Tag: national assembly

  • NASS approves N563.643bn promissory note, bond to local contractors

    Local contractors may soon heave a sigh of relief as the National Assembly on Wednesday approved the issuance of promissory note and bond worth N563.643 billion for the payment of promissory note and bonds to them.

    Hon. Adeyinka Ajayi, chairman, House Committee on Aids, Loans and Debts management presented a Senate and House conference report through which the approval was granted after lawmakers adopted the recommendations during the Committee of Supply.

    Adeyinka (APC-Osun) while speaking in the report told the House that the sum of N206.N43.586 billion was approved for the six local contractors and an additional sum of N162.479 billion.

    Similarly, the recommendation for the issuance of promissory note and bond for the payment of the sum of N195.089 billion to 270 exporters’ claim in the Export Expansion Grant (EEG) scheme was approved.

    Ajayi told his colleagues that the report was a result of the deliberations of the request of the President.

    The fund will enable Federal Government to settle inherited local debt and contractual obligations, he further said.

    Read Also: NASS don’t hate President Buhari – Dogara

    He said in the report: “The conference committee met on Friday, 18th January, 2019 to harmonise the differences in the recommendations of the reports with respect to the payment of beneficiaries/exporters in Export Expansion Grant Scheme and contractors as passed by the two chambers.

    “The conference committee observed the two additional companies (SCC Nigerian Limited and Mahaza Company Limited) whose approval of payment was not granted in the Senate did not present some key documents to the Adhoc Committee as requested till the expiration of the period given to them.”

    According to the lawmaker “the companies “subsequently presented all necessary documents to the House Committee on Aids, Loans and Debts Management who recommend their payment, hence their recommendation in the House Committee version.”

    The Conference Committee, he said, “worked on the two necessary items dealing on contractual debts to local contractors, hence unanimously adopted the House of Representatives recommendations.”

  • 2019 budget tops agenda as National Assembly resumes tomorrow

    THE two chambers of the National Assembly will tomorrow resume plenary after the Christmas and New Year break.

    Top on the agenda for the consideration of the lawmakers is the 2019 Appropriation Bill presented to a joint session of the National Assembly by President Muhammadu Buhari on December 19, 2018.

    Findings showed that the Senate and House of Representatives will begin with the consideration and adoption of the Medium Term Expenditure and Fiscal Strategy Paper (MTEF), which is still pending in the two chambers.

    The MTEF, which sets and outlines the parameters and guidelines for the budget, is normally adopted by the two chambers before the consideration of the budget.

    A source close to the office of the Senate President, Abubakar Bukola Saraki, said yesterday that the Senate is prepared to do what is necessary to hasten passage of the 2019 budget.

    He noted that after the adoption of the MTEF, the upper chamber will proceed to debate the general principles of the 2019 to set the 2019 fiscal policy document in motion for committal to the Appropriation Committee.

    He added that the heads of ministries, departments and agencies should also be prepared to cooperate with the National Assembly to defend their budget proposals.

    There was also indication that the lawmakers may cut short their plenary for five legislative days to pave the way for those of them seeking re-election to concentrate on their campaigns.

    It was gathered that the debate on general principles of the budget will hold at the two chambers from tomorrow to Thursday next week for the second reading of the N8.83 trillion budget.

    It was also gathered that motions for adjournment of plenary to Tuesday February 19, 2019, may be moved and adopted to create room for the lawmakers contesting in the elections to campaign while those not contesting may engage heads of the various MDAs at budget defence sessions.

    In the Senate, 68 of the 109 serving senators are contesting in the February 16 election on different political platforms for their return bids. Eight others are contesting for governorship elections slated for March 2, 2019.

    The 33 other senators not contesting for any elective positions are expected by the planned legislative arrangement to hold the budget defence sessions.

  • ‘National Assembly is clog in wheel of progress’

    Hon Osaigbovo Iyoha (Ondo East Constituency) is the Chief Whip of the Edo State House of Assembly and the All Progressives Congress (APC) candidate for the House of Representatives election. In this interview with OTABOR OSAGIE, he says vote buying will mar the poll.

    Are you threatened by the popularity of your opponent in the PDP?

    Not at all. Politics is like a football match. A winner will always emerge. He is the incumbent but he should realise that three years ago, they became lawmakers and we know the factors that brought them to power. Those factors are no longer there. We know the kind of money politics that played out in 2015. That election was bought. Nobody has that kind of cash to spend again. Our people are now wiser. My opponent knows that his time is up because we have a performing Governor and President in place. Our party cannot afford not to have an APC led National Assembly.

    Some youths of Oredo appeared to be dissatisfied with the APC. Will it not affect your chances?

    I am a realist. People that are aggrieved and moving from one party to another are migrant politicians. In an election, it is not everybody that will vote for you. They should look at their ideology. Where were they yesterday? Tomorrow they might come back to us. If you ask them why they are aggrieved or what they called use and dump, they will not have much to say. The truth is that the system that use to operate before now is not people oriented. It served a few persons. Obaseki has come to say he is Governor of everybody and nobody can be feeding fat on the resources of the state anymore. We see that he is using the resources to give us roads, good schools and everybody is seeing the transformation of Benin City. Those of us in the Assembly, we are depriving ourselves what previous lawmakers were benefitting. We did it in good faith because we know that it will benefit the people of Edo. Ask them what the real issues are, they will not see anything to tell you except they want to grativate towards where the food is.

    What are you going to do differently?

    There are a lots of things that have not been put right at the national level. At the state level, we have already passed next year’s budget for the state to function. The budget came in November and we passed it in December. This present National Assembly has been at loggerheads with the President. Last year’s budget was passed in August. How do we function without a budget? How do you expect the state to progress. This present National Assembly has been a clog in the wheel of progress of the government of the day. Everybody suffers when the lawmakers served themselves.

    They forgot they are representing the people. Are these people serving themselves or the people? We need a National Assembly that is responsive because we all suffer when the National Assembly is not supporting the Federal Govenrment. It is everybody that suffers it.

    Read also: 2019 polls …Power to youths, women

    Who is Osaigbovo Iyoha?

    I was born in Bénin City and did my primary education here. I had my first degree in Mechanical Engineering from the Ambrose Alli University, Ekpoma and I later obtained my Masters in Industrial Engineering from the University of Bénin. I have worked as a businessman in Lagos and Bayelsa states. I did real estate in Lagos and Marine Services in Bayelsa. I play football as my passion.

    Do you think the APC can repeat the magic of 2015?

    This election will be easy for the APC. It will be a smooth victory for us. By the time we start our campaigns, you will not see PDP again. We have statistics with which to campaign. Elections are not won on Facebook. We have details and when we start churning them out, the PDP will run. Like the issue of rice that the PDP is using to sing that a bag is now N18,000. The PDP wants us to believe that governance started four years ago. They should tell us the price of a bag of rice when they took over power in 1999. These are facts. On insecurity, we know how many states were under the control of Boko Haram. Let us compere and know where the decay started. This is the only country in the world where we have more private jets than commercial airlines. There was a wedding in Bénin some years back and there was no space to park private jets. They had to resort to park them in Asaba. Today, the case is different because these people were not paying parking fees and making remittances to govenrment coffers. The only difference between four years ago and today is that the rich are now complaining. The rich no longer have free lunch. They cannot enjoy the luxury they were used to. They are not comfortable again.

    The gang up by the retired Generals against Buhari…

    That is why you see them now accusing Buhari’s family of buying shares. You can accused Buhari of anything but not corruption. They want to smear him. The free lunch for the General is no longer there. You heard Iweala saying how much was given to lawmakers previously to pass the budget. That is what Buhari has stopped. He cannot be bribing you to do your job. In Edo State House of Assembly, it is the same thing. The PDP want to take us back to Egypt. We have to start putting things in the right perspective. There are lot of policies that Obaseki is putting in place like the Gelegele seaport, the industrial park and the modular refineries. They are going to create jobs. It is not government duty to create jobs. Government is to create the enabling environment for jobs to thrive. The companies are coming fast and we are training youths especially on welding. When we have a port, a lot of welders are going to be employed.

    Do you think vote buying will not happen again?

    For the past one year, there has been cash crunch in the country. There is no money to buy votes. Vote buying has been a plague in our politics. Oredo people are advanced. They will not mortgage their future because of money. The events that took place four years ago that gave all the seats to the PDP will not happen again

     

  • Is judiciary ready for 2019 polls?

    In Nigeria, elections usually end at the tribunals. With the general elections around the corner, is the judiciary ready for the disputes which may arise therefrom? ROBERT EGBE asks.

    THE elections will start on February 16 with those of the President and the National Assembly.

    Governorship and State Assembly/Federal Capital Territory (FCT) council elections follow on March 2.

    The presidential contest will pit President Muhammadu Buhari of the All Progressives Congress (APC) against no fewer than 13 other candidates. His main challenger, however, is former Vice President Atiku Abubakar of the People’s Democratic Party (PDP).

    According to analysts, so far, electioneering has been heated, but largely non-violent. They submitted that a credible vote would strengthen democracy.

    But they warned that a tight contest followed by controversial election tribunal rulings could fuel events that would test the country’s stability, especially where such decisions conflict with legal precedents.

    Election-related matters are usually contentious and are often considered and treated by politicians and other stakeholders as do or die.

    To some, the bitter exchanges between party loyalists and claims of fake news and hate speech are signs that the elections will be contentious.

    A January 3 report by Time Magazine listed the polls among the five global elections to watch this year. The others are in India, Israel, Ukraine and the European Union (EU), where parliamentarians would be elected.

    On December 15, the United States Government expressed fear that the elections might be marred by violence.

    It noted, however, that the public disturbance that the elections would cause might not be “large-scale nationwide conflict” but “localised violence.”

    The US Assistant Secretary of State for the Bureau of African Affairs, Tibor Nagy, made this known in his presentation at the US Congress hearing on Nigeria’s forthcoming elections in Washington DC.

    Nagy said: “I can tell you from my impressions during my travels and my previous service in Nigeria that I fear there will be some violence around these elections, as has been the case with previous elections.

    “I do not anticipate large-scale nation-wide conflict, but rather localised violence. We are already seeing increased tensions and polarization as the election approaches.

    “We assess that politicians are turning to narratives of identity politics in an attempt to improve their popularity, with potentially serious consequences for national unity.

    “However, Nigeria’s political system and society have weathered such tensions before.”

    INEC’s alarm

    On January 18, last year, the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) Chairman Prof. Mahmood Yakubu said the commission was hamstrung by conflicting court orders.

    He told the Chief Justice Walter Onnoghen that the commission was served with six conflicting judgments and orders from courts of coordinate jurisdiction within a short period of three months in 2016, during the PDP leadership crisis.

    Yakubu said: “Similarly, the commission was confronted by conflicting pronouncements by the lower courts on matters already decided by the superior courts, including the Supreme Court. This is making the work of the commission very difficult and creating unnecessary negative publicity perception for INEC and, I must say, the judiciary as well.”

    INEC’s Director, Legal Services, Mrs. Oluwatoyin Babalola noted several cases where lower courts failed to be bound by decisions of superior courts or their own decisions on similar facts.

    Babalola observed that in Labour Party vs. INEC (2009), the Supreme Court decided that where an election was nullified on the ground that the winner of an election was not qualified to contest the election, the disqualified candidate and the political party that sponsored him are not allowed to participate in the fresh/re-run election.

    But Hassan Abdullahi v. Abdul Ogwu Alhassan, as well as Idoko Moses Ododo v. Oshodi Isaac Ausa, both delivered on January 2, 2016, the Court of Appeal nullified the election of the disqualified candidates and ordered INEC to conduct fresh elections with the same disqualified candidates and their political parties.

    Babalola said: “Where the courts depart from precedents, it creates uncertainty as to the state of the law and consequence of particular conduct. Where courts of coordinate jurisdiction give conflicting decisions/orders, it can lead to disobedience of court orders, cause confusion in the polity and to the Election Management Body.”

    ‘Deluge of litigations’

    According to the Yakubu, INEC has been subjected to more litigations than any public institution.

    He said within two years (2016 and 2017), the commission was involved in 1,134 court cases, comprising 454 outstanding cases and 680 determined cases, arising from the 2015 general elections.

    In the party primaries of the 89 registered political parties contesting next month’s general elections, the commission said 396 petitions are already pending in court.

    At a two-day training workshop for INEC correspondents in Abuja, the INEC chair described the primaries as most acrimonious in the nation’s recent history.

    He said apart from the 396 petitions filed, INEC had also received 302 requests for Certified True Copies (CTCs) of reports of party primaries and copies of personal particulars of candidates.

    Yakubu added: “These requests are obviously a prelude to more court actions. In addition, we have also received 52 petitions and protests from aggrieved party aspirants.”

    Election tribunals

    As in previous elections, the courts, beginning with election tribunals, will play a major role in resolving election disputes.

    Their role is as defined in the Electoral Act, 2010 (As amended), which provides that appeals arising from governorship and presidential elections terminate at the Supreme Court while the National Assembly and state Houses of Assembly appeals also end at the Court of Appeal except where they are pre-election matters.

    Section 134(2) and (3) of the Act provides a 180-day time limit for election petitions to be concluded, while similar provisions are contained in Section 285(6) and (7) of the 1999 Constitution (as amended).

    Section 285(6) reads: “An election tribunal shall deliver its judgment in writing within 180 days from the date of the filing of the petition.”

    Subsection (7) provides: “An appeal from a decision of the election tribunal or court shall be heard and disposed of within 60 days from the date of the delivery of judgment.”

    Following the 2015 polls, the judiciary set up 110 Election Petitions Tribunals manned by 255 judges.

    Seven hundred and forty-nine appeals emanated from the tribunals’decisions, while the Abuja division had an additional 75 appeals in the year 2016/2017.

    Seven hundred and thirty of the petitions from the 2015 polls were heard by the Court of Appeal.

    They consisted of 39 governorship elections petitions, 79 Senatorial petitions, 179 House of Representatives and 380 State Houses of Assembly petitions.

    In addition, 32 election petitions were filed in 2016 which included Bayelsa and Edo States and other re-runs, and 21 petitions were filed in 2017, including Anambra State governorship and other reruns.

    Judges’ work suffer for election duties

    Following their appointment to hear election petitions, judges will shoulder these extra duties for almost three months.

    One implication of this is that it might slow work in the judges’ courts, thus swelling backlog of cases.

    This is a cause for concern because in some court jurisdictions across the country, 10 to 15 year-old cases are still on the cause list.

    Nigerian Bar Association (NBA) President Paul Usoro (SAN) noted this last September 24 at a special Supreme Court session to mark the beginning of the 2018/2019 legal year.

    He said apart from the expected election-related appeals. “There is still a huge backlog of appeals, mostly civil appeals that are pending before Your Lordships. We note with deep appreciation, Your Lordships’ efforts, notably in the last Legal Year, to clear the deck of these backlog of matters. But then, the pile still remains.

    “We know that there are still appeals pending before Your Lordships that were filed in 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006 – appeals that remain outstanding for more than 10 years. When this time-span is added to the time span that it takes for the appeals to journey from courts of first instance to Your Lordships, then the delays in our judicial process becomes quite pronounced, frightening and discouraging not only to litigants but also to the Bar and other stakeholders in the justice administration sub-sector.”

    What should the judiciary do?

    Chief Justice of Nigeria (CJN), Justice Walter Onnoghen, the NBA and other members of the Bar have suggested ways to help the judiciary better cope with elections fallout, backlog of cases and judicial delays.

    The CJN also recently met with the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) Chairman, Prof Mahmoud Yakubu, where he assured him that the appellate system of the judiciary will serve to correct anomalies created by lower courts in election petitions.

    According to him, conflicting court orders were bound to arise as a result of multiple court cases filed by politicians at different courts, which were bound to have different facts and interpretations by judges.

    ‘Judges must stick to judicial precedents’

    The CJN also warned judicial officers against giving decisions on election petitions that conflict with legal precedents.

    Justice Onnoghen, who spoke at a recent training for justices of the Court of Appeal, said judges must stick to the principle of stare decisis, i.e. the legal principle of determining points in litigation according to precedent.

    The CJN noted that there is a need for re-orientation of judges’ attitudes towards their obligation to stare decisis, “thereby creating a legal environment built on certainty of the law’’.

    He added: “On judicial precedents as it relates to election and pre-election matters, I want to remind us that the Supreme Court has decided in a number of cases that the principles of judicial review, such as Mandamus, Certiorari, Prohibition, etc, do not apply because election and election related matters, such as pre-election causes are suis generis (of its own kind).”

    ‘Professionalism, integrity required’

    According to the NBA, judges must maintain standards of professionalism, if the judiciary is to successfully weather the coming electoral storm.

    Usoro noted that judicial pronouncements in contentious and difficult political appeals “in no small way worked to maintain the peace and cement the unity and indivisibility of Nigeria, our great country’’.

    “Riots, unrests and political chaos in different parts of our Federation have been averted consequent upon Your Lordships’ decisions and pronouncements in some of these matters.”

    “These are very weighty responsibilities and functions which Your Lordships continue to carry out and fulfill selflessly and without any self-adulation or self- exaltation’’.

    According to him, the Bar and other Nigerians “expect Your Lordships to maintain, in the coming National Election season, the standards of decorum, professionalism, discipline and integrity that have always been the hallmark of Your Lordships and also ensure that those standards percolate to and are fully and strictly replicated by Their Lordships of the lower courts’’.

    Usoro advised: “Any judicial officer that is found wanting in that regard, we respectfully posit, must be swiftly and decisively punished and routed out from the pack of judicial officers.”

    ‘Prioritise digitalisation’

    Prof. Yemi Akinseye-George (SAN) urged the National Judicial Council (NJC) to prioritise the digitalisation of courts to reduce delays.

    “Court digitalisation must be a matter of priority. Locally developed software for e-recording of courts should be deployed. This will enhance speedy dispensation of justice as judges can have access to e-recorded proceedings both audio and video.

    “It will also help to address the problem associated with de-novo (repeat) trials following transfer of judges, death, promotion or retirement,” Akinseye-George said.

     

     

  • Sack Amina Zakari from INEC, PDP tells NASS

    The Peoples Democratic Party Presidential Campaign Organization (PPCO) yesterday charged  the National Assembly to immediately commence the process of removing  Mrs Amina Zakari from the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC).

    Zakari was on Thursday named the chairman of the Presidential Election Collation Centre Committee for the 2019 election, a development the main opposition party vehemently rejected.

    Spokesman for the PDP Campaign Organisation, Kola Ologbondiyan, told reporters in Abuja that the National Assembly should step in to save the nation from imminent political crisis.

    Ologbondiyan said the party’s position  is predicated on the fact that President Muhammadu Buhari is an uncle to Mrs Zakari.

    The Presidency has dismissed the claim as a lie.

    The PDP added that the Buhari presidency has been using Amina Zakari to bear pressure on INEC even to the extent of brazenly foisting her as the collation officer for the presidential election, to enable President Buhari announce himself as winner.

    Ologbondiyan further said, “The PPCO holds that a credible electoral commission must be completely impartial, transparent, totally independent and immune from external control by interested entities. These are qualities INEC can no longer lay claim to as long as Amina Zakari remains a member of the commission.

    “By foisting Mrs. Amina Zakari to lead the final process of the election, President Buhari is seeking a way to annex INEC, practically, take over the collation of results, and announce himself the winner.

    “This is a clear invitation to anarchy and a huge political crisis capable of derailing our democracy because Nigerians, across the board, are already in vehement rejection of this self-succession plot and are now, more than ever before, ready to use every necessary means available and accessible to them in a democracy to protect our democratic process”.

    The main opposition party said as long as Amina Zakari remained in INEC, the commission cannot be trusted.

    “It will interest Nigerians to know that following public outcry against her nomination, Amina Zakari’s agents, last night, surreptitiously attempted to compromise the media by sending secret messages to emails of editors with the view to watering down and swaying the direction of information on her provocative appointment to lead the collation of presidential election results.

    “Also, we have been informed of how Mrs. Zakari led other top INEC officials to a secret meeting with some top officials of the Buhari Campaign Organization (BCO) in Abuja on ways to introduce the controversial Incidence Form under a new name and use such to manipulate the collation of results.

    “We therefore urge Nigerians and lovers of democracy all over the world to unite in condemning this scheme by the Buhari presidency to use Amina Zakari to enmesh our election into unnecessary controversy and trigger a political crisis in our country, just because they have realised that President Buhari cannot win the presidential election.

    “President Buhari and Amina Zakari should know that Nigerians have made up their minds in rallying behind our presidential candidate, Atiku Abubakar, as their next president and no amount of machination, shenanigans and scheming will stop this resolve.

    It added that the Buhari presidency will never have its way in rigging the coming elections through a self-succession strategy, vowing that the PDP would insist that votes must count and that only the will of Nigerians, as expressed at the ballot will prevail.

  • 2019 budget and the mirage called change

    IN January, 2016, this writer didn’t have the privilege to dissect President Muhammadu Buhari’s New Year message chiefly because there was an urgent need to address the humongous appropriations contained in the Appropriation Bill presented to the National Assembly at that time. Besides, the Christmas had been ‘celebrated’ with mournful solemnity by most families and it was important that one drew the attention of government to the puzzling financial allocations in its budgetary documents at a period when it was asking the people to tighten up their belts for an economic recession. Yes, Buhari did promise the citizenry better days in his first speech on New Year’s day as a democratically-elected President but there was simply nothing in the administration’ first national budget proposal to convince one that those in the seat of power would conform to the President’s famed ascetic lifestyle. Instead, what confronted us as a people was the fact that, even with its new ‘Change’ mantra, the administration would still have to pander to the questionable inputs and official frivolities that have been recurring decimals in our appropriation policy over the years. In that budget, billions of Naira was marked down as expenses on things worth not being repeated here. Those who wish to refresh their memory may wish to go through a piece published on this page on January 2, 2016 titled “Of Pain, Gain and Change.”

    Interestingly, as I settle down to put my thoughts together on this week’s piece this January 2, 2019, the first news item that popped up on my news flash was on the details of the 2019 budget. You see, when the Senate President, Bukola Saraki, tore into shred, the N8.83trn 2019 budget, describing it as “hopeless and deceptive” based on the benchmark which he said was higher than the current price of barrel of oil in the international market, you would have thought the man was knocking the truth on the head without a tint of treacherous politicking which Saraki and his ilk are known for. But that would be too simplistic a bait to swallow when available facts indicate that the National Assembly, with its adversarial role in the last three and a half years, has continued to stick to its tradition of farming billions of Naira to its own nest. It is, therefore, not surprising that, once again, the National Assembly is poised to get a one-off allocation of N125bn in the 2019 projections without a breakdown of what the money would be used for. Ask its leadership what it did with the allocations of the previous years and you are likely to get the standard response that whatever was allocated to the legislature was a mere insignificant percentage considering the entire budget figures. Perhaps, that also justifies why legislatives aides hardly get paid on time regardless of the huge sums paid to lawmakers monthly, outside the official allocations, to maintain offices that are often under lock and key as they go on recess at every drop of a pin!

    In as much as no one expects a legislature that is sold to its own shenanigans to be taken seriously, it is imperative for the President to always take a second look at the allocations to The Presidency before forwarding same to the National Assembly while ministers should be mandated to do same with Ministries, Departments and Agencies. As regards The Presidency, certain things just shouldn’t be allowed to creep into the list especially in an administration that promises change. For example, why, for the life of me, allocate almost N800m for the “mandatory upgrade and installation of live TV and internet service” on one of the presidential jets when it could have been converted to commercial use since it has such features? Who are the important personalities flying these jets anyway? If Buhari had sold off most of these jets in the presidential fleet as he threatened to do during the 2015 political campaigns, the government wouldn’t have been burdened with the responsibility of requesting for various sums of huge allocation to carry out a ‘compliance mandatory upgrade and installation of internet service on a second presidential aircraft (N50m)” and another upgrades on “other presidential air fleet” worth N650m. It is not just about how these characters bandy figures around and leave poor Nigerians aghast but also about probity and accountability which they promised with so much gusto four years ago. When the executive says that, in 2019 alone, it plans to spend N4.3bn on “annual maintenance of mechanical/electrical installations in Aso Rock outside the millions of naira that would go into foodstuffs/catering materials and refreshments, you cannot help but wonder if the leadership is not bent on eating the rest of the populace into poverty.

    Yearly, we criticise the National Assembly for spending billions on the purchase of cars for its members and bureaucracy.  But has anyone bothered to take an inventory of vehicle purchase by The Presidency? It has become a ritual that defies logic and common sense. If there is anything this administration has wittingly or unwittingly consigned to the dustbin of history, it is the monetization policy of the President Olusegun Obasanjo era. Today, it is not uncommon to see top government officials riding in convoys in Abuja. The other day at the Federal Secretariat, yours truly bumped into the convoy of the Head of Service of the Federation and wondered who could be after the life of such ‘poor’ public servant that she has to move under heavy security presence. I marvel at the array of cars on display in that convoy. Even some serving ministers can’t boast of such lifestyle. Anyway, someone muttered that some privileged directors do have escorts too. And that’s probably why the State House plans to spend a whopping N607m in 2019 for the “phased replacement of vehicles, spares and tyres” in its operational fleet while another N53m would go into the purchase of tyres for bullet proof vehicles, plain Toyota cars, CVU vehicles, Land Cruiser and Prado jeeps, ambulances and other utility operational vehicles. This, I must stress, is outside the N456m that would be spent on acquiring security and operational vehicles by the Office of the Chief Security Officer to the President. Phew!

    Sometimes, you just wonder when things would begin to change for the better as Buhari promised us in 2016. The answer seems far off. Do we assume that the President is unaware of the saying that the devil is in the details? Shouldn’t it concern all of us that too many loose words are being used to justify the allocation of scarce resources? Why is The Presidency vague on the number, type, models and brands of the ‘operational vehicles’ that would be purchased, serviced, sold or phased out? What, if I may ask, is so special about a detention facility that the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission would be spending over N2bn to complete the one in Gombe State; another N3.1bn to expand the one in Port Harcourt; and over N2.6bn for the Maiduguri detention camp? Well, as it is, this country must be brimming with corrupt elements that we not construct more detention facilities than factories!

    The question is: what rigours go into budgeting especially allocations to key government agencies? It appears the officials simply apply the cut and paste rule in which minor adjustments are carried out on past documents and then submitted as fresh budgetary projections. Nothing else could justify the needless repetitions of items on the bill every year. For the avoidance of doubt, it was the malaise that plagued the Peoples Democratic Party-led government for 16 years until it was booted out. I hasten to say that I am yet to see any significant difference in approach as cases of padding and actual tampering of figures with the connivance of the legislature persist. With the exclusive snippets published by this paper in the last few days, it is difficult not to believe the joke out there that no serious brainwork goes into what has become a routine by those who handle the annual ritual. That the cut and paste theorist could be right is a scary possibility. But what is scarier is the fact that the nation will continue to be progressively moving in circles if it doesn’t free itself from the shackles of allocating resources to white elephants. Perhaps, that is the perspective from which one can understand Saraki’s blurred vision of hopelessness and deception in the 2019 Appropriation Bill even if he wouldn’t acknowledge that it is the same old story where he superintends as leader.

    In 2016, I had admonished the President to, among other things, “re-jig the Presidency’s appropriations to reflect the pain he claims to feel for the suffering masses.” I said it was a tall order then knowing the way the bureaucracy works. Three years after, I’m sorry to say that profligate budgeting appears to be having a swell time – meaning there is no change in a promised era of change! And that’s a pity.

  • Behind the show of shame at the National Assembly

    When the chairman and presidential candidate of the Fresh Democratic Party FRESH, Rev. Chris Okotie recently began his campaign for an interim government, he ventured out as a lone ranger. Just six weeks to the 2019 general election, some minority groups have come out in support of the Reverend’s controversial proposition.

    For the benefit of those who are not aware, the pastor-politician wrote open letters to the top political parties some months back, asking that he should be adopted to head an interim government of National Reconstruction and Reconciliation. Although he gave no specific time frame for the transition government he proposed in his letters to the All Progressive Congress (APC), the People’s Democratic Party (PDP) and the Coalition of United Political Parties (CUPP), he canvassed the view that Nigeria needed a new constitution before moving forward.

    In his letters, Okotie defended his call for the suspension of the ongoing transition, so that the multitude of problems facing the nation could be fully addressed. He went on: “As we approach another election cycle, the prognosis for a national crisis conveys a reality of frightening proportions. We are confronted by existential threats that seek to engender the fragmentation and disintegration of our nation as a holistic entity. Nigeria has become a divided and segregated society like never before. We have become polarized by ethnicity; we have become balkanized by religious fundamentalism. We have become fractured by political insensitivity and leadership disability.

    “The advent of the Boko Haram insurgents and the ubiquitous killer herdsmen phenomenon have further exacerbated social insecurity and cast nebulous clouds over the viability of our union. The concentric arrangements of the WAZOBIA alliances have been a disaster; engendering the marginalization of the smaller ethnic units, thus, perforating the canopy of the federalism under whose aegis we co-exist.”

    Few weeks ago, different minority groups followed Okotie’s line of thought by a public declaration for the postponement of the 2019 election and call for a transition government to be set up to produce a new constitution that would satisfy the yearnings for a true federal structure for Nigeria before any new election could be held. The groups cited all the existentialist problems that threaten our nation as stated in the Okotie letters.

    These groups, which had members from across the southern and middle belt zones comprises well known  Nigerians like Mr. George Akinola of the Yoruba Liberation Movement, Dr. Fred Agbeyegbe representing the Itsekiri Nation, Dr. Uduma Idiaka of the Biafran Coalition and Mr. Tony Nnadi who represented the Lower Niger Congress. They addressed the press in Lagos and called for the postponement of the 2019 election. They argued that the problem facing Nigeria is not election but how to reconstitute itself back to a true federation as the only viable mechanism for dealing with agitations for self-determination and other sovereignty issues.

    They insisted, like Rev. Okotie had said in his letters few months ago, that Nigeria needs to first address the critical issues raised by the disputed constitutional arrangement of Nigeria, before a realistic election could be feasible. There’s a convergence of opinion between Rev. Okotie and the minority groups in almost every key point. This is not an accident as a strategic but silent minority believes that under the extant 1999 constitution, governance has been reduced to motion without movement.

    Nigeria has been ruled by the APC and the PDP, and it is now obvious that there’s no difference between the two parties. Neither has been able to deal with the fundamental structural problems of the nation because they are hampered by a constitution that Okotie says is moribund. It is a luxury to run our country as if we are fighting  a civil war. Cry of marginalization and ethnic hegemony continue to rent the air because all the constituent units that make up the federation are disgusted with the 1999 constitution.

    We don’t have to wait like some people think, until the palpable, widespread discontents explode into a shooting war before we act. The chaos that almost marred President Muhamadu Buhari’s recent presentation of the 2019 budget at the National Assembly was unfortunate and unprecedented. We had never seen that type of scene before in the law chamber, and  this foreshadows what is to come after the 2019 presidential election has been won and lost.

    Let us revisit Rev. Okotie’s thought on the subject of restructuring: “My mandate, therefore, will be to set up an interim government which I have christened Government of National Reconciliation and Reconstruction as the mechanical instrumentality for the crystallization of the new Nigeria of our dreams. It would be predicated on a new concept of Aboriginal democracy.

    “Our current democracy has been hijacked by elitism, mysticism and Satanism. Aboriginal democracy will focus on cultural historicity, evolutional modernity and global relativity as the necessary ingredients of our evolutional political indigenization. Under this system, the current legislature would merge with the judiciary to create a unique judicature that administers justice and shares the enactment of legislative responsibilities with the presidency. This would save us the huge cost of running the National Assembly and obviate all the paralyzing debates that often stalled the passage of bills.”

    We have not heard the last word on this restructuring agitation, as the wind of change continues to blow in that direction.

     

    • Johnson wrote from Akure, Ondo State.
  • Why National Assembly must pass Police Bill

    After a two-month intensive training, another batch of officers and men of the Lagos Command, Nigeria Police Force (NPF) has graduated, trained in Human Rights and Rule of Law.  ADEBISI ONANUGA reports that the training also prepared them for the new Police that will secure the country after the passage of the Police Bill, which is at the National Assembly. The old colonial law governing the force was passed 75 years ago and has not seen any comprehensive review since its promulgation in 1943.

    Last Thursday, 300 officers and men of the Lagos Command of the Nigeria Police Force graduated after a two-month intensive training in human rights.

    The men of the command, from constables to Superintendent of Police (SPs), were taken through: “Human Rights awareness as contained in Chapter 4 of the 1999 Constitution; Basic International Human Rights Standards for Law Enforcement; Dealing with Victims, Suspects of Human Rights Abuses; Investigative Interviewing; Police powers and Human Rights; Humanitarian Laws; Child Rights Laws; United Nation’s Code of Conduct for Law Enforcement Officers and the Lagos State Domestic Violence Law 2007; Laws on Use of Fire Arms and the Police Bill before the Senate, among others.

    The training programme, which was organised by the Lagos State Command in collaboration with the Crime Victims Foundation of Nigeria (CRIVIFON), held at the Police Officers’ Mess, SoboArobiodu Street, GRA, Ikeja.

    In attendance were a representative of the Director, Directorate of Public Prosecution (DPP), Mrs Monisola Osibogun; Head, Human Rights Education, National Human Rights Commission (NHRC), Lagos, Mrs Amaka Omo; Vice Chairman of the Nigerian Bar Association (NBA), Ikeja Branch, Mrs Roselyn Obakpolo and the Baale of Ishen-Olu, Ogun State, Chief  Abdul-Rahman Adekunle Disu and an Investment Consultant and Chief Executive of Emancipation Consult, Dr Adekunle Okubule among others.

    The Commissioner of Police (CP) Imohimi Edgar, told the graduating officers to take human rights with all seriousness in the performance of their duties to the public.

    The course, he said, came about because of the keen interest the Inspector General of Police (IGP) has in respect to human rights.

    Edgar, who was represented by his Deputy, Elkana Ayuba, regretted that most officers do not know their rights during election duties.

    He urged them to put what they have learnt into practice during election and share the knowledge acquired with their colleagues and surbodinates.

    “If you decide to go against the law, you carry your burden alone. If you infringe on anybody’s right, you are on your own. In these days of social media, the actions of officers are being recorded somewhere, particularly during elections. Recording gadgets are now everywhere. So, you need to be careful in your actions,” he warned the officers.”

    CRIVIFON Executive Director, Gloria Egbuji had earlier disclosed that with the graduation of the officers, a total of 13,000 would have been trained on human rights since the programme commenced 2006.

    Egbuji said “We are already embarking on rights education and enlightenment of the public to interface with what we are doing with the police so that they as civilians will know their rights too.

    “We would continue to seize this opportunity to call on the human rights activists to appreciate the societal challenges of the Nigeria police Force and give them all the cooperation and encouragement in their efforts to succeed in this programme because the ultimate aim for it is to see that we attain enviable status in human rights practices’, she contended.

    According to her, “the reactions of the public to the programme have been overwhelmingly encouraging. The effects on the NPF image are very glaring. Gone are the days when police cells are packed full, cases are now discharged as soon as practicable, bailable offences are given free, the cells are kept clean, victims and suspects are humanely treated with empathy by the police.

    “Police is now a true friend. Human rights officers display‘ their numbers at the Station and you can always call on them when you need them. Do not be afraid of police; go to them they will treat you better now than before. Of course, the programme is faced with a lot of challenges being a new programme some of the DPOs are resistant to change and it has been difficult to fund the trainings”, she assured.

    In a lecture delivered at the ceremony, the National Coordinator, Network of Police Reformers In Nigeria (NOPRIN) Foundation, Okechukwu Nwanguma, said the importance of human rights training for the police cannot be over emphasized adding that  “human rights training for police officers is an essential means of promoting human rights-based approaches to policing”.

    The Police Reform Bill

    According to Nwanguma, the Nigerian Police Force is governed by a colonial law, which has seen no comprehensive review since its initial promulgation in 1943.  He said the new police bill has gone through several stages of public consultation and a legal audit of all the laws engaging the police and other stakeholders from 1999 till date.

    On principles behind the bill

    According to Nwanguma: “Section 1 of the proposed bill provides for: a Police Force that is more responsible and responsive to the needs of the general public and has entrenched in its operations the values of fairness, justice and equity; repositioning of the Police Force to uphold and safeguard the fundamental rights of every person in Nigeria in its operations; bring about a positive change in the public perception of the Police Force by ensuring that its functions are carried out in a manner sensitive to the needs and well-being of the general public; empower the Police Force to efficiently and effectively prevent crimes without unduly threatening the values of liberty and privacy of persons in Nigeria.

    It also strengthens the Police Force in carrying out its primary functions, including ensuring the safety and security of all persons, communities and properties in Nigeria; ensure that the Police Force carries out its functions in a manner that brings those functions closer to the communities by creating the enabling environment to foster cooperation and partnership between it and the communities it serves to effectively combat, reduce or eradicate crimes; develop professionalism in the Police Force by ensuring the provision of relevant training in all Police formations in Nigeria for enhanced performance; and improve overall performance in the rendering of Police services, particularly in the handling and treatment of victims of crimes.

    On alignment with International rules and ethics of policing

    Nwanguma said one of the key omissions from the current Police Act is a Code of Conduct that includes the prohibition of torture. The Bill in concordance with the Anti-Torture Act 2017, and the United Nations Code of Conduct for Law Enforcement Officials attempts to address this omission by providing for a Code of Conduct.

    According to him, “Article 5 of the UN Code of Conduct states that, “No law enforcement official may inflict, instigate or tolerate any act of torture or other cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment, nor may any law enforcement official invoke superior orders or exceptional circumstances such as a state of war or a threat of war, a threat to national security, internal political instability or any other public emergency as a justification of torture or other cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment.”  Section 3 (1) of the Anti-Torture Act also stipulates, that no exceptional circumstances can be invoked as a justification for torture.

    New areas in the proposed Police Bill

    According to Nwanguma, the proposed Police Bill provides for:

    Prohibition of arrest in lieu – A person shall not be arrested in place of a suspect.

    Humane treatment of arrested suspect- A suspect shall (a) be accorded humane treatment, having regard to his right to the dignity of his person and, (b) not be subjected to any form of torture, cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment.

    Alignment with on-going reform within the Nigeria Criminal Justice Sector

    He noted: “Sections 33 to 36 of the proposed bill incorporate the human rights provisions in the Administration of Criminal Justice Act (ACJA), which were basically drawn from the Nigerian Constitution. In recognition of the demonstrable link between unlawful and arbitrary arrest and the torture and ill-treatment of detainees, the sections of the Bill relating to arrest are drafted to incorporate safeguards, including strict guidelines on what constitutes a warrant for arrest and judicial review that will prevent the misuse of this provision.

    To promote effective implementation of other sections of the ACJA, the bill should also include:

    that the Police Force shall collaborate with and maintain close working relationships with any Government agency or relevant private initiatives in the establishment of schemes or mechanisms offering legal services to accused persons, detainees or accused persons in police custody in need of legal services to ensure that they have full access to justice as laid down under the relevant provisions of Chapter IV of the Constitution.

    This will be done by: facilitating access to legal support for suspects, accused persons or detainees in police custody; ensuring that police officers are assigned to work under the relevant scheme providing necessary assistance as may be required by legal counsel; and submitting to the Attorney-General of the Federation and the National Assembly an annual report on the state of implementation of responsibilities referred to under section 5(2) of this Act. The Attorney-General of the Federation shall after a review of the annual report received, send his findings and recommendations to the President and publish same in his official website.

    “The Inspector-General of Police and the head of every agency authorised by law to make arrests shall remit quarterly to the Attorney-General of the Federation a record of all arrests made with or without warrant in relation to Federal offences within Nigeria.

    “The Commissioner of Police of a State and the head of every agency authorised by law to make arrest within a State shall remit quarterly to the Attorney General of that State a record of all arrests made with or without warrant in relation to State offences or arrests within the State. The report shall contain the full particulars of arrested suspects

    “A register of arrests containing all particulars shall be kept in the prescribed form at every police station or agency authorised by law to make arrests, and every arrest, whether made with or without warrant, within the local limits of the police station or agency, or within the Federal Capital Territory, Abuja, shall be entered accordingly by the officer in charge of the police station or official in charge of the agency as soon as the arrested suspect is brought to the station or agency”.

    On Funding and Performance Management of the Police

    He said the proposed bill includes a section that makes provisions for police funding framework and an annual policing plan, which must be linked to funding to ensure accountability for cost and performance, just as human rights provisions and accountability mechanisms ensure accountability for conduct. The policing plan should be developed with inputs from the Police Force Headquarters and all the various police formations nationwide.

    To ensure efficient financial planning, he said the bill provides that: The Police Force shall, not later than 30th June of each financial year, submit to the Minister in respect of the preceding financial year, an annual report on the activities of the Police Force in such form as the Minister may direct. The report should contain; (a) a copy of the audited accounts of the Police Force for that year together with the Auditor–General’s report on the accounts; (b) information and description of all contributions made to the Police Force, including contributions other than cash; and (c) such other information as the Minister may request.

    He said the Police Force shall not later than 30th September of each year, submit to the National Assembly through the supervising Minister estimates of its income and expenditure for the next financial year and where necessary, submit supplementary or adjusted statements of estimated income and expenditure to the Minister.

    The Police Force shall, in preparing its estimates obtain inputs from the Force Headquarters, Zonal Headquarters, State Commands, Area Commands and Divisional Commands on their budgetary needs based on the annual policing plans for the various policing formations to be included in the overall estimates for the Police Force for the next financial year

    On Community Policing

    He said it is also instructive to note that positive policy initiatives, such as community policing, are also incorporated to guarantee the incorporation of community policing philosophy in the Nigeria Police. For long-term sustainability, he said the bill provides for Community Policing Forums as platform for community police engagement and sustainability of community policing. This helps to insulate it from the whims and caprices of political leadership (Sections 60 to 65). Community Policing as we all know gives effect to better intelligence gathering, community engagement, effective communication and accountability which are the hallmarks of democratic policing.

     

  • 2019: Ekweremadu urges Nigerians to embrace Christlike virtues

    Deputy Senate President, Senator Ike Ekweremadu, on Monday urged Nigerians to imbibe the virtues of love, fairness, selfless service, and commitment to public good as exemplified by Christ in order to ensure hitch-free conduct of the 2019 general elections.

    Ekweremadu who made the call in his goodwill message to Nigerians at Christmas, explained that the National Assembly had amended the constitution to quicken the dispensation of justice in pre-election disputes.

    He said: “The forthcoming general election is critical for the survival and deepening of democracy in Nigeria. So, I believe that embracing the Christlike virtues of love, peace, fairness, and selfless service to fatherland is key to eschewing the desperation and pursuit of narrow interests that fuel vote-buying, intimidation, and other electoral manipulations that in turn trigger electoral violence.

    Read Also: Atiku yet to convince, placate Ekweremadu

    “Slow pace of justice delivery has been an incentive for ills. Therefore, just as we amended the Constitution in 2010 to prescribe a time frame for the conclusion of election petitions, the current National Assembly has further amended Section 285 of the Constitution to set time frames for the conclusion of pre-election disputes such as issues arising from primary elections. The President has also assented to this particular amendment to make it part of our Constitution.

    “Going forward, every pre-election matter must be filed not later than 14 days from the date of the occurrence of the event, decision or action complained of in the suit.

    “Judgement shall be delivered within 180 days of institution of the suit

    “An appeal from a pre-election matter shall be heard and disposed within 60 days.

    “That way, every aggrieved persons can rest assured that they don’t have to wait forever again to get justice. Every wrong done before or during elections will now be remedied speedily”.

    Ekweremadu wished Nigerians a merry Christmas, urging them to also continue to pray for the country.

  • Budget presentation: NANS wants NASS to apologise to Nigerians

    The National Association of Nigerian Students (NANS) wants  members of the National Assembly to apologise to Nigerians for what it described as lawmakers’  unruly behaviour during President Muhammadu Buhari’s 2019 budget presentation .

    The Public Relations Officer of NANS, Mr Azeez Adeyemi, made the call yesterday  in Abeokuta.

    Adeyemi condemned the lawmakers’ behaviour, saying that it had further tarnished the external image of the country.

    He urged the lawmakers to always promote the integrity of the country, while according due respect to its leaders.

    Read also: Video: Buhari hailed at National Assembly

    He stressed that the legislators should jettison personal and political interests while treating matters of national interest.

    He said:”Nigerian students believe that members of the National Assembly should be role models to Nigerian youths and students by displaying worthy and enviable character.

    “It is important to place respect for the honour and integrity of our dear country above any personal or political interests.

    “We, hereby, call on the leadership of the National Assembly to, as a matter of necessity, apologise to the entire people of Nigeria over the members’ unruly conduct during the president’s budget presentation,” he said.

    The NANS spokesperson, nonetheless, urged the National Assembly members to scrutinise the 2019 appropriation bill before its passage so as to ensure the outcome was in the best interest of all Nigerians.