Tag: Reps

  • Detectives probe N60b vote for Senators, Reps

    Detectives probe N60b vote for Senators, Reps

    EFCC asks National Assembly to state why Omisore got N2.5b

    Detectives have recovered a sensitive document from Otunba Iyiola Omisore’s Abuja home.

    The document shows how N60billion was voted for extraneous overhead expenses for some senators and members of the House of Representatives in the Sixth Assembly, according to Economic and Financial Crimes Commission( EFCC) sources.

    Omisore, former deputy governor of Osun State, was the chairman of the Senate Appropriation Committee between 2007 and 2011.

    The anti- graft agency is probing  the document to identify the senators and members of the House of Representatives who got the largesse.

    A source, who spoke in confidence, said when detectives went to search the Abuja home of the ex-deputy governor, they stumbled on the “budget padding” document in his bedroom.

    The source said a sober Omisore joined issues with the EFCC operatives, asking why they were interested in the document.

    The source said: “In the course of searching Omisore’s residence at 1, Kainji Crescent in Maitama, Abuja, we stumbled on a document on budget padding worth about N60billion for some Senators and House of Representatives.

    “Immediately we picked the document, Omisore was a bit concerned. He asked our operatives to limit their investigation to only the N1.310billion from the Office of the National Security Adviser (ONSA) but we insisted that we are interested in the document.

    “It contained a list of budget padding of about N60billion and how it was spread for some Senators and members of the House of Representatives from 2007 and 2011.

    “A crack team is already looking into the details of the padding of the budget and the affected Senators and Representatives.

    “Certainly, as a former chairman of the Senate Committee on Appropriation, we expect him to speak on the document.

    “The fact that Omisore proved difficult before we arrested him has actually paid off for EFCC. His stubbornness has assisted in opening new investigation frontiers. If he had honoured our invitation as a gentleman, we might not have been able to get these new areas of investigation.”

    To get to the root of the matter,  the EFCC has written to the management of the National Assembly to explain why it paid N2.5billion to Omisore.

    The letter followed the discovery of the strange remittance in Omisore’s account by the management when he was a serving senator.

    But the management, in a response to the EFCC signed by a top official, said Omisore was not awarded any contract or engaged for any service to have warranted such a payment.

    In a follow-up letter, the anti-graft agency mandated the management to be more “forthcoming on what the N2.5billion was meant for to have earned remittance into the account of the ex-deputy governor”.

    The NASS bureaucracy has up till the end of this week to clarify the “purpose of such a huge payment” to an individual.

    There were indications that the commission may quiz two former National Assembly and Senate Clarks as well as and some management members of staff in the Finance Department, including directors.

    According to EFCC findings, the strange payment of N2.5billion was discovered during the screening of Omisore’s transactions in the course of investigating a N1.310billion  illegally allocated to Omisore and three companies by the ONSA.

    The source added: “We were able to detect that the sum in question was transferred from the Skye Bank account of the National Assembly to Omisore’s account.

    “We got a letter from the management that Omisore did not at any time execute any contract for the National Assembly or offer any service to be able to earn such a payment.

    “We have written another letter to the management to explain why the money was paid to Omisore. We want those in the relevant desk behind the payment to guide the EFCC accordingly.

    “We are expecting a detailed response from the management of the National Assembly, including vouchers for the payment and authorisation. Once we get their response, we will invite those connected with it.

    The source explained: “This was why we secured a court warrant to detain Omisore to get to the roots of this latest payment.”

    After about three months of hide and seek, the EFCC arrested Omisore in Abuja for alleged N1.310billion ONSA slush funds traced to him  and three companies.

    According to a report by the EFCC, the funds were  remitted as follows: Fimex Gilt Limited (N160m)-8/8/2014in UBA; Metropolitan Consortium (N350m)—9/7/14 in First Bank; Sawanara (N300m)—1/8/14 in First Bank and Metropolitan Consortium (N350m)-1/8/14 in First Bank.

  • Reps warn Samsung, others on local content compliance

    House of Representatives’ Committee on Local Content has warned international oil and gas services companies, including Samsung Heavy Industries (SHI) of South Korea against flouting the Nigerian Local Content laws.

    The committee said it strongly opposed a situation where foreign oil firms and their cohorts exceed expatriate quota and breaking other rules that are contained in the Nigerian Content Act, adding that it would not allow any infractions on the Act to go unpunished.

    The Committee’s Chairman, Hon Emmanuel Ekon, while speaking on the sideline of tour of LADOL Free Trade Zone in Lagos by the committee, said no efforts would be spared on ensuring that foreign-owned firms comply with all known local content rules in Nigeria.

    He said the committee would sanction any non-compliant firm irrespective of its investments in the country.

    Ekon said: “The fact that Samsung partner LADOL to build multi-billion dollar Total Egina Floating Production, Storage and Offloading (FPSO) vessel in Nigeria does not confer on it the right to violate the laws of the land. The committee is not out to witch-hunt any firm, but it was only doing its job of implementing laws for the growth of country.”

    According to him, monopoly is the bane of the Nigerian economy, adding that local operators in the petroleum industry have shown that they cannot be put aside by their foreign counterparts. Ekon said the committee would use its legislative instruments to protect indigenous operators in the oil sector and others.

    “The indigenous companies have shown that they have the capacity to grow the economy. LADOL is one of such firms. The company has demonstrated faith in Nigeria by investing over $600million in the country. Besides, LADOL has built a fabrication yard of its zone. The yard has employed 2,500 jobs and helped in developing skills.  The major goal of LADOL is to provide 50,000 direct and indirect jobs and the firm is working hard to achieve this. That is why stakeholders must join forces together to support LADOL and other companies that have shown the desire to promote the nation’s economy,” he added.

    He berated Nigerians, who have lots of money in banks abroad because they help in promoting foreign economies to the detriment of Nigeria.

    Also, the acting Executive Secretary, Nigerian Content Development and Monitoring Board (NCDMB), Mr. Daziba Patrick Obah, urged local investors to invest in Nigeria, stressing that they stand to gain a lot by doing so. He said with the local content law, indigenous firms are sure of getting good returns on investment.

    Obah said: “The Board, the House of Representatives Committee on Local Content and other relevant stakeholders are out to promote indigenous investment.  We would do all we can to support local operators with a view to developing the nation’s economy.  The Board, for instance, has taken a decision to open office in LADOL base. It is part of efforts to promote local content,” he said.

    The Managing Director of Lagos Offshore Logistics (LADOL), Dr. Amy Jadesimi said the ongoing  Egina  FPSO project and others in the zone, are undertaken by LADOL and its partners in order to make Nigeria oil and gas hub in West Africa and Africa.

  • Reps insist on constituency projects

    Reps insist on constituency projects

    The House of Representatives yesterday said the N100  billion constituency projects embedded in the N6.6 trillion 2016 budget must be implemented.

    A statement by the Chairman of the House Committee on Media and Publicity, Hon. Abdulrazak Namdas, said: “The Appropriation Act is a law that must be implemented.”

    The lawmaker, who was reacting to the statement by Secretary to Government of the Federation (SGF) Babachir David Lawal, that dwindling revenue may affect the implementation of constituency projects. Namdas said: “But for constituency projects, many rural communities in Nigeria would never have known about the existence of the Federal Government let alone benefitting from budgets.

    “Thanks to the mechanism of the projects which ensures that every year projects such as solar powered bores, hand pumps, school infrastructure, dispensaries, skills acquisition centres, poverty alleviation, etc are implemented, however poorly the implementation.”

    “Already unfortunately, the Secretary to the  Government of the Federation Babachir David Lawal, has stated that the government may not be able to implement constituency projects in the 2016 budget.

    “May be he doesn’t know that the Appropriation Act is a law that must be implemented unless of course if it is amended which can only be done if the government fails to meet its revenue targets.”

  • Reps adopts 2014 confab report

    Reps adopts 2014 confab report

    The Ad hoc Committee on the review of the constitution at the House of Representatives has adopted the report of the 2014 National Conference organized by ex- President Goodluck Jonathan.

    The confab report recommended 54 states, modified presidential system of government, state police as well as a revenue sharing formula whereby  Federal Government gets 42.5 percent, states receive 35 percent and local governments earn 22.5 per cent among others.

    The Chairman of the Committee, Yusuf Lasun, who is also the Deputy Speaker of the House, said in a statement issued by his Chief Press Secretary Wole Oladimeji, that the report would form part of the working documents of the Committee.

    The statement reads: “The decision to adopt the report of the National Conference was taken at a working session/retreat of the committee recently held at Transcorp Hilton hotel, Abuja

    “The meeting was presided over by the Chairman of the committee who doubled as the Deputy Speaker of the House, Rt Hon Sulaimon Lasun Yusuf.

    “Copies of the report have been circulated to members of the committee‎ to go through and come up with recommendations to the committee while the consultants to the committee have been given the report to advise the committee on how to go about it.

    Some of the salient proposals in the report would be turned into draft bills‎ which would be presented to the house for adoption and passage.

    “The committee would commence work on the review immediately the House resumes from its Sallah break.”

  • 2.6GHz auction: Reps to investigate NCC

    2.6GHz auction: Reps to investigate NCC

    The proposed auctioning of 2.6 gigahertz (GHz) spectrum by the Nigeria Communications Commission (NCC) is to be investigated by the House of Representatives.

    The lawmakers opined that the sale of the spectrum would lead to a huge job loss in the telecommunications sector.

    In a motion, Diri Douye (PDP, Bayelsa) said the telecommunication sector regulatory body erred by considering the bid of a mobile telecommunications service provider, MTN Nigeria for the sale of the spectrum.

    He said the consideration of MTN’s bid by NCC negates fair play as the fundamental right of other sector players has been disregarded, pointing out that the possible negative effect of such sale on other sector investors was also not taken into consideration.

    He alleged that the regulator failed to take cognisance of current spectrum operators and their interest, it will result in the loss of billions of naira to investors.

    The lawmaker argued further that  the NCC may not have considered the long term effect of job loss, adding that employment generation and protection of business is a key component of the legislative agenda of the 8th Assembly.

    “It will also jeopardise the interest of banks and result in the loss of thousands of jobs,” he warned.

    While he noted that the auctioning may be necessary to meet with the digital migration compliance, Duoye said there was also need to build confidence in all the  stakeholders.

    Committee on Telecommunications was mandated to investigate and resolve all pending issues connected with proposed spectrum auction.

  • NCC seeks Reps’ cooperation on telecom regulation

    NCC seeks Reps’ cooperation on telecom regulation

    The Nigerian Communications Commission (NCC) yesterday sought the cooperation and understanding of members of the House of Representatives especially on the regulatory functions of the commission.

    The Executive Vice Chairman of NCC, Prof Umar Danbatta spoke during an oversight visit of members of the House Committee on Communications to the head Office of the Commission in Abuja.

    The House is still investigating the N1.04trillion fine imposed on MTN over infractions on subscriber identity module (SIM) card registration. Danbatta in a statement endorsed by his Media Assistant, Yakubu Musa stressed the need for striking a balance in satisfying diverse stakeholders in the industry.

  • Reps wade into EU, Nigeria’s beans’ export ban

    Reps wade into EU, Nigeria’s beans’ export ban

    The House of Representatives has expressed disappointment with the decision of the European Union (EU) to extend to three years its ban of the exportation of Nigeria’s dried beans into the European market.

    The initial ban was to lapse  this month before the latest extension due to Nigeria’s inability to work towards the lifting of the initial ban according to the EU.

    The House has, therefore, mandated its  Committees on Agriculture, and Commerce and Industry to investigate the extension.

    Sponsor of the motion of urgent public importance,  Ferdinand Nwankwo (APGA, Anambra) in his debate recalled that last June, the EU banned the export of dried beans from Nigeria on the ground that the produce contained high level of pesticide considered hazardous to human health.

    He said: “The ban was to last till June 30, 2016 to allow Nigerian authorities time to provide an export control plan and assurance that the beans exported complied with EU Minimal Risk Level for Hazardous Substances.

    “It was, however, of  concern that few days to the expiration of the ban, EU had extended it for three years.

    “Several relevant agencies of government including the Standards Organisation of Nigeria  (SON), National Agency for Food, Drugs Administration and Control (NAFDAC) and Federal Ministry of Industry, Trade and Investment claimed to be collaborating with each other to resolve the issue before close of the deadline.

    “The alleged reason for the extension was that Nigeria did not do enough to lift the ban during the period of suspension but the effect of the extended ban on Nigerian economy should be of concern, especially as the current administration was focused on diversifying the economy through export of agricultural products.”

    The joint Committee has two weeks to carry out the assignment and report back to the House for further legislative action.

  • Reps, rape and all that rap

    Reps, rape and all that rap

    Now that the frenzy that greeted the allegations against three House of Representatives’ members seems to have subsided, it is fit and proper to examine the matter dispassionately.

    I take it that you know what I am talking about. In case you don’t or you have lost track of it all – no thanks to the dizzying rate at which events occur here – here is a recap: United States Ambassador James Entwistle petitioned House Speaker Yakubu Dogara, accusing three Honourables of improper conduct, attempted rape and soliciting for prostitutes during a trip to the United States. Mohammed Garba Gololo (APC, Bauchi), Samuel Ikon (PDP, Akwa Ibom) and Mark Gbillah (APC, Benue) were members of a 10-man team that participated in the International Visitor Programme between April 7 and 13.

    “Galolo allegedly grabbed a housekeeper in his hotel room and solicited her for sex. Gbillah and Ikon allegedly requested hotel parking attendants to assist them to solicit prostitutes,” Mr Entwistle wrote.

    The three lawmakers are threatening to go to court to defend their integrity. Dogara has demanded proof of the allegations even as the House has mounted a huge probe of the matter, which has portrayed the lower chamber and its honourable members as aggressive philanders, whose accounts in the bank of decency and morality are in the red.

    Nigerians love salacious stories, especially those spiced with sex, the kiss-and-tell type. They squeeze it and squeeze it endlessly, like some orange, throwing away the seeds, sucking it all up until the last drop and then licking their lips to ensure that all the sweetness is captured. They gave the gentlemen no benefit of the doubt. They lashed out at the lawmakers for what they called their sexual peccadilloes. Some, without any scientific or sociological evidence, threatened to prove that their libidinous  peregrinations have been hampering the discharge of their onerous legislative duties.

    How?

    Weighty matters of state have been shoved aside by this titillating tale of lawmakers who, allegedly, would not zip up.  Wadata Plaza, headquarters of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), has become Fallujah, with the two major factions tearing at each other in an internecine war to capture it. The party has been wracked and wrecked by a terrible leadership battle that has imperilled its ability to stand as a sturdy opposition party.

    Hitherto respected men have been behaving like Ibadan touts taking over a motor park. Boko Haram is gasping for breath, its bestiality contained by our gallant troops. Herdsmen killings continue. Niger Delta Avengers (NDA) is on its hazy vengeance mission. Gone is the vociferous agitation for the government to name those who have been returning what they stole.

    As I was saying, the alleged concupiscence of our lawmakers has grabbed the headline. But, in my view, many of the comments have been either totally off the mark or out rightly subjective. When the matter moves from a barbershop talk to the courts, the truth will surely come out.

    Some of the comments have been romancing the past. Nostalgic. When lawmakers were not just presumptive but proactive, when they were worthy representatives of their worthy constituents, said some of the commentators, they had style. Those who loved wine had their choice from the best wineries, specially  processed to suit their delicate tastes and delivered in customised bottles on which their photographs were emblazoned.

    When they embarked on trips to either hone their skills or undertake some oversight duties, they took with them their bevy of beauties or got them delivered in the right specifications as part of a big package of some legislative privileges. There was no space for foreign women of easy virtue. No. In other words, our lawmakers had taste. They had style. Not anymore.

    But then, isn’t it too early for us to pass a judgment on a matter that is yet to go beyond mere allegations?

    The matter seems to have become an inflated balloon. I have been told that a group of women of easy virtue operating under an umbrella body which goes by the bizarre name, National Association of Nigerian Prostitutes and Allied Practitioners, briefed a Lagos human rights activist who is also a lawyer well grounded in commercial law. He is to take out a writ on behalf of these poor women, hereinafter referred to as his clients. He will be urging a high court to make:

    • a declaration that our lawmakers erred in law to have solicited for women in America when members of the association are here battling the prevailing economic crisis;
    • a declaration that the lawmakers, who are at the forefront of the “ buy Nigeria campaign”, are hypocritical, lacking in patriotism by attempting to fritter away scarce foreign exchange when the very materials they sought to purchase are here in abundance;
    • a declaration that by their alleged conduct and misconduct, the women’s fundamental right to making a honest living has been breached by the way and manner these Reps conducted themselves in the United States; and
    • a declaration that the women are entitled to generous compensation by the lawmakers as well as an order restraining the lawmakers, their servants, agents, privies and whomsoever designated as honorable from such acts of sabotage that are against the spirit and letters of the “patronise made in Nigeria” campaign.

    A source, who pleaded not to be named because of the sensitivity of the matter, has told me that the women will be asking a reputable accounting firm to establish how much it costs a day to procure the services of a woman of easy virtue in the United States. This, I learnt, the association will calculate based on the number of days the trio spent in the United States and work out at the prevailing naira/dollar market forces exchange rate  how much its members may have lost. This, I am told, will enable them know how much damages to ask for.

    What iron clad proof do the Americans have? In the case of Hon. Gbillah and Hon. Ikon, how reliable is the verbal account of some inattentive car park attendants? Is there a recording of their alleged solicitation? Are we sure some opponents of these gentlemen, who lost the last general elections have not gone this far to damage their reputation and tear their record of moral sanctity?

    Will the lawmakers be allowed to return to the United States to prove their innocence? I am told they are willing to go that far – unlike another lawmaker who the other day threatened to commit suicide should law officers seize and bind him and bundle him onto a plane bound for the United States where he is expected to face charges for alleged drug offences. He rushed to the court for protection. Now he is sitting pretty at the National Assembly, making laws for the wellbeing of fellow Nigerians and pontificating on President Muhammadu Buhari’s anti-corruption battle. Please, pardon the digression. I return to the serious matter at hand.

    Hon. Galolo, who allegedly grabbed a housekeeper, has been pertinacious in his denial. All questions pertinent to the situation must be raised to enable the discerning public get to the root of this matter. Is there a genuine video of the alleged grabbing? Did the housekeeper scream? If so, did her colleagues or other guests rush to snatch her from his grip? Where did he grab her – by the waist? From her back? By the chest? By the buttocks? By her laps?

    What was the weather like in Cleveland, Ohio, on the day of the controversial incident? Warm? Cold? If cold, how cold? Chilly; the type we call “weather for two” here? Cold enough for a Nigerian big man to request for a “wrapper” or “cover cloth”?

    These and other pieces of evidence will form the test of integrity to which these weighty allegations will be subjected to see if a prima facie case has been established against these respectable lawmakers. It is not enough for Amb. Entwistle to fire a petition. It is, after all, trite in law that affirmati non neganti incumbit probation; that is to say “the burden of proof is upon him who affirms – not on him who denies”.

    The popular thinking here is that the housekeeper did not realise the worth in cash – in dollars – of a Nigerian lawmaker. She would have smiled seductively. Ours are believed to be some of the best paid lawmakers anywhere. Sitting allowance, constituency project allowance, stewards’ allowance, mistress allowance, children’s allowance, bodi no be wood allowance, gardener’s allowance and all that. Could it be that the housekeeper felt the crashing oil prices might have affected our lawmakers’ enviable standard of living? This is neither here nor there.

    Like so many other serious matters of urgent and grave national importance, this American allegation has provoked many jokes among some disillusioned Nigerians, those who will not accord our lawmakers some credibility, no matter how little.

    There is the joke about a married woman who was found on a bachelor’s bed three streets away from her matrimonial home. Asked why she abandoned her family, she replied: “I’m sorry, I don’t know where I am; it was raining and the flood carried me.”

    Some patriots have, however, suggested that the aggrieved lawmakers should not take their case to the high court where it may drag on and on like a Lagos Bar Beach show, a circus. They should go to the International Court of Justice (ICJ), the patriots have recommended, because, according to them, this is serious business. Shouldn’t they?

  • Reps to debate ‘sex scandal’ against colleagues

    Reps to debate ‘sex scandal’ against colleagues

    The House of Representatives will tomorrow debate the allegations of impropriety levelled against three of its members by the United States.

    Hon. Mohammed Garba Gololo (Bauchi,APC),Hon. Samuel Ikon (Akwa-Ibom,APC) and Hon Mark Gbillah (Benue,APC) were fingered as having behaved inappropriately while on a leadership training in Cleveland, Ohio, United States.

    The three lawmakers involved in the incident are scheduled to address the press today.

    Speaker Yakubu Dogara yesterday evening on Twitter said if there was no evidence, no action would be taken against the accused lawmakers

    The Speaker said: “ We closed that discussion yesterday. We await the evidence before any action is taken in line with our laws.”

    The Chairperson, House Committee on Foreign Affairs Hon. Nnena Elendu Ukeje, told The Nation at the weekend said the scandal should not sour the relationship between Nigeria and the United States.

    Ukeje said: “We will deal with the matter institutionally in such a way that controls the domestic fallout of this weighty allegation and ensure a continued cordial relationship between the institution and the people and the government of the United States, and the two democratic nations.

    “As the Speaker has said, the House shall carry out its own investigations into the matter. It is an institutional thing between the legislature of the republic of Nigeria and the government of United States.

    “The initial intendment was an exchange programme to help deepen our democratic practices. We will have this investigation so as to mitigate the domestic fallout so,it does not jeopardise the relationship that parliament has with the United States.”

  • Reps seek N500b intervention programme framework

    Reps seek N500b intervention programme framework

    • NDDC’s N260b budget bill scales second reading

    The House of Representatives has directed the Presidency to make available to it the administrative framework and details of the programmes to be implemented under the N500billion  social intervention fund.

    This followed the adoption of  a motion of urgent public importance  by Chika Adamu (Niger APC), who said the success of the programme remained doubtful because it has neither administrative nor legal framework for its implementation.

    According to him, intervention programmes introduced by previous administrations failed due to mismanagement and lack of strong institutional structure, adding that  the office of the Vice President does not possess the capacity to handle such social intervention fund.

    He said the N500billion programme should be stopped until the framework has been provided by the Senior Special Assistant to the Vice President on  Poverty Alleviation.

    Meanwhile, the Niger Delta Development Commission (NDDC’s) N260b budget bill for this year equally scaled second reading on the floor of the House yesterday too.

    Reacting to the request for the implementation framework of the intervention programme, House Majority Leader, Femi Gbajabiamila argued that the request was unnecessary because the framework was already in place.