Tag: Reps

  • Reps to investigate NMDPRA/Dangote faceoff

    Reps to investigate NMDPRA/Dangote faceoff

    The House of Representatives on Tuesday gave its committees on Petroleum Resources (Midstream) and (Downstream) to investigate the cause of the brewing dispute between the Nigerian Midstream and Downstream Petroleum Regulatory Authority (NMDPRA) and Dangote Refinery with a view to ensuring quick resolution.

    Adopting a motion of urgent public importance sponsored by the Chairman of the House Committee on Rules and Business, Francis Waiver (APC, Delta), the House directed that relevant stakeholders in the downstream value chain should be involved in the process of resolving the disputes with a view to forestalling possible fuel crisis during and after the yuletide.

    In moving the motion, Waiver drew attention to the provisions of Section 88 (1) and (2) of the 1999 Constitution (as amended) which empowers the National Assembly to conduct investigations into the activities of any authority executing or administering laws made by the National Assembly;

    He said Section 29 (3) of the Petroleum Industry Act 2021 provides that the Nigerian Midstream and Downstream Petroleum Regulatory Authority (NMDPRA) shall be responsible for the technical and commercial regulation of the midstream and downstream petroleum operations in the petroleum industry.

    He disclosed that the dispute between the Nigerian Midstream and Downstream Petroleum Regulatory Authority (NMDPRA) and Dangote Refinery arose over alleged arbitrary grant of importation licenses, allegation of corruption against the NMDPRA Chief Executive, Petroleum Motor Spirit pricing benchmarks, and other sundry issues.

    Waive expressed concern that if the brewing dispute between the Nigerian Midstream and Downstream Petroleum Regulatory Authority (NMDPRA) and Dangote Refinery is not nipped in the bud, it is likely to get escalated and thus lead to fuel supply crisis during the yuletide season and beyond.

    He said the Dangote Refinery represents a strategic national investment poised to end Nigeria’s historical dependence on imported Petroleum Motor Spirit, conserve foreign exchange, stabilize domestic supply, and moderate fuel pricing in the long term.

    He maintained that unresolved regulatory disagreements between a statutory regulator and the country’s largest domestic refinery pose a real risk of supply chain disruption, pricing volatility, policy inconsistency, and erosion of investor confidence in Nigeria’s petroleum sector.

    The Delta Lawmaker said that the absence of a clearly articulated, transparent, and consistently applied Petroleum Motor Spirit pricing framework creates room for arbitrary determinations, and market distortions to the detriment of Nigerian consumers.

    He stressed that Nigerians continue to experience frequent Petroleum Motor Spirit price fluctuations without adequate public disclosure of:(a) (b) (c) (d) Refinery gate prices;Regulatory pricing assumptions,Cost and margin components, and the comparative impact of local refining versus import-based pricing; convinced that energy security, downstream stability, and consumer protection cannot be achieved where regulatory uncertainty and pricing opacity persist.

    He said urgent legislative investigation is required to clarify regulatory boundaries, harmonize pricing expectations, and restore confidence in Nigeria’s downstream petroleum governance architecture.

  • Reps vow to end sale of substandard drugs, protect Nigerians’ health

    Reps vow to end sale of substandard drugs, protect Nigerians’ health

    Speaker of the House of Representatives, Abbas Tajudeen, on Tuesday declared that the National Assembly will not allow any company—local or multinational—to enrich themselves at the expense of human lives by supplying Nigerians with fake, adulterated, or substandard drugs.

    Speaking at a public hearing on drug trafficking, substance abuse, and the regulation of alcohol, tobacco, and pharmaceutical industries in Nigeria, Speaker Abbas stressed that corporate profits must never take precedence over national well-being.

    Represented by the Chairman of the House Committee on France/Nigeria Friendship Group, Adegboye Kalejaiye Paul, he emphasized the need for transparency and accountability from all stakeholders.

    “This is not an exercise for evasive responses or selective disclosures. It is an evidence-based national accountability process. Any attempt to mislead the Committee, withhold information, manipulate data, or submit falsified documents will be treated as contempt of the National Assembly under Section 89 of the Constitution,” he warned.

    Speaker Abbas assured Nigerians of the House’s commitment to implementing the outcomes of the investigation, including strengthening regulatory frameworks, imposing stricter penalties for violators, improving port efficiency, and reducing the circulation of harmful substances. He also pledged to enforce ethical advertising, expand public health and rehabilitation programmes, and collaborate fully with strategic global partners such as WHO, UNODC, INL, USAID, and the European Union.

    “Nigeria must never again become a dumping ground for toxic substances, criminal and fraudulent drugs, counterfeit medicines, unregulated alcohol, or predatory corporate practices,” he said, noting that the investigative hearing is not a routine legislative exercise but a critical step in addressing one of the country’s most pressing national emergencies.

    He said, “Nigeria is dealing with a dangerous and rapidly escalating crisis; one that reaches into every family member, every community, and every geographical source. Drug trafficking and substance abuse are destroying young lives and claiming innocent victims.

    “Harmful and unregistered alcoholic beverages are flooding our markets. Unethical tobacco marketing continues to target unsuspecting youths and often endangers Nigerians.

    “This problem threatens not only our public health, but also our national security, our economic productivity, and the future of our youth. Across the nation, we are witnessing heartbreaking realities. We see the rising addictions to codeine-based syrups, tramadol, and synthetic narcotics.

    “We see fake and expired medicines circulating in our markets and hospitals. We see cheap and highly toxic alcoholic mixtures that continue to damage the health of millions of Nigerians. Tobacco and narcotic products are being marketed in ways that subtly but deliberately appeal to our youth and through a network of compromised ports, terminals, and border systems.

    “Illicit drugs continue to find their way into our country. These challenges are deeply connected. They form part of the systemic failure in regulation, enforcement, corporate behaviour, and public awareness.

    “Solving them will require not only stronger enforcement, but meaningful policy reforms, institutional accountability, corporate responsibility, and comprehensive public health interventions, adding that the goal is to cover gaps, enforce accountability, strengthen regulations, and protect the Nigerian people.

    While stressing the need for concrete measures to tackle drug abuse and trafficking in the country, chairman of the Ad-hoc Committee on Drugs Trafficking and Substance Abuse, Oluwatimehin Adelegbe, said, “We gather under the mandate of the Nigerian people—and under the solemn weight of a national emergency that threatens the soul of our country.

    “Substance abuse, illicit drug trafficking, unregulated pharmaceutical distribution, predatory alcohol marketing, and aggressive tobacco promotion have converged into a dangerous crisis. This crisis is stealing the health of our youth, weakening our labour force, destabilizing our communities, and undermining our collective future.”

    He said the committee was set up not as a ceremonial exercise, but as a constitutionally empowered intervention, rooted in Sections 88 and 89 of the 1999 Constitution (as amended), to seek the truth, expose systemic failures, and recommend strong corrective measures.

    According to him, the mission of the committee is to investigate, to protect, to reform and ultimately, to save lives, adding that “this national reality can no longer be ignored, because across the country, cannabis is smoked freely in the street like cigarette, methamphetamine usage is spreading across the Nation at an alarming rate and codeine-based cough syrups are sold like soft drinks.

    He said further that tramadol 200mg is trafficked with the same coordination as hard narcotics, cheap and hazardous alcoholic mixtures are destroying young men and women in motor parks, campuses, and marketplaces, tobacco companies continue to exploit loopholes to target minors through flavours, informal retail channels, and deceptive marketing, while substandard pharmaceuticals, fake spirits, and unregistered products flood our markets unchecked.

    He lamented that the nation’s ports, airports, and borders has remain vulnerable to trafficking syndicates who exploit weak enforcement systems, while entire communities have been crippled by addiction, crime, and preventable deaths.

    The Ondo lawmaker stressed that the country was losing too many lives, too many futures, too many families to drug abuse, adding that “as lawmakers, we must rise to the responsibility placed upon us. The Nigerian people expect answers, solutions, and firm action—not excuses”.

    He told the audience that the investigation is not anti-business or witch-hunt, but an accountability session, saying, “We support industries, we value investors, and we welcome innovation. No business model can be allowed to thrive at the expense of Nigerian lives. No profit margin can justify the destruction of our youth. No corporate actor will be permitted to hide behind compliance rhetoric while fuelling an addiction epidemic. Every stakeholder is a partner in protecting Nigeria, and your cooperation is not only expected, but required.”

    He said the committee will not accept half-truths, evasions, or attempts to mislead the Committee, saying “anyone who obstructs this process understands the constitutional implications of doing so. We shall, before the wrap-up of this investigation, call for a National conference on this discourse.

    He disclosed that the outcome of the investigation will lead to possible reforms to the NAFDAC, NDLEA, Customs, and SON Acts, enactment of the National Alcohol Act, enforcement of “smoke-free spaces, digital tracking of pharmaceutical products & enforcement of drug prescriptions law, legal framework for harm reduction programs, and a strengthened national drug control framework, among others.

    He said the findings from the investigation will guide legislative action, executive enforcement, and national policy direction for many years to come.

  • Reps pass bill to establish specialised medical college for armed forces for second reading

    Reps pass bill to establish specialised medical college for armed forces for second reading

    The House of Representatives on Thursday passed for second reading a bill seeking to establish a specialised medical college for members of the Nigerian Armed Forces

    Proposal for Establishing a Nigerian Military Medical College.

    The bill sponsored by the Chairman of the House Committee on Defence, Babajimi Benson (APC, Lagos) will be responsible for training medical doctors, specialist physicians, and allied health professionals for the Nigerian Armed Forces, as well as the other uniformed services.

    The proposal draws on international models, national workforce data, and the operational needs of a modern military with key drivers including the ongoing medical exodus of Nigerian physicians, frequent industrial actions in civilian medical education, the need for military-unique medical training (tropical medicine, trauma, CBRN, austere medicine), and the operational advantage of a reliable, disciplined medical corps exempt from civilian strikes.

    Leading the debate on the bill, Benson said the healthcare capacity of a nation is a key determinant of its security posture, adding that for the Nigerian Army, dependable medical support is essential for force health protection, casualty management, preventive medicine, and the welfare of troops and their dependents.

    He said that despite significant strides by the Nigerian Army Medical Corps (NAMC), the wider national health system faces persistent shortages of doctors, unequal distribution of specialists, and a continuous outflow of medical professionals to higher-income countries.

    According to him, establishing a military medical college will create a sustainable, mission-focused pipeline of physicians trained for the unique demands of military service.

    He stressed that Nigeria has experienced a significant outflow of medical professionals over the past decade, adding that a 2022 study on physician emigration reported that “between 2016 and 2018, over 9,000 medical doctors left Nigeria seeking opportunities abroad, with many more expressing intent to emigrate.

    “National reporting and government statements indicate that thousands more have migrated in subsequent years; one widely-cited review and national press coverage estimated that around 16,000 doctors emigrated over a five-year period, leaving an estimated 55,000 doctors remaining in the country.

    “Other analyses suggest that as many as half of licensed medical doctors trained in Nigeria have emigrated over the course of their careers, contributing to a low physician density compared to global benchmarks.”

    He maintained, “The situation in the Nigerian Army (NA) and sister services is even more dire. From 2019 to 2025, only 21 doctors could be commissioned into the NA due to low civilian interest. During the same time period, 21 doctors left the system. Presently, there are only 189 doctors serving the entire army, of which nearly 40% (71) are on various specialist training in civilian institutions outside the army.

    “The army requirement of doctors is at least 15 times the current number. There are similar statistics for the sister services. Generally, retention rates are far below recruitment, leading to a net loss of skilled manpower with attendant consequences.

    He said the losses have direct operational implications, saying Low physician-to-population ratios hinder routine health services, surgical capacity, and the ability to staff military medical facilities with experienced specialists.

    He said, according to WHO indicators, Nigeria’s physician density remains well below recommended thresholds. Recurrent strike actions by university staff unions in Nigeria have led to prolonged academic calendar disruptions.

    He maintained that repeated strikes reduce student motivation, extend training time, and negatively affect knowledge retention among medical undergraduates, adding that research shows that students exposed to frequent strike-related disruptions are at higher risk of repeated examinations and delayed completion.

    He argued that military-run medical institutions internationally are typically insulated from such disruptions because they operate under military command, with students often receiving service contracts and being part of a broader defence education system.

    He said this institutional continuity shortens training disruptions and maintains operational readiness, saying several established military medical schools demonstrate the feasibility and value of dedicated military medical education.

    He said, “The Armed Forces Medical College (AFMC) in Pune, India — established in 1948 — trains physicians for the Indian Armed Forces, offering undergraduate and postgraduate training with strong links to operational military medicine and public health (AFMC official website).

    “Similarly, the Uniformed Services University of the Health Sciences (USUHS) in the United States provides a military-centered medical education that integrates leadership, military medicine, and biomedical research into the curriculum (USUHS official website).

    “These institutions produce doctors who are both clinically competent and familiar with military structures, ethics, and operational needs. Their graduates provide dependable staffing for military hospitals, research in defence-relevant health topics, and leadership in field medical operations.

    “A dedicated military medical college can create contractual obligations (service terms) and incentives that encourage retention. Service scholarships, guaranteed employment, and career progression within the military reduce the financial and professional motives to emigrate.

    “Military educational institutions operate within defence structures that are not subject to civilian academic union strikes, ensuring continuity of training. This stability reduces prolonged study timelines and minimizes the indirect costs associated with delayed graduations and professional uncertainty.

    “Military physicians require competencies beyond civilian training: battlefield trauma care, mass casualty management, CBRN response, tropical medicine, austere resource management, and leadership under stress. A military medical college can integrate these components into undergraduate and postgraduate curricula (USUHS, AFMC).

    “Having in-house trained physicians ensures availability of personnel familiar with military protocols and ready for rapid deployment in national emergencies, peacekeeping missions, and joint operations. It also reduces reliance on civilian secondees during crises.

    ‘A military medical college can focus on operational research relevant to the Nigerian security context: trauma systems, endemic disease control in deployment areas, mental health among troops, and rehabilitative medicine. This localized research agenda supports evidence-based policy for force health protection.

    “The proposed Nigerian Military Medical College (NMMC) will be a fully accredited medical school operating under the Ministry of Defence in collaboration with the National Universities Commission (NUC) and the Medical and Dental Council of Nigeria (MDCN).

    “While initial costs are substantial, long-term savings will accrue from reduced reliance on knee-jerk medical staff recruitment, lower medical evacuation costs, improved troop health and reduced sick days, and retention bonuses avoided due to staff emigration. Additionally, the NMMC could offer paid services and postgraduate training to civilians as a revenue stream.

    “NMMC governance will include a Board of Governors chaired by the Chief of Defence Staff, an academic council with representatives from NUC and MDCN, and a Medical Education Unit responsible for curriculum standards and quality assurance. Periodic external reviews and international partnerships will ensure compliance with global medical education standards.”

  • Centre urges Reps to safeguard Niger Delta’s hard-won peace

    Centre urges Reps to safeguard Niger Delta’s hard-won peace

    A socio-cultural advocate group, the Izon Cultural Heritage Centre (ICHC), has expressed concern over the ongoing oversight issues between the House of Representatives Public Accounts Committee (PAC) and the Presidential Amnesty Programme (PAP), particularly regarding the summons issued to the Programme’s Coordinator, Dr. Dennis Brutu Otuaro.

    The group said ICHC as a cultural institution committed to peace building, social stability, and the preservation of the Niger Delta’s collective interests, recognised the constitutional mandate of the National Assembly to ensure transparency and accountability in the management of public institutions, saying oversight must be conducted, and public officials must provide clarifications when required.

    However, the ICHC Chairman, Apostle Bodmas Kenepadei, strongly advised that the tone, manner, and escalating posture of the Committee risk creating unintended tensions in a region that has, through considerable sacrifices and deliberate efforts, enjoyed unprecedented peace in recent years.

  • Reps to FG: declare January 15 national public holiday to honour fallen soldiers

    Reps to FG: declare January 15 national public holiday to honour fallen soldiers

    The House of Representatives has asked the federal government to declare every January 15 as a national public holiday in honour and celebration of the Nigerian Armed Forces and to institutionalise national remembrance while strengthening civic appreciation of the sacrifices made by military personnel.

    In a resolution following a motion by Sesi Oluwaseun Whingan (APC, Lagos), the House asked the Committees on Defence, Interior, and Legislative Compliance to liaise with the Federal Ministry of Interior and relevant stakeholders to ensure timely implementation.

    Whingan said that for decades, the Nigerian Armed Forces have made extraordinary sacrifices to defend the nation’s sovereignty, protect citizens, confront threats, and maintain peace both domestically and internationally, adding that their qualities of courage, discipline, and professionalism has been a lasting source of national pride.

    He acknowledged the day observed nationwide as Armed Forces Remembrance Day which commemorate the end of the Nigerian Civil War in 1970 and dedicated to honouring fallen heroes, celebrating serving personnel, and recognising the service and resilience of veterans who continue to contribute to national development.

    He said declaring January 15 a national holiday would institutionalise national remembrance, create a unifying civic tradition, and strengthen the bond between Nigerians and the men and women of the Armed Forces whose sacrifices uphold our freedom, security, and democratic order.

    According to him, “Over 70 countries across the world, including the United States, United Kingdom, Canada, Ghana, Kenya, South Africa, India, Australia, and New Zealand, observe national holidays dedicated to Armed Forces or fallen heroes, ensuring sustained public awareness, civic education, and national unity rooted in shared history and gratitude.

    He said the absence of a designated national holiday limits citizens’ participation in wreath-laying ceremonies, remembrance parades, military honour events, school-based civic lessons, and community led tributes, thereby weakens national consciousness of military history, reduces opportunities for intergenerational learning, and diminishes public recognition of the sacrifices that secure the nation.

    Whingan said most Nigerian youths are unaware of the symbolism, and historical weight of January 15, thus contributing to a gradual cultural disconnect between civilians and military families.

    He maintained that honouring the Armed Forces through a national holiday would promote deeper national identity, patriotism, and collective appreciation for military service, support the mental and emotional well-being of veterans who battle post-traumatic stress, physical disabilities, and assuring them that their sacrifices are not forgotten and the nation stands with them.

    He stressed the importance of the Nigerian Armed Forces in addressing security challenges, including insurgency, terrorism, kidnapping, banditry, illegal bunkering, piracy, and communal violence, adding that national recognition of their role enhances morale, fosters unity among personnel, and increases public awareness of their responsibilities in maintaining national security.

    He said declaring January 15 a national holiday will promote national pride, unity, historical memory, and civic discipline in line with the values upheld by the Constitution, including Section 14(2)(b), which affirms that the security and welfare of the people shall be the primary purpose of government.

    Deputy Speaker of the House asked the Lawmaker to bring an amended to the public holiday act so that the resolution be made part of the law to make it binding.

  • Reps move to probe indiscriminate land sale, mining in Abuja

    Reps move to probe indiscriminate land sale, mining in Abuja

    The House of Representatives on Wednesday raised alarm over what it described as the indiscriminate sale of land, off-plan allocations, and dangerous mining activities around the Federal Housing Authority (FHA)/ENL Paradise Hills Estate in Guzape, Abuja.

    This followed the adoption of a motion sponsored by Hon. Esosa Iyawe, who warned that the activities now pose severe risks to residents, public assets, and the structural integrity of buildings in the area.

    Presenting the motion, Iyawe noted that the Paradise Hills Estate—developed by the FHA in partnership with ENL Consortium—was originally conceived as a secure, well-planned residential enclave designed within a hilly topography that served as natural protection. 

    He said the estate, long sold out, is now being subjected to harmful alterations.

    He expressed concern that after selling the houses, the developers allegedly began mining the surrounding sand-based hills, purportedly to create additional plots for sale. According to him, the hills are vital to the estate’s environmental stability and security buffer.

    The lawmaker warned that the mining has already weakened the hills, especially during the rainy season, leading to mudslides that render internal roads impassable. 

    He added that continued heavy downpours could worsen the situation, endangering houses and public infrastructure.

    Iyawe further disclosed that residents have reported tremors caused by daily excavation, raising concerns about the long-term safety of buildings within the estate and adjoining parts of Guzape.

    Describing the situation as a looming disaster, he stressed that the indiscriminate mining threatens both government and private properties in the area and could result in loss of lives if not urgently addressed.

    The House also expressed wider concern that several estates in the Federal Capital Territory, including FHA/ENL developments, frequently deviate from approved master plans by allocating and selling plots not originally designated for residential or commercial use.

    Following deliberations, the House resolved to urge the Federal Capital Development Authority (FCDA) to clarify the controversial developments and strengthen monitoring of Paradise Hills Estate and other estates across the FCT.

    It also mandated the Committees on Public Assets, Housing and Habitat, and the FCT to jointly investigate the matter and take steps to halt further allocation and development of plots that fall outside the approved master plan of the FHA/ENL Estate in Guzape and other government-owned estates in the Federal Capital Territory.

    The committees are expected to report back to the House for further legislative action.

  • Reps seek suspension of deductions on COVID-19 loan, waiver for vulnerable homes

    Reps seek suspension of deductions on COVID-19 loan, waiver for vulnerable homes

    The House of Representatives on Wednesday asked the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN), NIRSAL Microfinance Bank, and the Federal Ministry of Finance, to immediately suspend all deductions on COVID-19 intervention loans, while granting total waiver on the outstanding COVID-19 intervention loans owed by vulnerable households and micro-businesses.

    In a resolution following a motion of urgent public importance sponsored by the Deputy Chairman of the House Committee on Finance, Saidu Musa Abdullahi, the House asked the relevant agencies of government to put into consideration the inability of Nigerians to pay back the loan due to current harsh economic conditions.

    It mandates the Central Bank of Nigeria(CBN), NIRSAL Microfinance Bank, and Small and Medium Enterprises Development Agency of Nigeria (SMEDAN) to restructure repayment terms for SMEs by extending moratoriums, reducing interest rates, and spreading repayment over longer timelines, in order to safeguard jobs and prevent business collapse.

    While leading debate on the motion, Abdullahi recalled that the Federal Government, through the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) and the NIRSAL Microfinance Bank, introduced the COVID-19 Targeted Credit Facility (TCF) during the pandemic, disbursing ₦419.42 billion to households, micro, small, and medium enterprises to cushion the devastating socioeconomic impact of the global lockdown.

    “The programme reached 792,936 beneficiaries nationwide; 674,972 households and 117,964 small businesses with women accounting for 45% of beneficiaries (about 330,128 women supported with ₦159.21 billion).

    “The TCF was credited with creating or sustaining about 1,585,872 jobs, underscoring its significant impact on livelihoods and enterprise stability during and after the pandemic.”

    He expressed voncerned that as at September 2023, ₦261.07 billion (about 62%) of the loans remained unpaid, while ₦378.03 billion was classified as outstanding reflecting widespread inability to repay among vulnerable households and micro-enterprises.

    He said, “Recent CBN surveys show rising default rates across household and enterprise lending in Q4 2024 and Q2 2025, driven by inflation above 24%, severe food insecurity, loss of purchasing power, business closures, and shrinking household incomes.

    “Despite the high default figures reported in 2023, substantial recoveries have been made through the unplanned automatic deductions from beneficiaries’ bank accounts between late 2023 and December 2025; This suggests that the current outstanding exposure may be significantly lower and therefore fiscally manageable for a structured waiver.

    “The COVID-19 TCF was fundamentally a survival support loan, not a conventional business facility as many households used the funds for essential needs such as food, shelter, healthcare, and school fees during the lockdown, making repayment unrealistic for those who have not recovered economically.

    “Nigeria has a strong domestic precedent of leniency in the Anchor Borrowers Programme, where despite its commercial nature and a default rate exceeding 50%, the federal government has repeatedly provided restructuring and partial waivers.”

    He said further that the loan waivers for pandemic-era support align with international best practices; countries such as the United States, Canada, Germany, South Africa, and India forgave or waived significant portions of their COVID-19 relief loans or adopted extended moratoriums, recognising the humanitarian context of the pandemic.

    He said the continued automatic debits and aggressive recoveries are inflicting severe hardship on vulnerable Nigerians, risking the collapse of small businesses, worsening unemployment, and heightening social instability.

  • Rowdy session as Reps members clash over procedure on CBN’s alleged N16tn non-remittance report

    Rowdy session as Reps members clash over procedure on CBN’s alleged N16tn non-remittance report

    Members of the House of Representatives on Wednesday engaged in a rowdy session over the procedure to adopt in considering a damning report by the House Committee on Public Accounts on the alleged non-remittance of about N16 trillion to the federal government by the Central Bank of Nigeria.

    While the Chairman of the Public Accounts Committee, Bamidele Salam, moved that the CBN Governor be invited to appear before the House at plenary, some lawmakers argued that an ad-hoc committee should be constituted to interface with him and report back.

    Others insisted that the House should invoke its powers and formally summon the CBN Governor to appear before the Public Accounts Committee to address the issues raised in the report.

    Another group of lawmakers maintained that, given the magnitude of the amount involved, the CBN Governor must be compelled to appear before the Committee of the Whole, rather than a single committee.

    The Chief Whip, Usman Bello Kumo, and the Minority Whip struggled to calm agitated members as they moved from one lawmaker to another to restore order amid the shouting match.

    The Speaker also battled to control the situation, describing the conduct as unparliamentary. 

    He warned that members who persist in such behaviour risk being referred to the Ethics Committee, stressing that shouting would not secure their demands.

    Read Also: IYC faults Reps’ 72-hour ultimatum to PAP coordinator Otuaro

    Ahmed Jaha eventually moved a motion that the CBN Governor and other relevant stakeholders be summoned to appear before the Public Accounts Committee, failing which sanctions would apply. The motion passed through a voice vote.

    Jaha argued that referring the matter to the Committee of the Whole could undermine the confidence of the Public Accounts Committee and others handling similar reports, adding that the House must not encourage government officials to disregard its invitations.

    Sada Soli (APC, Katsina) said the President must pay special attention to the revelations contained in the motion as it was coming from a constitutional committee headed by the opposition.

  • Reps committee frowns at NNPCL’s failure to honour invitation, gives Dec 15 deadline

    Reps committee frowns at NNPCL’s failure to honour invitation, gives Dec 15 deadline

    The House of Representatives Committee on Public Accounts has frowned at the failure of the Management of the Nigerian National Petroleum Company Limited (NNPCL) to respond to the 2021 audit query issued by the office of the Auditor General for the Federation.

    The Committee directed the Group Chief Executive Officer, Bayo Ojulari, to submit all outstanding documents and appear before it on Monday, 15th December 2025, over audit queries raised on expenditures between January and December 2021.

    Chairman of the Committee, Bamidele Salam (PDP, Osun), who gave the directive at the committee’s sitting on Monday, expressed displeasure over NNPCL’s persistent failure to honour the committee’s invitations or provide the requested documents despite multiple reminders.

    He warned that the committee would no longer tolerate such disregard for legislative oversight.

    At the resumed hearing, the chairman read a letter from NNPCL explaining the GCEO’s absence, citing another critical official engagement at the Presidential Villa.

    However, members of the Committee faulted the company’s conduct, describing it as disrespectful to the parliament and obstructive to the audit review process.

    Following an appeal by the NNPCL National Assembly Liaison Officer, Hon. Umar Faruk, the committee resolved to grant a final grace, fixing 15th December 2025 for the company to appear and submit all requested documents.

    In his ruling, Salam said, “We have agreed as a committee to give you till next Monday, the 15th of December, for a fresh appearance. Remember, the committee is very busy; we are dealing with so many issues. If you have been here in the last couple of weeks, you would understand the volume of matters before us.”

    The NNPCL is expected to respond to several queries raised by the Auditor-General, including alleged payments to contractors for abandoned projects, failure to deduct statutory taxes, and irregular payments made by the Chief Finance Officer without the approval of the Group Managing Director.

  • Women to gain 156 additional parliamentary seats in reserved seats bill

    Women to gain 156 additional parliamentary seats in reserved seats bill

    Nigerian women stand to gain 156 additional seats across state and federal legislatures if the Reserved Seats for Women Bill currently before the National Assembly is passed and signed into law by the President.

    The bill, which seeks to amend the 1999 Constitution to create special seats for women in the National Assembly and state Houses of Assembly, is being championed by gender advocates as a corrective, temporary, and strategic measure to address decades of underrepresentation of women in governance.

    While the proposal recommends one reserved seat for women in both the House of Representatives and the Senate from each state, as well as three seats per state assembly, The Nation gathered that the Senate is pushing instead for one reserved women’s seat per geopolitical zone in the upper chamber.

    Speaking during a training session for members of the House of Representatives Press Corps—organised by the House Committee on Media and Public Affairs in collaboration with the TOS Foundation—the Special Adviser to the Deputy Speaker on Legislative Matters, Chidozie Aja, dismissed claims that the bill is designed to help women displace men from existing elective positions.

    He said, “For emphasis, these seats will not replace existing seats, but will expand representation to create room for women at the table of decision-making. It is important, also to note that political parties will field only female candidates for these seats.  

    “It is meant to last for 4 election cycle of 16 years in all. It is a temporary special measure. However, adjustments being proposed so far may either completely remove the sunset clause or extend the duration. Summarily, the Bill seeks to alter Sections 48, 49, 71, 77, 91 and 117 of the Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria, 1999; and more recently recommended alteration of Section 42.

    “While this is novel in the Nigerian space, this approach has been used successfully by Rwanda, now the global leader with 61% women in Parliament. Other countries that have successfully implemented this approach, in various forms and mixes, include Tanzania, Uganda, Kenya, Burkina Faso and Senegal.  

    “It is important to note that even if additional 74 seats are granted in the Senate and House of Representatives, bringing the total number of seats to 543, it means that Nigeria will only secure 13.6% women representation in the national parliament. Not an outstanding progress, but significant.  

    “The evidence is clear, countries that adopt structural gender quotas tend to experience stronger representation, better governance, and improved development outcomes”.

    He explained that the the bill will strengthen democracy, “because democracy thrives when all voices are heard, adding that “currently, Nigerian democracy is functioning with only half of its potential. Women’s inclusion makes democracy deeper, more legitimate, and more stable.

    “Multiple global studies show that when women participate, parliaments pass better health policies, more education-focused laws, stronger social protection frameworks and more community-driven development policies. Simply put, women’s presence improves the quality of governance.

    “Women are critical actors in peacebuilding, especially at the grassroots. Their inclusion helps reduce conflict and improve community resilience. Gender inclusion is also an economic strategy.”

    He said further that a study by the McKinsey Global Institute estimates that Nigeria’s GDP would increase if women were fully included in economic and political life. 

     The Institute projects US$22.9 billion overall economic gain and 23% overall growth in GDP if Nigeria reduces gender inequality by 2025.