamber. The legislators often complained that he had ignored their inputs into governance. Last month, over 30 bills listed for presidential assent were allegedly ignored. Some of the bills have been with the President for more than 60 days. According to the constitution, the President ought to have assented to them within 30 days. The lawmakers believed that it was a deliberate act, especially when a presidential aide said that resolutions of the National Assembly were mere opinions.

    With the PDP on the brink of becoming the minority party, the days ahead may be difficult for the President. and vice versa for the hitherto opposition party, APC, options of muscle flexing for President Jonathan are disappearing and fast too, says a political analyst, Dr Alfred Armstrong.

    According to a critic, Dr. Alfred Armstrong, the President has two options. He said: “If he sees the office as an opportunity to serve his people and leaves the country better than he met it, then, he must tow the line of compromise. Against what any of his advisers would say, President Jonathan must be ready to make sacrifice by instilling on the PDP members in the House that fact that the nation comes first and that they must not do anything to jeopardise motions, bills and reports emanating from the APC or other parties”.

    Armstrong warned that, if compromise is jettisoned, the President and his party may lose the battle. He said that, even if the new PDP lawmakers refrain from defecting to the APC, their actions and activities would ultimately be detrimental to the interest of PDP.

    “Intimidation and revenge, which are the second option would leave the country worse off. To agree on most matters of national importance would be a Herculean task for both the lawmakers and the Presidency. The power struggle would play out during the budget debate and executive bills would find it harder to scale through. We should also expect more vigorous and targeted investigations from the lawmakers.

    “ If we put these together in another form, our democracy may be better for it, but the PDP would not find the new political equation too welcoming,” he added.

    The Chairman of the House Committee on Petroleum (Downstream), Hon. Dakuku Peterside, said that the change in power structure would bring a better Nigeria. He said: “There has been a lot of alignment and realignment. There’s a whole new political current going on in the two chambers of the National Assembly. One thing that is certain is that the power configuration must change.

    “Now, the change in power configuration will come with consequences and implications. It might affect the leadership of the parties in the National Assembly, and again, it will also affect the way the NASS relates with the executive arm of government. It might be negative or positive, but ultimately, it will be for the good of the Nigerian people. “For the first time, there will be effective checks and balances. It will no longer be family affairs. The days of family affairs are gone and gone for good. The politics of Nigeria will never be the same again.”

  • PDM to NASS:  Investigate Obasanjo’s letter to Jonathan

    PDM to NASS: Investigate Obasanjo’s letter to Jonathan

    The Peoples Democratic Movement (PDM) has called on the National Assembly to investigate the letter written to President Goodluck Jonathan by former President Olusegun Obasanjo.

    In the said letter, Obasanjo had chronicled alleged atrocities being perpetrated by the Jonathan administration in the various sectors of the economy.

    The Presidency has not responded to the issues raised in the letter.

    In a statement issued on Monday by the National Publicity Secretary of the PDM, Ahmadu Rufai Abubakar, the party said the matters raised in the letter were troubling and unfortunate.

    Obasanjo had, among others, alleged non remittance of over $7 billion crude oil proceeds to the Federation Account by the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC).

    He also accused the President of training snipers for the purpose of attacking his political opponents ahead of the 2015 elections.

    The statement reads, “These are grave and weighty allegations indeed. We read, with deep disappointment, the President’s response or, better still, his non-response to these allegations, through his media aide.

    “The decision of the President to ignore these allegations, for now, is quite troubling and unfortunate.

    “It is totally inexplicable and unacceptable that the leader of our nation can assume that the nation can wait until such a time he feels the need to explain these grave allegations, some of which border on treason.

    “By his decision not to respond to these allegations immediately, the President is keeping Nigeria and Nigerians in unnecessary and dangerous suspense, “the statement added.

    The party insisted that Nigerians have a right to know the truth about the allegations raised in the letter, stressing that the President owed the Nigerian people an explanation.

    “It is not a matter of choice, it is a matter of duty for the President to respond immediately, failing which his government loses the legitimacy to continue to govern and he loses the moral right to continue to lead the country.

    “We view this decision by the President to defer a timely response seriously. We feel it is an abdication of duty and responsibility and it undermines the integrity of the office he occupies. It threatens the unity, peace and political stability of the nation.

    “In view of the above, the PDM calls on the National Assembly to discharge its duty and responsibility to the nation by compelling the President to offer an immediate response to the allegations levelled against him in the letter.”

     

  • Rivers crisis: Amaechi is paying for underrating me, says Wike

    Rivers crisis: Amaechi is paying for underrating me, says Wike

    •The people will resist take- over of Rivers Assembly by NASS

    •Wike has track record of betrayal; he is confused, Amaechi

    THE Supervising Minister of Education, Chief Nyesom Wike, said yesterday that Governor Rotimi Amaechi with whom he is currently locked in a bitter battle for the soul of the state is paying the price of underrating him.

    Wike, the arrowhead of the opposition to the governor, described Amaechi as a tyrant who does not take kindly to those with ambition.

    He spoke in an interview in Port Harcourt against the backdrop of last Wednesday’s court ruling nullifying the take-over of the functions of the State House of Assembly by the National Assembly and attempts by members of the State Assembly on both sides of the divide to return to the complex.

    The Police dispersed the assemblymen and their supporters on Thursday and Friday as they gathered to gain entry into the building.

    Wike, a former Chief of Staff to Amaechi, is widely believed to be nursing an ambition to succeed the governor in 2015. He is also believed to be favoured by the presidency which is fighting its own battle with the Chairman of the Nigeria Governors Forum.

    The National Assembly has signified its intention to appeal the court’s decision, but Wike declared yesterday that the people of the state would resist further move by the National Assembly to take over the running of the state assembly.

    He also vowed that nothing could stop him should he decide to contest the 2015 governorship election in the state.

    He dismissed suggestions that he betrayed Amaechi who made him chief of staff.

    He said that as far as the governor is concerned it is a criminal offence to have an ambition.

    But responding to Wike’s tirade against Amaechi, the Chief of Staff, Government House, Chief Tony Okocha, said the minister is confused and lacks the qualities required to govern the state.

    “Rivers people will not allow Wike to be governor of the state, after enjoying good governance from Governor Amaechi,” he said.

    “It is not true that Governor Amaechi is a tyrant. Decisions are always taken by the Rivers State Executive Council. Rivers Governor gave Wike a free hand as the Chief of Staff and recommended him to be minister. It is shocking that the governor has suddenly become a tyrant.

    “Governor Amaechi knew that Wike was a mischief-maker, but tried to manage him. The people of Obio/Akpor LGA of Rivers State rejected Wike, when he was seeking re-election as Council Chairman because of his disrespect for elders and constituted authority, but Governor Amaechi intervened and saved his political career.”

    The Chief of Staff said that Wike is angry with the governor for asking him to drop his senatorial ambition in 2011 in favour of Senator George Thomson Sekibo.

    He said that the crisis in the State House of Assembly is an ill-wind that would blow no one any good and asked the people of the state to continue to embrace peace.

    Wike also said: “When has nursing ambition become a criminal offence? Assuming I want to be Rivers governor in 2015, so what? Is it because I want to be governor, that is why you (Amaechi) will leave the party and tell Rivers people lies?

    “Is it because I want to be governor that is why Amaechi is quarrelling with President Goodluck Jonathan? Governorship is an ambition. If I want to run for governorship of Rivers state, nothing will stop me. Who told you I would not want to be the president of Nigeria?

    “Nigeria will do well, if we stand by the truth. Amaechi is a tyrant and he can be likened to Adolf Hitler. Amaechi is the worst tyrant I have ever known. If you do not know, know it now. I worked there (in Government House, Port Harcourt as Chief of Staff). So, I can tell you.

    “Amaechi is the only one that God wants to have an ambition. No other person can have an ambition. It is a criminal offence for you to have an ambition, but it is constitutional for Amaechi to have an ambition.”

    The supervising minister of education also stated that it was not true that the six lawmakers supporting him in Rivers House of Assembly were plotting to impeach the Rivers governor. He said that without a chief judge, impeachment could not be carried out.

    He added: “The Rivers governor and I were not good friends. We worked together. Working together does not make you to be friends. I worked for him seriously.

    “With the circumstances at that time, if they happen now, I will still work for him. The circumstances at that time, because at every giving point in life, there are circumstances that will influence you to do one thing or another.”

  • NASS writes IG over Rivers crisis

    NASS writes IG over Rivers crisis

    The National Assembly is back in court in the bid to take over the affairs of the crisis-ridden Rivers State House of Assembly.

    The national legislature wants the Court of Appeal to reverse Wednesday’s judgment of a Federal High Court, Abuja, which declared the initial take-over unconstitutional.

    Accordingly, it has written a letter to the Inspector General of Police, Mohammed Abubakar, to stop anti-Governor Rotimi Amaechi lawmakers from gaining access to the House of Assembly to take any action against the governor.

    The National Assembly letter was signed by its counsel, Ahmed Raji (SAN), against the backdrop of alleged plot to allow six anti-Amaechi lawmakers to sit yesterday ostensibly to commence impeachment process against the governor.

    The police barricaded the entrance to the House yesterday and prevented the pro and anti-Amaechi sides from gaining access into the complex.

    It was learnt that the self-acclaimed Speaker of the State House of Assembly, Evans Bippi, early yesterday met with the State Commissioner of Police, CP Mbu, on the planned sitting of the six legislators.

    Bippi was said to have told the CP that he had secured the signatures of 27 lawmakers to convene a session of the House.

    The National Assembly said since its appeal was pending, it would be illegal to allow the anti-Amaechi lawmakers to sit.

    The letter reads: “We refer to our letter of yesterday (11/12/2013) in respect of the above matter.

    “We are glad to learn that your officers in Rivers State prevented some members of the Rivers State House of Assembly from sitting in the parliament today(12/12/13) on the ground that a copy of the Judgment has not been presented to the police.

    “It thus means that the judgment of the Court has not been executed in any way. Meanwhile, shortly after the judgment, we filed an appeal along with a motion for stay of execution and an injunction.

    “We caused the two processes to be served on your office yesterday vide our letter dated 11th December, 2013

    “The implication of the two processes is that effect cannot be given to the judgment delivered yesterday (11/12/13) until the motion filed by us is disposed of.

    “We are fortified in holding this view by the immortal words of Eso JSC (of Blessed Memory) where, in the case of Governor of Lagos State v. Ojukwu(1986) 1NWLR Part 18 pg. 621 particularly at pg. 634, he said the following:

    “They have no right to take the matter into their own hands once the Court was seized of it. The essence of the Rule of Law is that it should never operate under the Rule of force or fear…”

    “With the Court seized of the Motion for Stay and Injunction, the status quo is to be maintained pending the disposal of the motion.

    “We will be urging you to be guided accordingly and we also plead with you to give necessary instructions to that effect to your appropriate officers in Rivers State against the rumour that there is a plan to open the parliament for a faction by next Tuesday.

    “We thank you for your understanding and kindly accept the assurances of our highest esteem at all times.”

    Earlier, in a separate letter to the IGP, dated 11th December 2013, the counsel to the National Assembly said: “We are pleased to inform you that following the Judgment of the Court delivered in the matter today(11/12/13), we have lodged an appeal against the said judgment on behalf of our clients(7th, 8th and 9th defendants).

    “We have also filed a motion for Stay of Execution and Injunction. Copies of the Notice of Appeal and Motion for Stay are herewith attached.

    “The implication of the Motion for Stay and Injunction is that effect cannot be given to the judgment of the court until the Motion is disposed of. We thank you while assuring you of our highest esteem at all times.”

    The Federal High Court Abuja, in the Wednesday judgement, held that at the time the National Assembly took over the affairs of the Rivers State House of Assembly, there were no facts that the House was unable to carry out its functions as provided under the constitution.

    Justice Ahmed Ramat Muhammed declared that by provisions of section 11(4) and (5) of the constitution, the National Assembly could not assume the lawmaking functions of the Rivers State House of Assembly when there were no facts that the said House of Assembly was unable to carry out its functions.

  • Rivers Assembly: NASS appeals against judgment, writes IGP

    Rivers Assembly: NASS appeals against judgment, writes IGP

    …Self-acclaimed Speaker meets Rivers police boss

    …Plot to remove Amaechi  thickens

     

    The National Assembly has written the Inspector-General of Police, Mohammed Abubakar, to stay action on plans to allow anti-Governor Rotimi Amaechi lawmakers from gaining access to the Rivers State House of Assembly to take any action against the governor.

    The National Assembly said it has appealed against the judgment of the Federal High Court, Abuja, which voided its right to take over the functions of the state House of Assembly.

    The National Assembly wrote the IGP through its counsel, Ahmed Raji(SAN) against the backdrop of plot to allow six anti-Amaechi lawmakers to begin the impeachment process against the governor on Friday.

    The Nation gathered that the self-acclaimed Speaker of the State House of Assembly, Evans Bippi had in the early hours of Friday met with Rivers State Commissioner of Police, Joseph Mbu on the readiness of the lawmakers to sit.

    Bippi was said to have allegedly told the CP that he had secured the signatures of 27 lawmakers to convene a session of the House of Assembly.

    As at press time, the police has allowed anti-Amaechi lawmakers into the Rivers House of Assembly to sit and begin impeachment proceedings against the governor.

    But the National Assembly said since its appeal was pending, it would be illegal to allow the anti-Amaechi lawmakers to sit.

    The letter reads: “We refer to our letter of yesterday (11/12/130 in respect of the above matter.

    “We are glad to learn that your officers in Rivers State prevented some members of the Rivers State House of Assembly from sitting in the Parliament today(12/12/13) on the ground that a copy of the Judgment has not been presented to the police.

    “It thus means that the Judgment of the Court has not been executed in any way. Meanwhile, shortly after the Judgment, we filed an Appeal along with a Motion for Stay of Execution and an Injunction.

    “We caused the two processes to be served on your office yesterday vide our letter dated 11th December, 2013

    “The implication of the two processes is that effect cannot be given to the Judgment delivered yesterday (11/12/13) until the motion filed by us is disposed of.”

     

     

  • NASS mulls new law for counterfeit products, fake drug

    The National Assembly said on Tuesday it will consider a new legislation to help fight against products and drug counterfeiting.

    The Vice Chairman (Senate Committee on Health) Sen. Margery Okadigbo, stated this in Abuja when she led a Senate delegation to the office of National Agency for Food and Drug Administration and Control (NAFDAC).

    According to Sen. Okadigbo, the quest to put fake drugs and counterfeit products in check is in other, adding that, it is indeed a commendable effort put together by NAFDAC in the fight against counterfeit products and drugs in the country.

    She described most of the country’s laws as “archaic,” adding that there is need to consider new legislation in the fight against counterfeit products and drugs in the country.

    Sen. Okadigbo said: “The transformation process is something that we all have willingly partaken in. It gladdens us to confirm what the DG has said; that what we hear is actually happening. We are here to know how the organization is doing. We need to follow you and make sure that we are indeed partners in progress.

    “We are not here to witch hunt. We are here to add our support to your fight against fake drugs. We expect that you will guide us, direct us where your assistance will be required. The issue of counterfeit products and drugs are a concern to Nigeria. Even though the issues of counterfeits still exist, Nigeria is making its marks globally in its fight.

    “We are here to partner with you in other to help fight your challenges in relations to budget. We know you get little from which you have been able to sustain your fight against counterfeit products in the country.

    “We will also help you in the area of legislation to help fight counterfeit products and drugs. Your proposal on counterfeit is a good thing. Most of our laws are archaic. We are growing more and more into a modern world. It is something we should basically look at in other to change our laws.”

     

     

  • NASS considers law to fine oil firms over spills

    NASS considers law to fine oil firms over spills

    The National Assembly is considering a law to impose new fines on operators responsible for oil spills, a measure that could face major foreign companies with penalties running into tens of millions of dollars a year.

    There are hundreds of leaks every year from pipelines that pass through the creeks and swamplands of the Niger Delta, damaging the environment and the profits of oil companies, including Royal Dutch Shell and Italy’s Eni.

    Many of these spills are caused by oil theft and pipeline sabotage, a crime committed daily in the Niger Delta where frustrations among millions of people in poverty run high.

    There have also been rarer cases of large oil spills in deep offshore projects.

    Currently, oil companies are required to fund the clean-up of each spill and usually pay compensation to local communities affected, if it was the company’s fault.

    The law, according to Reuters,would impose new fines on oil firms when they are responsible for spills and strengthen the regulator’s powers, including being able to force firms to shut operations.

    Every barrel of oil spilled onshore or in coastal water would incur a fine of 200,000 naira while shallow water spillages would be penalised 175,000 naira per barrel and deep offshore leaks would cost 150,000 naira a barrel.

    Shell’s website said that in 2008 more than 50,000 barrels were spilled due to operational issues. Under the new law, this could incur a fine of 10 billion naira ($63 million).

    Environmental campaigners say this is an underestimate and the real figure could be several times that.

    In later years, far less was spilled due to the company’s error, it says.

    Oil companies would have to report oil spills within 24 hours to the regulator or be fined 500,000 naira per day thereafter. They would also have to submit 0.05 per cent of their operating budget to help fund the regulator.

    “Only if polluting the environment becomes more costly than cleaning it up, will the situation change for the better,” said Senator Bukola Saraki, head of the senate’s environment board.

    Saraki’s team said they hoped a vote on the bill would be held by the end of the year.

    A Shell spokesman declined to comment on the proposed law.

    Legislation is often difficult to enforce in Nigeria, where a patronage culture and widespread corruption create loopholes, according to watchdogs, including Transparency International.

    Clauses in the new law say the new regulator would set the salaries and benefits for its members itself and it would be allowed to accept gifts, including property and cash.

    Amnesty International criticised Shell this week, saying it manipulated the results of oil spill investigations to avoid paying fines or damaging its reputation. The company strongly denied the allegations.

    Amnesty also criticised the Nigerian government for not having a more well-equipped oil spill regulator.

  • ASUU to NASS: Plug spending leakages in government

    ASUU to NASS: Plug spending leakages in government

    The Academic Staff Union of Universities on Thursday asked the National Assembly to go beyond “begging” ASUU to call off its strike, but assist in plugging spending leakages in government in order to allow for provision of needed infrastructural facilities for Nigerians.

    The union also lashed out at the Vice Chairman, Senate Committee on Education, Prof. Sola Adeyeye, over his comments on the ongoing ASUU strike.

    Adeyeye had reportedly asked why a professor will demand payment to supervise postgraduate students.

    A release signed by the Chairman, University of Ibadan chapter of ASUU, Dr. Olusegun Ajiboye, and tagged- “The Goofing Prof. Adeyeye: Senate and begging comments,” said, Prof. Adeyeye is using public funds to train all his children abroad, hence he lacks knowledge on the situation of things in the Nigerian universities.

    Ajiboye also condemned the Senate President, David Mark’s comments that ASUU will lose public sympathy if it does not call off its strike, saying such was a careless talk as the Senate had already lost its credibility among Nigerians over its bogus allowances and its perpetual anti-masses stance as opposed to the progressives in the House of Representatives.

    “We are fighting a just cause. Can the Senate members wait for four years of their tenure before their allowances are paid? Can the Senate members seat in the chambers without air conditioners? What role has the Senate played to increase budgetary allocation to education? It is even funny for the Senate President to feign ignorance of the ASUU agreement as the sitting Senate President in 2009.”

     

  • David-West to Jonathan, NASS: You can’t amend the constitution

    David-West to Jonathan, NASS: You can’t amend the constitution

    A former Minister of Petroleum Resources, Prof. Tam David-West, has faulted plans by President Goodluck Jonathan to send recommendations of the proposed national conference to the National Assembly, saying they lack the power to amend the constitution.

    David-West, who spoke to our correspondent in Ibadan on Wednesday, said both the President and the lawmakers seem not to understand the constitution they are using for governance.

    He said Section 9 of the 1999 constitution is clear on the procedure involved in the amendment of the constitution, adding this is contrary to the current amendment plans.

    He described their efforts as a mere “waste of time.”

    David-West said, “I am concerned and very much worried for some time now over how the amendment of the constitution is being discussed by the National Assembly. I was one of the few people that drafted the 1979 constitution and it is almost the same thing as the 1999 constitution. It is clear to me that neither the National Assembly nor the President had any power to alter or add one word to the constitution. I am surprised that they have not been called to order by the Nigerian Bar Association (NBA) or any of the numerous legal luminaries in the country.

    “I am saying this because Section 9 of the constitution clearly provides for how the constitution can be altered or changed. All what they have done so far are completely at variance with what is provided for in the constitution. It is an exercise in futility!”

     

     

  • Lagos-Ibadan is a failed road; Dead Police;  Air Force Museum; UNESCO Education; CBN

    Lagos-Ibadan is a failed road; Dead Police; Air Force Museum; UNESCO Education; CBN

    After five and half hours trying to get from Ibadan to Lagos on Saturday September 14, I can declare on behalf of travelling Nigerians that the LAGOS IBADAN ROAD IS A FAILED ROAD and deserves EMERGENCY ONE WEEK REHABILITATION. Even though most Presidency bigwigs and National Assembly (NASS) members use helicopters and planes, the millions of fellow citizens who use the Lagos-Ibadan road daily demand emergency repairs to their cars and the road. A powerful, good government can cause Julius Berger and RCC to employ thousands of unemployed Nigerians to fill the potholes on the road in one or two weeks if they have any love for Nigerians and sense of national pride and urgency. October 1, Nigeria@53 is around the corner. Government should make this an EMERGENCY GIFT to Nigeria. The Lagos-Ibadan former expressway is to be fully refurbished in 24-30 months with an Infrastructure Bank loan of N167b for the 127km road. Still too long, too slow.

    Intelligent advisers should advise the President that accolades come from opening the completed road. The President should further reduce this contract to six or 12 months to be completed in his present term to attract political kudos and paparazzi. After all, who knows tomorrow or 2015? Even politicians do not live forever and must act positively when they hold power. Already Governor Segun Agagu has sadly gone, may he Rest In Peace; who next? The President should care about the millions of citizens and 100,000 vehicles suffering on the former expressway daily?

    The celebrated release of human rights lawyer, Mike Ozekhome and the explanations of the motivation of the captors do not justify the execution of FOUR living souls from worth but not rich families, the police men! The released lawyer should attend the funerals of each dead policeman. He should then fight for better pay and conditions for police and better compensation for victims’ families. We, SAN lawyer and policemen are all equal in the sight of God.

    Life is serious. Twenty-three killed in bridge disaster. Who will investigate the contractor and the ministry to exonerate them of corruption and incompetence in design and planning for flooding –it is, after all, a bridge? Which body will pay compensation to the victims? Folajomo Agunbiade, a student of Adekunle Ajasin University was shot in the head, for praying to God in tongues during an armed robbery that was not being resisted in her family home in Ibadan.  Her mother is abroad trying to cater for her children. God knows that Folajomo is in heaven now but will that explanation comfort the family? A five-year old Nigerian had a limb amputated abroad because of bone cancer. I saw two children with sightless eyes from beatings in school and home.  Another 10 killed this week in the ongoing Plateau Tiv and Berom farm-Fulani herder war, and we all still eat cow meat. Meanwhile politics seems more important. Shame!

    The proposed Air Force museum is better late than never, good. Ditto for museums for all other areas e.g. transport, and academic subjects. What happened to the Army museum? We know about the Yar’Adua Museum.  Where is the Aviation Museum which we begged for as the aviation authorities destroyed old planes for teaspoons and petty cash instead of giving them to the top technology universities and polytechnics and to science and aeronautical support for education, people’s museums and exhibitions? The Air Force should involve ministries of education, technology and the sciences.

    So we need UNESCO and Gordon Brown to repeat what ASUU and all Education NGOs and unions and student bodies have been saying for 40 years, before government will listen at all levels? Gordon Brown offers more money to empower wayward corrupt governments; the same governments happily divert to corruption or other projects considered more important than children’s welfare and education. Again foreign money, like DFID’s, will help bail out corrupt Nigerian leadership. The less aid we get, the more Nigerian money will be spent correctly. Aid should be in the form of software, short stay, 1-3month scholarships and equipment.

    Another 23 killed at a collapsed bridge in Katsina. No different from the thousands killed in the North this year by cow-farm violence, ‘no western book’ violence, kidnap and vehicle violence etc. Sorry, as you grieve, but look at the picture of the bridge disaster. Increasingly in the North, when we see pictures of collapsed roads, railways and bridges we see red laterite earth sometimes 20 feet deep but we see no stones, boulders, cement or iron rods supporting the laterite road. So once again the contractor, the supervising engineers, the ministries of works and finance must answer questions of culpability in these and other deaths. Rains sweep away weak, un-reinforced infrastructure. Who under-planned, under-budgeted, under-built the bridge and under-built the coupling to the immediate access structures which were dislocated from the bridge? Who has the names on the signatures on the documents? The COREN and the Nigerian Society of Civil Engineers and NGO civil rights groups need to do evaluation and soil checks just as forensic investigation is done with an air crash. Was the bridge poorly constructed for the expected rainfall?

    CBN boasts that Nigeria has the second highest African reserves. This is being economical with the truth or using creative financial accounting procedures. Did he tell you the population to funds ratio in the other countries ahead of Nigeria? Nigerians are being slapped and punched repeatedly.