Tag: Senate

  • Senate seeks fresh solutions to rising insecurity

    Senate seeks fresh solutions to rising insecurity

    • Zulum, Fubara: we need to state police

    The Federal Government is intensifying its search for fresh solutions to mounting security challenge in collaboration with sub-national units.

    Three geo-political zones – Southwest, Northcentral and Northwest – will host the National Security Summit today to collate widespread ideas on how to refocus the anti-terror war.

    The summit is being organised by the Senate across the six regions to get the input of leaders and experts on how to wipe put the terrorists.

    Yesterday, stakeholders from Southeast converged on Enugu, capital of Enugu State, to brainstorm and dissect the efficacy of current strategies aimed at stemming the tide of banditry.

    Simultaneously, in Port-Harcourt, capital of Rivers State, where Southsouth leaders gathered, Governor Siminalayi Fubara called for a decentralised, enhanced collaboration and  shared intelligence gathering.

    In Maiduguri, the Borno State Governor Babagana Zulum proposed a community-driven security network as panacea to killings, kidnappings and violence by bandits during the summit hosted by the Northeast.

    Fubara calls for decentralised security

    Fubara called for a decentralised approach, enhanced collaborations and intelligence sharing in tackling insecurity in the Southsouth and the country.

    He also called for collaboration among stakeholders in the zone to set the pace for greater peace and security.

    The governor spoke at the Senate Ad-Hoc Committee Southsouth Zonal Public Hearing on National Security organised in conjunction with the Rivers State Government.

    The theme of the summit was: ‘The way Forward in Tackling National Security Issues at the Local Level.”

    Fubara, who was represented by the Secretary to the Government, Dr Benebo Anabraba, said there should be shared responsibility in securing lives and property

    Read Also: Nnamdi Kanu: All hope not lost, political solution underway – Deputy Speaker Kalu

    He said: “Security is not the business of the Government alone, but a shared responsibility and concern of every person. As a government, we are not unaware of our constitutional responsibility to ensure the protection and safety of lives and property in the state, including the territorial integrity of Nigeria.

    “These objectives we have assiduously pursued with robust collaboration and partnership with the Federal Government and the various security agencies, in providing the necessary equipment such as operational vehicles, boats, and even aircraft, accommodation, and support, including the welfare of both serving personnel and the Nigerian Legionnaires.

    “This summit could therefore, not have come at a better time, as it is today, in the face of security challenges in the region that drains our national revenue, damages our environment, and put lives and property at risk, and the immense efforts of the federal, state and local governments in combating these menaces to society.”

    “This distinguished gathering is a testament to our commitment and synergy towards a more secure, stable, and prosperous future for the South-South region and Nigeria in general”.

    The governor said he was delighted in partnering with the Committee in convoking this Southsouth Public Hearing on National Security.

    He added: “We urge the stakeholders gathered here to see this occasion as a mechanism from the people to the policy-makers, ‘Bottom-Up Approach’ while giving special attention and recognition to our peculiar natural environment or topography as a coastal region that is the gateway to international waters of the Gulf of Guinea.”

    Fubara said his government would continue to adopt proactive measures such as intelligence sharing, and best practices with security agencies and sister states to complement initiatives and stakeholders’ engagements, the employment and empowerment of youths, and public participation, particularly at community levels.

    Senate Minority Leader and Chairman of the Southsouth Security Summit, Abba Moro, said the event was a deliberate effort to diagnose, understand and collectively address the hydra-headed security challenges confronting the country.

    He described the summit as a unique platform for frank deliberations and assessments geared towards procuring solutions that would mitigate the security challenges of the country.

    Moro said: “The Senate as a responsive lawmaking institution, recognises that no security act can succeed without a clear understanding of local dynamics and peculiarities of security occurrences across the country.

    “Be assured that the information we should gather from this summit would undoubtedly form the basis of our recommendations to the Senate, which will serve as guides to our legislative interventionist measures, budgetary provisions and policy reforms that will revamp national security landscape,” he noted.

    The Chairman of the Southsouth Traditional Rulers Forum, Sergeant Awuse, said security agencies should move from being reactive to preventive in crime fighting.

    He also kicked against the formation of various local security blocs formed on cultural grounds, urging the government to invest in the youths to achieve a relatively safe society.

    Awuse said: “You have local vigilantes, but we cannot absolutely rely on those tribal groups. Based on culture, they form their own groups. The Yoruba have their own, the Amotekun; then Ebube-Agu in the East.

    “These are groups specialized in their own. What do we have in our own area (South-South), none. We have young people looking after the community under an empty stomach. You encourage them today, you can’t encourage them forever.

    “The government has to come in now to help those classes of people because the more they leave the youths to run the streets doing nothing the more they are exposed to danger and the more the society is unsafe. And we want to have a safe society. It is safe to have a relatively safe society by good performance of all those in charge of authority.

     “If you want to have this system properly checked you have to provide a system to ensure there must be early warning. Every crime is planned by somebody. Because every crime is planned by somebody there needs to be investment by the government in order to sort out information before those crimes are carried out.

    “There must be community and security agencies partnership by actual consultation and working together. They must invest in the people and the people must show accountability. And at the end of the day I’m sure, put all together in South-South, you have a zonal security arrangement that will take this nation to a higher level.”

    Zulum: Communities have roles to play

    Borno State Governor Babagana Zulum said communities have roles to play as joint partners in the collective search for solutions to insecurity.

    The governor, who declared open the summit,  called for “a strengthened, intelligence-led, and community-driven security framework” to address the challenge in the Northeast.

     Zulum emphasized the need for coordinated, innovative, and region-specific interventions to tackle the complex and adaptive nature of insecurity in the region.

    The governor, who was represented by Deputy Governor Umar Usman Kadafur acknowledged said despite the efforts by the military, the a multi-layered approach that combines kinetic and non-kinetic strategies are required.

    He alluded to Borno’s reconstruction efforts, resettlement of displaced persons, and investments in key sectors as evidence of commitment to linking security with development.

    The Commissioner for Information and Internal Security, Prof. Usman Tar, who presented Borno’s position paper, highlighted the security architecture, including the Borno State Security Council, deradicalization and reintegration programs, and collaboration with local vigilante groups.

    He emphasized the need for collaborative learning, Federal-State synergy, and focus on the root causes of radicalization.

    The Chairman of the Northast National Security Summit, Senator Mohammed Tahir Monguno said that insecurity has exacerbated poverty, displacement, and social instability.

    He attributed the persistent insurgency to external influences and local collaborators.

    He called for modern security technologies and enhanced regional cooperation to tackle emerging threats.

    State police helpful, says Enugu Speaker

    The Speaker of the Enugu State House of Assembly,  Uche Ugwu, said security should be rooted in intelligence gathering and socio-economic stability.

    He said: “We must invest in intelligence gathering while not neglecting the economic conditions that make our people, especially our young ones, vulnerable to criminal activities.”

    Ugwu emphasised the need to rebuild trust among communities, government and security agencies.

    He added: “When communities trust their security agencies and when leaders speak with one voice, insecurity loses its strength.”

    The Speaker also identified farmers-herders clashes and open grazing as major drivers of conflict in the Southeast, warning that “anything open grazing in the Southeast is against the peace of the land.”

    He called for state police, arguing that decentralised policing would create safer communities.

    Ugwu said: “Security cannot be achieved by force alone. The issue of state police is something we should look into to create an enabling environment in our communities.”

    At the Southeast summit were lawmakers, traditional rulers, Ohanaeze Ndigbo, military and paramilitary agencies, local government chairmen, town union leaders, religious organisations, youth groups, farmers, traders and vigilante operatives.

    Declaring the summit open, the coordinator of the summit, Senator Austin Akobundu, warned that the Southeast’s worsening security environment, marked by killings, destruction, economic stagnation, school disruptions and declining communal life, requires urgent, sincere action.

    He said: “Whole communities are traumatized and displaced, farmlands abandoned, schools disrupted, with grave socioeconomic consequences including spikes in poverty, hunger and illiteracy.”

    Akobundu condemned violent agitations in the region, insisting that “violence solves nothing and can never be a pathway to self-determination.”

    He acknowledged that inequity, marginalisation, unemployment and poverty must be addressed “headlong” to stem the crisis.

    Akobundu praised Southeast governors for their “uncommon grit” in confronting insecurity and assured that the Senate would act on recommendations from the summit.

    He said the Senate would amend and repeal existing laws and make new ones to strengthen national security.

    He also lauded frontline security personnel, saying: “Your sacrifices will never be forgotten. The Senate takes your welfare seriously.”

  • Reps push Senate to fast-track bill establishing police pensions board

    Reps push Senate to fast-track bill establishing police pensions board

    The House of Representatives leadership is set to engage its Senate counterparts to fast-track legislative action on a bill seeking to establish the Police Pensions Board and exempt the Nigeria Police Force from the Contributory Pension Scheme (CPS).

    The resolution followed a motion by Jessy Okey Onuakalusi (LP, Lagos), who drew attention to the plight of police pensioners protesting at the National Assembly gate for several weeks. The retired officers are demanding exemption from the CPS, similar to their counterparts in the military and intelligence agencies.

    The House had already passed the bill for third reading in October and transmitted it to the Senate for concurrence ahead of its onward transmission to the President for assent.

    Addressing journalists on the matter, Chairman of the House Committee on Police Affairs, Abubakar Makki Yelleman, along with the Chairman of the Pensions Committee, Hussein Jallo, confirmed that the bill was forwarded to the Senate on October 28.

    READ ALSO; Senate seeks fresh solutions to rising insecurity

    Yalleman said, “The protest you see daily at the gate is not against the House because we. Have done all that we need to do and have passed the bill. It is not before the Senate. We have asked the Leadership to lease with the Senate so they can pass the bill for third reading.

    “Immediately that is done, it will be sent to the President for his assent, and I can assure you that we are all working in collaboration with the Inspector General of Police and the DG PENCOM in this regard.

    “The House is interested in the welfare of police officers, especially the retired officers. That is why we did all that was needed of us.”

    On his part, the chairman of the Committee on Pension said a meeting has been scheduled between the IGP, DG, PENCOM, the House Committee on Police Affairs and Pension, as well as their counterparts in the Senate, on the issue.

    He assured that the bill addressing the concern of the police pensioners will be signed into law before the end of the year. 

  • Senate seeks fresh solutions to rising insecurity

    Senate seeks fresh solutions to rising insecurity

    Stakeholders across the Southeast on Thursday converged on Enugu for the zonal edition of the Senate’s National Security Summit.

    The forum was aimed at harvesting practical inputs toward ending the persistent security crisis in the region.

    The event brought together lawmakers, traditional rulers, Ohanaeze Ndigbo, military and paramilitary agencies, local government chairmen, town union leaders, religious organisations, youth groups, farmers, traders, and vigilante operatives.

    Declaring the summit open, coordinator of the southeast event, Senator Austin Akobundu, said the Senate convened the national dialogue to gather first-hand perspectives from citizens and leaders in regions most affected by insecurity.

    He warned that the southeast’s worsening security environment, marked by killings, destruction, economic stagnation, school disruptions, and declining communal life, requires urgent, sincere action.

    “Whole communities are traumatized and displaced, farmlands abandoned, schools disrupted, with grave socioeconomic consequences including spikes in poverty, hunger, and illiteracy,” Akobundu said.

    He condemned violent agitations in the region, insisting that “violence solves nothing and can never be a pathway to self-determination,” but acknowledged that issues such as inequity, marginalisation, unemployment, and poverty must be addressed “headlong” to stem the crisis.

    Akobundu praised Southeast governors for their “uncommon grit” in confronting insecurity and assured that the Senate would act on recommendations from the summit, including amending or repealing existing laws and making new ones to strengthen national security.

    He also lauded frontline security personnel, saying, “Your sacrifices will never be forgotten. The Senate takes your welfare seriously.”

    The Speaker of the Enugu State House of Assembly, Hon. Uche Ugwu, described the summit as an opportunity for the Southeast to “listen, understand, and suggest solutions in line with the realities on the ground.”

    He stressed that security must be rooted in intelligence gathering and socioeconomic stability.

    “We must invest in intelligence gathering while not neglecting the economic conditions that make our people, especially our young ones, vulnerable to criminal activities,” he said.

    Ugwu emphasised the need to rebuild trust between communities, government, and security agencies.

    “When communities trust their security agencies and when leaders speak with one voice, insecurity loses its strength,” he said.

    The Speaker also identified farmers-herders clashes and open grazing as major drivers of conflict in the Southeast, warning that “anything open grazing in the Southeast is against the peace of the land.”

    He called for urgent consideration of state police, arguing that decentralised policing would help create safer communities.

    “Security cannot be achieved by force alone,” he said. “The issue of state police is something we should look into to create an enabling environment in our communities.”

  • House seeks reduction in age to contest Senate, governorship seats

    House seeks reduction in age to contest Senate, governorship seats

    The House of Representatives has taken steps towards amending the 1999 Constitution to further reduce the age for those willing to contest elective positions across the country.

    As part of the efforts, the House passed for the second reading a Constitution Amendment Bill to reduce the age for qualification for membership of the Senate and Office of the governor, sponsored by Martin Esin Etim and 24 others.

    The constitution currently sets 35 as the minimum age for candidates wishing to contest for the senatorial and governorship tickets, while the age for those contesting the House of Representatives seats is pegged at a minimum of 25.

    Leading the debate on the general principle of the amendment Bill, Etim, who is representing Offong/Oruko/Udung Uko Federal Constituency of Akwa Ibom State, said the age threshold for higher offices restricts the political advancement of young Nigerians.

    Read Also: Fed Govt will rescue Kebbi abducted school girls, bring culprits to Justice — Shettima

    The lawmaker argued that the existing gap of 10 years between eligibility for the House and the Senate or governorship limits the progression of young legislators who begin their careers early.

    According to him, many lawmakers who enter the Green Chamber at 25 and complete two four-year terms would be 33 but still unable to contest for the Senate or governorship seats.

    Etim explained that the Bill proposes a reduction of the age requirement from 35 to 30, maintaining a five-year gap between eligibility for the House and the higher offices.

    He said: “If a member of this House at 25 years spends two terms in the House of Representatives, he will be 33 years and he will still not be qualified to go to the senate or to become a governor.

    “So, I think that this honourable house should look into it and we maintain the gap between the office of the governor and Senate, as it were, and that of the House at the five years that it has always been.”

  • Senate steps in to end ELRA leadership crisis

    Senate steps in to end ELRA leadership crisis

    The Senate has moved to broker peace in the protracted leadership crisis rocking the Equipment Leasing Registration Authority (ELRA), following a petition alleging the unlawful removal of the agency’s former Acting Chief Executive Officer, Saidu Njidda.

    At an investigative hearing convened by the Senate Committee on Ethics, Code of Conduct and Public Petitions, the Northern Alliance Committee (NAC) insisted that Njidda was “unceremoniously and unlawfully” removed in violation of the ELRA Act and established public service rules.

    NAC’s representative, Prof. Ibrahim Madugu, told the committee chaired by Senator Neda Imasuen (APC – Edo South), that the former Acting CEO was eased out without a disengagement letter or adherence to provisions of the Code of Conduct Bureau Act, Pension Reform Act, and the Public Service Rules.

    He argued that such omissions carry far-reaching consequences for the affected officer, describing the alleged appointment of a new Registrar without following due process as a “blatant breach.”

    Madugu urged the Senate to insist on strict compliance with Section 8(a) of the ELRA Act in future appointments, saying administrative oversight by supervising ministries must not be converted into punitive measures against officers who follow procedure.

    He also referenced President Bola Tinubu’s recent remarks at a judicial conference, stressing that reforms cannot thrive where due process and integrity are undermined.

    But ELRA’s representative, Mr. Oluwasogo Adeuja, countered the allegations, maintaining that Njidda’s tenure effectively ended with the dissolution of the board under which he served.

    READ ALSO; Emir of Ilorin condemns Eruku Church attack

    He said the Office of the Secretary to the Government of the Federation had, on June 19, 2023, dissolved the board, rendering all its subsequent actions invalid.

    Adeuja added that a legal opinion from the Attorney-General of the Federation affirmed the invalidity of the board’s later activities.

    He disclosed that an audit query alleged that Njidda made financial payments to himself, prompting a demand for a refund.

    According to him, the power to appoint or remove the ELRA Registrar resides exclusively with the President, who, in October 2024, inaugurated a new board and appointed a substantive Registrar.

    Representatives of the Northern Alliance insisted they approached the National Assembly only after failed attempts to resolve the matter with the executive.

    Their objective, they said, was not to challenge presidential authority but to seek transparency and fairness.

    Senator Imasuen commended the orderly conduct of parties, especially Engr. Njidda, despite the tense exchanges during the session.

    He directed the committee to write to the Minister of Finance to convene a stakeholders’ meeting aimed at achieving an internal resolution.

    The matter was adjourned for one month to allow room for reconciliation, with the committee warning that failure to reach a compromise would trigger a full-scale review in line with its oversight mandate.

  • Reps seek reduction in age to contest Senate, governorship seats to 30

    Reps seek reduction in age to contest Senate, governorship seats to 30

    The House of Representatives has taken steps towards amending the 1999 Constitution to further reduce the age for those willing to contest elective positions in the country.

    As part of the efforts, the House passed for second reading a Constitution amendment Bill to reduce the age for qualification for membership of the Senate and Office of the Governor, sponsored by Martin Esin Etim and 24 others.

    The constitution currently sets 35 as the minimum age for candidates wishing to contest the Senate and governorship, while those contesting the House of Representatives seats are pegged at a minimum of 25.

    Leading the debate on the general principle of the bill, the Akwa Ibom lawmaker who represents Offong/Oruko/Udung Uko federal constituency, said the age threshold for higher offices restricts the political advancement of young Nigerians.

    READ ALSO; Emir of Ilorin condemns Eruku Church attack

    The lawmaker argued that the existing half-decade between eligibility for the House and the Senate or governorship limits the progression of young legislators who begin their careers early, adding that many lawmakers who enter the House at 25 and complete two four-year terms would be 33 but still unable to contest for the Senate or governorship.

    According to him, the bill proposes a reduction of the age requirement from 35 to 30, maintaining a five-year gap between eligibility for the House and the higher offices.

    He said, “If a member of this house at 25 years spends two terms in the House of Representatives, he will be 33 years and he will still not be qualified to go to the Senate or to become a governor.

    “So, I think that this honourable house should look into it and we maintain the gap between the office of the governor and senate, as it were, and that of the house for the five years that it has always been.”

  • Senate mourns Enugu North Senator Okey Ezea

    Senate mourns Enugu North Senator Okey Ezea

    The Senate has expressed grief over the death of Senator Okechukwu Ezea (LP – Enugu North).

    Chairman, Senate committee on media and public affairs, Senator Adeyemi Adaramodu, disclosed this in a statement in Abuja.

    “Nigeria has lost one of its serving federal lawmakers, Senator Okey Ezea, who represented Enugu North Senatorial District in the 10th Senate,” Adaramodu said.

    He added, “According to a statement issued by his family, the senator passed away at a private hospital in Lagos at about 11:07 p.m. on Tuesday, 18th November, 2025, after a brief illness.

    “Senator Okey Ezea, until his passing, was a member of the Labour Party, where he contested and won the 2023 Senatorial election.

    “He was an active and influential voice in the 10th Senate.

    “At the genesis of the legislative session in 2023, he served as Chairman of the Senate Committee on Ethics, Privileges, and Public Petitions.

    “He later held key leadership roles as Vice Chairman of the Senate Committee on Housing and Urban Development.

    “At the time of his death, he was the Vice Chairman of both the Senate Committee on Cooperation and Integration in Africa and NEPAD, and the Senate Committee on Culture and Creative Economy.

    “Senator Ezea’s legislative footprint was marked by purposeful and prolific interventions.

    “He sponsored the bill to establish the Federal College of Agriculture, Adani, and championed the bill for the creation of Adada State, a legacy bill he pursued with stoic determination.

    Read Also: Enugu North Senator Okey Ezea dies

    “He also moved several motions on the Senate floor, including a motion calling for the establishment of a military base in Uzo-Uwani Local Government Area of Enugu State, to stem the spate of killings in the area by rampaging bandits.

    “Beyond elected office, Senator Ezea has held notable national appointments, including the Chairman of the Federal Medical Centre, Jalingo, in Taraba State.

    “The Senate shares the grief of this unfortunate and tragic demise of the distinguished Nigerian, with his constituents in Enugu North, Enugu State, and Nigerians, and most especially the immediate family members.

    “We pray fervently that God shall grant him a restful immortality.”

  • Move by Senate to change procedures for electing Presiding Officers, others suffers set back

    Move by Senate to change procedures for electing Presiding Officers, others suffers set back

    The move by the leadership of the Senate to amend its Standing Orders 2023 by changing procedures for the emergence of presiding officers, suffered set back on Tuesday.

    The proposed amendments to standing rules of the Senate faced resistance immediately after being presented by Deputy Leader of the Senate, Senator Lola Ashiru (Kwara South), who stood in for the Leader, Senator Opeyemi Bamidele (Ekiti Central) .

    Senate leadership had in the proposed amendment, which was later stood down, listed only four categories of senators to number four among as those eligible to run for the position of Senate President or Deputy Senate President at  inauguration.

    The proposal, which was  contained in proposed provisions for nomination of Senators to serve as Presiding Officers, states that any Senator who has served as President of the Senate before comes first, followed by any other Senators who must have served as Deputy President of the Senate before and followed by those who have served as principal officers before, after which ranking, in terms of number of years spent in the Senate as a Senator, follows.

    The provision states: “Nomination of Senators to serve as Presiding Officers shall be in accordance with the ranking of Senators and shall be strictly adhered to.

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    “In determining ranking , the following Order shall apply ÷ (i) Former President of the Senate, (ii) Former Deputy President of the Senate, (iii) Former Principal Officers of the Senate, (iv) Senators returning based on number of times re-elected, (v) Senators who had been members of the House of Representatives and ( vi) In the absence of (i) to (v), Senators elected as Senators for the First Time can vie for the positions.”

    Apparently dissatisfied with the proposal, one of the ranking Senators by number years spent in the Senate so far, Senator Danjuma Goje (Gombe Central), kicked against the move.

    Goje, in kicking against the said, it was wrong to place a first timer, appointed principal position on the template of quota system, above others, particularly somebody like him serving his fourth term in the Senate.

    On the strength of Senator Goje’s explanation, the amendment, was hurriedly stood down as advised by the Deputy Senate President Barau Jibrin, who presided over the session.

  • Armed Forces Reform Bill scales second reading at Senate

    Armed Forces Reform Bill scales second reading at Senate

    The Senate yesterday passed for second reading a Bill seeking to repeal and re-enact the Armed Forces Act to provide for a modern, constitutionally compliant, and operationally responsive legal framework for the Nigerian military.

    The proposed legislation, titled: “A Bill for an Act to Repeal the Armed Forces Act and to re-enact a modern, constitutionally compliant and operationally responsive legal framework for the Armed Forces of the Federal Republic of Nigeria, and for Related Matters, 2025”

    was sponsored by the Chairman of the Senate Committee on Army, Abdulaziz Yar’Adua (APC, Katsina Central).

    In his lead debate, Yar’Adua said the existing Armed Forces Act, originally derived from military decrees of the 1960s and last consolidated in 2004, no longer reflects the realities of Nigeria’s constitutional democracy and complex security challenges.

    Read Also: Troops neutralise nine ISWAP terrorists in ongoing onslaught in Borno

    “The Armed Forces of Nigeria remain the cornerstone of our sovereignty and national security,” Yar’Adua said.

    “They have stood gallantly in defence of our nation, from combating insurgency and terrorism to peacekeeping missions across Africa.

    “However, our military law has not kept pace with the evolving defence environment.”

    The Katsina lawmaker explained that the Bill seeks to align the governance of the Armed Forces with constitutional principles, democratic accountability, and international best practices.

    He said it also aims to modernise disciplinary procedures, operational structures, and welfare provisions for service personnel.

    According to him, obsolete fines, such as N200 and N500 penalties, would be replaced with percentage-based sanctions tied to officers’ salary levels, while fair hearing provisions and expanded rights for non-commissioned officers would be introduced to boost morale and ensure justice.

    Yar’Adua noted that many democracies, including those of the United States, the United Kingdom, and South Africa, have reformed their military laws to promote professionalism, accountability, and respect for human rights.

    “Nigeria cannot afford to lag,” he said.

    Senator Ali Ndume (APC, Borno South) supported the Bill, describing the proposed reform as long overdue.

    “As we advance in our democracy, it is necessary to align our Armed Forces with modern laws that reflect transparency and professionalism,” he said.

    Also, Senator Tahir Monguno (APC, Borno North) said the legislation would strengthen civilian oversight of the military and ensure that military authorities operate within democratic frameworks.

    “This Bill seeks to bring our military laws in tandem with international best practices and under the control of democratically elected institutions,” Monguno said.

    Senator Sampson Ekong (APC, Akwa Ibom South) described the proposed Bill as a “profound reform initiative” aimed at deepening the nation’s defence policy framework and reinforcing professionalism within the Armed Forces.

    The Bill was passed for second reading after Deputy Senate President Barau Jibrin, who presided over the plenary, put it to a voice vote.

    Barau referred the Bill to the Senate Committees on Defence, Army, Air Force, and Navy for further legislative work, with a directive to report back within four weeks.

  • Senate demands full disclosures in probe of Stamp Duty collection

    Senate demands full disclosures in probe of Stamp Duty collection

    The Senate has launched a far-reaching investigation into stamp duty collections said to run into trillions of naira, demanding full disclosure from commercial banks, the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN), the Federal Inland Revenue Service (FIRS), and state governments.

    Chairman of the Senate Public Accounts Committee, Senator Ahmed Aliyu Wadada, who gave this indication during a press briefing in Abuja, said the move followed concerns over what he described as “humongous” sums generated from stamp duty between 2016 and 2024, much of which remains unaccounted for.

    “It is one thing to generate revenue and another to ensure it is judiciously utilized,” Wadada said.

    “The legislature cannot afford to look the other way when trillions are at stake.”

    He said the committee has written to all commercial banks to submit detailed records of stamp duty collections and remittances for the eight-year period.

    It has also asked the CBN to provide corresponding data on what the banks remitted and what the apex bank transferred into the Treasury Single Account (TSA).

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    Similarly, he said letters have been sent to the FIRS to account for stamp duties collected on government and private sector agreements, and to the Nigerian Governors’ Forum, chaired by Kwara State Governor AbdulRahman AbdulRazaq, to disclose proceeds received by the states.

    “We want to know what is where, and how effectively it has been used,” Wadada said.

    “This is about accountability and ensuring every kobo collected on behalf of Nigerians is properly tracked.”

    He added that the committee had received preliminary data from consultants but would wait to reconcile all submissions before making its findings public.

    “We have a fair idea of what’s involved,” he said. “But we’re verifying every figure. Once that’s done, we’ll not hesitate to summon anyone necessary to explain discrepancies.”

    He said that all concerned agencies have until November 25, 2025, to respond to the Senate’s requests.

    “This administration has shown commitment to transparency.

    “Our job is to make sure that the revenues it depends on are fully accounted for and effectively utilised for the benefit of Nigerians,” Wadada said.