Tag: national assembly

  • 9th Senate ‘ll move fast to cover lost grounds — Lawan

    The new Senate President, Ahmed Lawan, on Friday assured that the Ninth Senate will move fast to cover lost grounds and support President Muhammadu Buhari to implement people-oriented projects and programmes.

    He spoke with State House correspondents after observing the Jumat prayer with President Buhari at the State House mosque.

    Lawan also assured of early passage of national budgets.

    He said: “The expectations from Nigerians is a National Assembly that is very focused, that is very united, that is very patriotic and nationalistic, and that is, by the grace of God, the National Assembly that we shall have.

    “From my interactions with my colleagues when I was contesting, every senator there when I was contesting, has one massive experience or another.

    “I saw my colleagues exhibit patriotism and desire to work for Nigerians. Therefore, we hope to have a National Assembly that will work for Nigerians optimally and patriotically.

    “We also hope to have a National Assembly that will work with the executive arm of government in partnership and synergy to ensure that we perform our functions as a government, because we are a single unit.

    “I also foresee a National Assembly that will insist that whoever has a responsibility in government performs that responsibility, because it takes all of us to work together to ensure that no part or nobody is left behind.

    “If there is anyone that is deficient, it would cost the system. So we are going to work very hard. We would like to catch up the lost grounds over the last four years.”

    He noted that the last Senate didn’t perform to capacity.

    Read Also: Election of Lawan was bipartian, says Nnamani

    “I am sure we did not perform to our capacity as a National Assembly in the last National Assembly.

    “This time around, we want to perform to full capacity, and by the grace of God, Nigerians will see a positive difference in terms of delivery of service to our country men and women.”

    On timely passage of budget bills, the Senate President said that the National Assembly is ready speed up their passage.

    He explained that national budgets will be passed before Christmas break if the executive sends the proposal by September or October.

    He said: “Well, this is a crucial thing that worries everyone. Every Nigerian wants to see the National Assembly pass the budget in good time, and we’ve campaigned with that and it’s something all of us in the National Assembly have bought into – that we’ll pass the budget within three months, by the grace of God.

    “But I want to say here that it takes two sides of government to pass the budget in good time, and I am sure that the executive side of the government would like to present the budget before the National Assembly in good time – in September or early October.

    “And by the grace of God, we in the National Assembly will ensure that we carry out the budget defence and do the remaining parts of the processes, and before we leave for Christmas break, the budget would have been passed and Mr President would have the budget before him to sign and assent.

    “It is our desire in the National Assembly that every minister, every chief executive officer of every agency comes to the National Assembly to defend the budget of his agency or her agency before going out of the country.

    “That window is going to be available within the one month. But that is the only window that is going to be available. After that, for example, every minister or head of agency who did not come to defend the budget of that institution, the National Assembly would go ahead to work on such a budget appropriately.

    “I believe that nobody would take pleasure in wasting the time of this administration.

    “We are in a hurry, we are thirsty to perform, we want to support Mr President, we want to see Mr President achieve those legacy dreams that he has, and we are going to work full course and full time to ensure that we give him the maximum support that he requires.”

  • Coverage of national assembly

    Following wide condemnation, the recently issued guidelines for accreditation of journalists and media organizations to cover the National Assembly have been reportedly withdrawn.

    Among other requirements, the controversial guidelines spelt out the number of journalists/correspondents to be accredited for print, electronic and online media for Senate and House of Representatives. It also listed a number of requirements for permanent accreditation which included circulation figures, functional Bureau in Abuja and income tax return.

    There have always been guidelines for accreditation of journalists covering the assembly, but this new one includes some sections that are clearly ill-advised and may be difficult for the authorities concerned to ascertain.

    While the existing guidelines may be outdated considering the changing media landscape that has given room for the emergence of new media platforms more than the traditional ones, nothing should be done to suggest any attempt to limit the freedom of the press in the country to perform its role in the coverage of any arm of the government.

    The role of the National Assembly and the legislators in ensuring good governance in a democracy is crucial and its activities should be well covered in and out of session. As many major media organisations and those that specialize in reporting the legislative matters should be accredited.

    Though the new guidelines may be well-intentioned to ensure that only the right media organizations and representatives are accredited, insisting on a circulation figure for newspapers and page views for websites may not be realistic. In a country where we do not have an Audit Bureau of Circulation, how can the National Assembly ascertain the copies circulated daily?

    For those who are familiar with the low circulation figures of newspapers in the country, the question has been how many papers circulate up to the required figure?

    The requirements that media organizations applying for accreditation must have experience of covering proceedings of the National Assembly for at least two years before applying for permanent accreditation and that all online media must have at least 5,000 viewership per day, the site must have been in operation for five years and provide satisfactory evidence to this effect with clippings of the news utilized (especially parliamentary news) may also edge out particularly new media organisations.

    However, while we should demand for the review of the some of the sections like the ones mentioned above, we cannot totally dismiss the need to accredit journalists to cover the National Assembly like it is done in some other major coverage points in the country, including Aso Villa and State Government Houses.

    If every journalist or media organization that wants to cover the Assembly is to be allowed, there may be no space to accommodate them in the gallery.

    There should be agreed criteria based on consultations with media groups for determining which organization should be fully accredited. Some accredited journalists in the Assembly no longer have any business covering the assembly as their organizations are defunct and engage in all kinds of unethical practices.

    Sometimes ago, the National Assembly Correspondents Association defied the directive of the Nigeria Union of Journalists not to give awards to some legislators because of the composition of the membership of the Association.

    I do not have any problem with the demand for income tax return and some other basic documents which any good corporate organization should have.

  • Group seeks positions for Igbo in National Assembly

    The Concerned Citizens of Abia in Diaspora (CCAD) has admonished the All Progressives Congress (APC) not to exclude Igbo in the vital leadership positions of the National Assembly. The plan to zone these positions to the North and Yoruba only is unacceptable to Igbo and Abians in particular, CCAD said.

    A statement by the spokesman, Chief Innocent Nwachukwu, reads: “The endorsement of Atiku Abubarka by Ohanaeze Ndigbo should not be a reason for APC to further split Nigeria by excluding Igbo in the leadership of the National Assembly and federal appointments. Many other groups, including Afenifere, a Yoruba group, also endorsed the same candidate. Going ahead with the purported plan is tribalism and nepotism at its peak.

    “The exclusion of Igbo in the vital leadership positions in the National Assembly is tantamount to the downgrade of all Igbo sons and daughters who are active in APC. It is a clear message that the ruling is not for Igbo.

    “CCAD also supports the candidature of Orji Uzor Kalu, the Senator-elect for Abia North, for deputy Senate President and Nkeiruka Onyejeocha, the most qualified candidate for Speaker of the House of Representatives.

  • To a loyal reader of this column

    I cannot now remember how long Emmanuel Egwu of Ebonyi State  has been a dedicated reader of this column but I have  known him as a constant source of encouragement for the little we try to do on these pages. He has been both a critic and a source of encouragement as he has, week in week out, taken time out to comment on all the articles appearing here in the column. He has certainly been an adrenalin booster for me too but we shall come to him shortly.

    For now, let us deal with a matter of urgent national interest.

    I have lately come to attach less, and less importance, to things emanating from a wing of Afenifere but all that disappeared, however momentarily, after I read Senator Femi Okunrounmu say as quoted below on the maximum thievery going on in the National Assembly which has, again,  just awarded itself N23B as severance package for its members, atop the humongous amount of money they haul home monthly. According to newspaper reports, Senator Okunrounmu was reported as saying: “We have been commenting for years without any appreciable result to show for it. Nigerians are so docile; they are a very docile people who fail to take necessary action to prevent recurrence of an incident like this” “Otherwise, the National Assembly will not embark on this type of journey when Nigerians are suffering. All the recklessness would have stopped if Nigerians cared. The National Assembly can take all the money and Nigerians would keep quiet.”So, my comment would amount to nothing because whatever we say, the National Assembly will still do what it intends to do and get away with it. They make ridiculous budgetary allocations to themselves; they collect money recklessly and spend with impunity”.”We are aware of the kind of provisions they make to themselves regularly. We know what a senator takes home every month compared to what Nigerian workers earn. We have been commenting on this for years, but what have we done about it? “The National Assembly lawmakers know they can do what they are doing and get away with it, hence they are not bothered. We can stop them if only we get on our feet and march on the National Assembly. We must say enough is enough.”

    As I have written severally on these pages when will Nigerians wake up to their own salvation? By the way how many heads do we think Algerians, Sudanese or Venezuelans, have tat they all troop ot against bad governance?. Must we, the people, too look askance if the federal government would not lift a finger towards ending this roguery?

    Any way Fela had long ago sang for the Mumus of Nigeria in SORROW, TEARS and BLOOD when he sang:

    “People self they fear too much

    We fear for the thing we no see

    We fear for the air around us

    We fear to fight for freedom

    We fear to fight for liberty

    We fear to fight for justice

    We fear to fight for happiness

    We always get reason to fear:

    We no wan die

    We no wan wound

    We no wan quench

    We no wan go

    I get one child

    Mama dey for house

    Papa dey for house

    I wan build house

    I don build house

    I no want quench

    I want enjoy

    I no wan go

    Ah!

    So na like this we go dey look?

    God bless the duo of  Monday Ubani and John Nwokwu, two lawyers who  have dragged the Attorney General of the Federation, Revenue Mobilization Allocation and Fiscal Commission, RMAFC, the Senate and House of Representative before a Federal High Court in Lagos over huge salaries, allowances and remunerations being collected by National Assembly members. Also joined in the suit which was filed on Thursday is the National Assembly Service Commission. In an originating summons filed before the court, the two lawyers are asking the court to determine whether by relevant sections of the 1999 constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria, the National Assembly members had the power to fix their salaries, wages, remuneration or allowances.

    “In an affidavit in support of the suit, sworn to by Ubani, he contended that based on relevant sections of the constitution, it was illegal for the National Assembly members to continue to collect the sum of N13.5 million monthly as running cost, N750,000.00 as consolidated salary and allowance and N200 million constituency project allowance as revealed by recent newspaper publications.

    Ubani argued that by virtue of relevant sections of the 1999 constitution as amended, RMAFC is the only authority permitted to fixed the salaries, allowances and remuneration of political office holders, including that of National Assembly members.

    He further contended that the actions of the defendants have continuously depleted the national economy, subjected Nigerians into hardship and exposed the country into economic recession.

    He also argued that the defendants by their action connived and colluded with themselves to rob Nigerians of their common patrimonies, wreck economic havoc and economic earthquake on the national economic development. Consequently , Ubani and his co-plaintiff are asking the court to among other things, make a declaration that RMAFC is the  only body responsible for determining, the salaries, remuneration and/or allowances of the National Assembly or political office holders.

    They also want the court to make an order that the each member of the National Assembly should refund to the federation account the sum of N13.5 million and N10 million respectively collected as running cost since 2015 till date,  within 14 days of delivery of judgment”.

    Nigerians would soon know whether the law serves the people, or the mighty.

    Back then to my friend Egwu

    Egwu has been absolutely untiring, commenting, at some length, on each and every one of my articles here. I reproduce below two of his comments which are, however, edited for space purposes.

    On: The mega-scandal of predatory legislature

    “Except that Nigeria is a place where God is always for all, and everyone for himself, your write up on the above subject,  and the stirring argument you appropriately brought to bear on it,  should have been enough for long suffering Nigerians to troop out, en mass , in a redemptive revolution to ensure an end to this brazen legislative banditry, on top of the humongous salaries they haul  home monthly even as millions of Nigerians are not sure as to where their next meal would come from. If only the people would all rise and do  the  needful to stop this cruel enslavement by the NASS, and curtail other excesses in government, I have no doubt, whatever, that the economy would record a massive turn around and our politics will become far less predatory , and killing, since money is at the root of our ugly politics.

    The North: Militancy and banditry and the rest of us

    Thanks for your interactive style which would always make matters more comprehensible, and a lot clearer. The Zamfara mayhem is simply a case of sowing and reaping. The north’s religion, or cultural heritage, permits the existence of Alamjiris, a group of somewhat abandoned children, most of who cannot trace their parents in a thousand years, and therefore, a sitting duck for recruitment by Boko Haram and other vagabond groups now tormenting the North. They go about in search of crumbs falling off from the master’s table just as they  beg for arms and wander about. This they do daily while the rich live in stupendous opulence in the same community. It is unimaginable the rich never thought these people would one day become societal monsters. When they start asking questions about how they grew into a life so nasty, brutish and short, and there are no satisfactory answers, the  result is what we are now seeing in the North

    The answer to all these lies in providing massive incentives for educating the youth both in Zamfara and other affected states. This must be followed up with the provision of quality youth empowerment programmes to engage the youths and the downtrodden of the areas in meaningful ventures. A hungry man is an angry man, and an idle mind will ever remains the devil’s workshop.

    Good governance and people-oriented leadership is the ultimate and enduring solution.

     

  • Lawan headache for National Assembly leaders

    THE leadership of the current National Assembly may be sounding tough, but beneath their tough utterances are fear and trepidation over the fate that could befall them after May 29 when they would have vacated their seats.

    Their main headache is Senator Ahmed Lawan, the Senate Majority Leader who has been adopted as the candidate of the All Progressives Congress (APC) and President Muhammadu Buhari in the jostle for the seat of the Senate President in the 9th National Assembly.

    The current leaders are indeed not looking into the future with confidence because they fear that Lawan would go after them at the promptings of the executive once he becomes the Senate President. One issue that is really troubling them is the loans they took to run their affairs. They are looking at the figures and already know that they face a Herculean task. You may wonder why they need such loans when they don’t embark on executive projects and all they spend money on are recurrent things.

    Already, the Independent Corrupt Practices and Other Related Offences Commission (ICPC) has vowed to make the two chambers of the National Assembly account for funds allocated to constituency projects, and the figures are scary. Out of the 2,516 projects tracked between 2015 and 2017, 918 of them were not done, 395 are ongoing while 214 of the projects cannot even be located.

    Read also: But why Ahmed Lawan and Femi Gbajabiamila?

    A further breakdown reads as follows: 2015: 436 projects tracked in 16 states, 145 completed, 77 ongoing and 211 not executed at all; 2016: 852 projects in 20 states, 350 completed, 118 ongoing, 41 locations not specified in the budget and 343 not done; 2017: 1,228 projects tracked as at June 2018, 478 completed, 173 in unspecified locations, 200 ongoing, 13 abandoned and 364 not started.

    Little wonder the leaders of the two chambers are in desperate need of a candidate that will cover their tracks, and from what Sentry is gathering in Abuja, many of them want that assurance from APC that Lawan as Senate president will not look into the books.

    They are indeed reaching out to people they believe have influence on both the Villa and Lawan, promising that once they are assured of their own safety, both Lawan and Hon. Femi Gbajabiala will have their ways as Senate President and Speaker of the House of Representatives respectively.

  • ‘N23b severance package for National Assembly lawmakers ridiculous’

    Many Nigerians have expressed shock and dismay at the N23.7 billion severance package for Eighth National Assembly lawmakers in the face of what they called pervasive poverty in the land.

    Those who spoke with The Nation noted that the “hefty” pay-off showed that the lawmakers were insensitive to the plight of millions of Nigerian who they say have been pauperised by the huge salaries the lawmakers take home.

    The United Progressive Party (UPP) National Chairman Chekwas Okorie said the action of the lawmakers could not be justified, given the current state of the economy.

    He said: “It is scandalous that they are giving themselves this mouth-watering severance package without passing through the body set up by government to fix the salaries and allowances of public officials, including those at the National Assembly, the Revenue Mobilisation Allocation and Fiscal Commission (RMAFC).

    “This is just pure blackmail. The National Assembly has been having this sort of hostile relationship with the Executive arm of government since this set of lawmakers came in four years ago.

    “They know that the President would assent to the Appropriation Bill, because of time constraint; he could not afford to wait for the Ninth Assembly for things to get back to normal. This people are not only corrupt, they are very, very unpatriotic.

    “The President must try and beat them to their game. President Buhari should go ahead and assent to the bill and during implementation, he can apply to the incoming Ninth Assembly for a review. He can apply for virement, and he can also apply for a supplementary budget.

    “The Buhari administration has been complaining about padding of budgets. This is an indication that what the government has been saying all along is true. Giving themselves a severance package of N23 billion is the most scandalous thing this set of legislators has done. They are so shameless. I am thoroughly disappointed by this development.

    “But the deed has been done. President Buhari should not allow them to delay our budget unnecessarily; he should assent to it and find a way to adjust later.”

    Okorie hoped the incoming Ninth Assembly would toe a different path.

    He said: “This is why the Presidency is interested in those who will eventually emerge as principal officers of the incoming Ninth Assembly. It is because of this sort of thing that the Presidency and the All Progressives Congress (APC) national leadership have indicated that members of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) would be excluded from occupying key positions in the coming dispensation.

    “It is not likely that an APC-controlled National Assembly would create problems for a government controlled by the party. This is because all of them are going to face the electorate again in 2023.”

    The UPP national chairman noted that what played out during the Eighth Assembly was a PDP agenda to make the ruling APC look bad in the eyes of the people.

    Okorie added: “The intent was to make the APC fail to pave the way for its defeat in 2019, but obviously, the opposition has failed in that respect.”

    Former Vice-President of the Africa Development Bank (AfDB), Chief Bisi Ogunjobi, said the issue should be examined from the viewpoint of how the severance of the Seventh Assembly and those before it were determined.

    He said: “If they go beyond what was done for the Seventh Assembly, then we can say there is something wrong. But, for now, I don’t know how that of the Seventh Assembly was determined and what they got as severance package.”

    Ogunjobi, an economist, said the budgeting process is flawed and that both arms of government must go back to the 12-month cycle – from January to December.

    He said this year’s budget has eight months before it elapses, rather than 12 months.

    The founding President of the Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC), Alhaji Hassan Sunmonu, described the action of the lawmakers as selfish.

    He said: “In my view, this set of legislators is selfish; they are more concerned about their own welfare, than that of those who elected them and the nation at large. The problem between the leadership of the National Assembly, particularly the Senate, and the executive arm of government has made things to go the way they are not supposed to go under normal circumstances.

    “It is a sort of a cat and mouse relationship. But, by the first week of June, when the Ninth National Assembly would have taken over, things will improve and we are going to see more sanity in the National Assembly. That is my hope.

    “But if that is not the case, they are going to face the wrath of the people, because Nigerians have indicated that they are no longer going to tolerate this sort of thing. Of course, I am happy they passed the N30,000 monthly minimum wage; that is a good development. But that does not mean that the national coffers should be emptied.

    “How many years have some of them served? Many of them have not served for more than four years or eight years. Nigerians who served for about 25 years are still struggling to get their pension or gratuity.

    “The NLC has been calling for social justice. I don’t think there is any social justice in what they (National Assembly lawmakers) are doing. It is not only the National Assembly. State assemblies, like Bayelsa, have been approving a similar mouth-watering severance package for themselves. This is not patriotic.”

    The Southeast Secretary General of the human rights watchdog, the Campaign for Democracy (CD) Dr. Jerry Chukwuokolo said the action of the lawmakers cannot be treated in isolation.

    The activist noted that under the Muhammadu Buhari administration, the Executive arm, had not also been obeying the laws of the land.

    He said: “I want to look at it from a more holistic perspective. First of all, the Executive arm of government, which has been lying to us, is it doing well? Everybody understands that this country has got to a point of no return in terms of doing things in the right way.

    “The lawmakers cannot be an exception. Does anybody obey the law in Nigeria? We live in a banana republic where people do whatever they like. But whenever it favours them, they start calling our attention to it. Or, is it anywhere it is convenient for the Executive that we should apply the law?”

    An elder statesman and one of the leaders of Afenifere, the apex Yoruba socio-political organisation, Chief Femi Okunrounmu, said it was a waste of time commenting on such issues because it would almost not change anything.

    He said: “We have been commenting for years without any appreciable result to show for it. Nigerians are so docile; they are very docile people who fail to take necessary action to prevent recurrence of an incident like this.

    “Otherwise, the National Assembly will not embark on this type of journey when Nigerians are suffering. All the recklessness would have stopped if Nigerians cared. The National Assembly can take all the money and Nigerians would keep quiet.

    “So, the comment would amount to nothing because whatever we say the National Assembly will still do what it intends to do and get away with it. They make ridiculous budgetary allocation to themselves; they collect money recklessly and spend with impunity.

    “We are aware of the kind of provisions they make to themselves regularly. We know what a senator takes home every month compare to what Nigerian workers earn. We have been commenting on this for years, but what have we done about it?

    “The National Assembly lawmakers know they can do what they are doing and get away with it, hence they are not bothered. We can stop them if only we get on our feet and march on the National Assembly. We must say enough is enough.”

    The National Vice Chairman of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), Dr. Eddy Olafeso, said the political class is the problem with Nigeria because of their insensitivity to the yearnings and aspirations of the people.

    He said: “It is very unfortunate that people believe when you have a ticket to become a political leader that you are entitled to be fed for the rest of your life.

    “To me, I believe that is not fair. At a point, it has to stop. That is why I earlier on mentioned that these people are the same. That is why nobody is taking the job so seriously. That is why we have the reckless rat race to become a National Assembly member. They want to become senators or governors. They should be informed that the people they represent are the most important than they themselves.

    “If Nigeria is going through this trauma of poor development and there is a threat of recession outside there, there is no basis for what they did.”

     

  • Fasanmi, Olukotun, Igbokwe carpet National Assembly

    The N23.7 billion severance package for National Assembly legislators included in this year’s Appropriation Bill by the Senate has drawn the ire of the Nigerian public.

    They described the legislators’ action as selfish and insensitive to the economic situation in the country.

    Afenifere leader Senator Ayo Fasanmi said the severance package is self-serving and scandalous.

    He urged President Muhammadu Buhari to look at the issue critically before taking a decision on it.

    Fasanmi said: “As someone who has served as a member of the House of Representatives in the First Republic and as senator in the Second Republic, to me, the approval of severance package for members of the National Assembly is self-serving and very scandalous. I want Mr President to look at the issue very critically as a foremost crusader against corruption in our public life before taking a decision on the expenditure.”

    Prof Ayo Olukotun of the Department of Political Science at Olabisi Onabanjo University (OOU), Ago-Iwoye, Ogun State, said the severance package was part of the excesses of the members of the National Assembly. The political scientist said this had not been curtailed over the years.

    He said: “It is the politics of disorder with no one prepared to call them to order. The principle may be justified but it has been stretched beyond rationality.”

    To the Lagos State Publicity Secretary of the All Progressives Congress (APC), Mr Joe Igbokwe, the Executive should ignore the severance package approved by the legislators for themselves in the Appropriation Bill.

    He described the lawmakers as selfish and greedy.

    Igbokwe said President Buhari should not release the money.

    “It should not be our priority. Members of the Eighth National Assembly should go; we are tired of them. Let us deal with the new Assembly.

    “Given the jumbo salaries and allowances drawn by the members of the National Assembly and the state of the economy, the severance package should be expunged from the budget. They have had more than enough.

    “The N23.7 billion can be used for the construction and rehabilitation of many roads in the country. The incoming legislators should know it will no longer business as usual. We want to build this country on the part of moral integrity,” he said.

  • Speakership: Northern groups dump Gbajabiamila for Onyejeocha

    Arewa women and youth groups led by Movers and Shakers Organisation of Nigeria and Northern Emancipation Network, on Tuesday kicked against Hon. Femi Gbajabiamila’s candidacy, describing Hon Nkiruka Onyejeocha as the right person for the position of 9th speaker of House of Representatives.

    The groups a re Movers and Shakers Organisation of Nigeria, Northern Emancipation Network, Northern Women Political Canvassers, Arewa Students League for Justice, North for Peace and Unity, Network for Women Support, Arewa Youth Stakeholders Forum and Civic Education for Grassroot Mobilization.

    Their position was made known at a press conference, held at Holiday Conference facility in Kaduna.

    Reading the endorsement document on behalf of other groups, President, Movers and Shakers Organisation of Nigeria, Ruqayya Sani, said, South East was the best slot for the speaker of the house in line with federal character arrangement.

    The groups, according to her, observed that, there were underground forces driving the controversies and fueling tensions, aimed at causing initial distrust among the NASS members, with the attendant risk of making the next four years of President Muhammadu Buhari strenuous, and setting the stage for the eventual breakup of the All Progressives Congress.

    She said, they were surprised that the leadership of the All Progressives Congress (APC) and President Muhammadu Buhari were failing to see the potential risk in the trap to get them to openly endorse the adoption of candidates drawn from particular zones to the exclusion of other zones of the federation with equal entitlement.

    She said, “for the sake of fairness, justice and equity, we believe that the South-East is more eminently qualified for the slot of the Speaker of the House of Representatives in compliance with the nation’s federal character principle. And in conformity with the global demand for affirmative action, we strongly recommend that a female member of the House should be given the position.

    “In this regard, after due consideration and assessment of all possible candidates from the South East, we are convinced that Mrs. Nkiruka Onyejeocha, representing the Isuikwato/ Umunneochi Federal Constituency, of Abia State is by whatever criteria competent to take up that responsibility.

    “We hereby declare support for Honourable Nkiruka Onyejeocha to be nominated and urge all independent-minded members to support and eventually elect her as the new House of Representatives Speaker in a transparent democratic process.

    “We also commit ourselves to champion her course across the entire northern region and to reach out to other relevant stakeholders and like-minded groups and individuals across the country as we see Mrs Nkeiruka Onyejeocha as a symbol of hope for women, hope for the younger generation, hope for unity and hope for the future,” she added.

  • Breaking: National Assembly jerks up 2019 budget by over N100bn

    The National Assembly has jerked up the 2019 budget by over 100 billion naira

     

    Details Shortly………………..

  • Fear of Shi’ites invasion sends Reps packing

    The House of Representatives hurriedly adjourned yesterday following reports of invasion of the National Assembly by protesting Shi’ite members.

    Deputy Speaker Lasun Yussuff, who presided over proceedings, caused a stir when he informed members of the impending invasion of the House by the protesters.

    He called for an adjournment, saying the move was imperative to ensure the lawmakers’ safety.

    The Shi’ite group started a fresh protest on Tuesday over the continued detention of its leader, Ibrahim El-Zakzaky.

    Yussuff said: “Report reaching me is that the Shi’ites have crashed the first gate, but I don’t know if we have enough security to handle the situation.

    “In view of this, do we continue with the consideration of the reports before us or adjourn?”

    Before adjourning, he requested for five minutes from the Sergeant-at-Arms to enable the Committee of the Whole House conclude its consideration of the report before it.

    The request was granted and plenary was adjourned till today.

    The protesters were stopped from accessing the main complex and they departed shortly after.

    Neither Senate President Bukola Saraki nor Speaker Yakubu Dogara nor their representatives attended to them.

    Earlier, Advocates for Good Governance (AGG) stormed the Assembly to protest what it called the lawmakers’ conduct of its affairs in secrecy.

    The protesters arrived at 11 a.m but stopped at the first gate, where they addressed reporters.

    The group noted that since the lawmakers were elected by Nigerians, they should allow the people to have in-depth knowledge of the workings of the legislature by conducting their affairs with utmost transparency.

    The protesters demanded that beginning with the Ninth Assembly in the next dispensation, the lawmakers should adopt open ballot voting in the selection of their leadership, besides the process of passing the national budget, among others.

    AGG’s Convener Duro Meseko said: “We are dismayed by information coming from the National Assembly that the leadership of the Ninth Assembly will be conducted via a secret ballot process.

    “More worrisome is the fact that the leadership of the Eighth Assembly has perfected plans to select leaders who will constitute a legislative cog in the wheel of progress of President Muhammadu Buhari

    “At this juncture, we wish to remind the President that Nigerians are watching and are not ready to leave this important matter in the hands of National Assembly members alone.”