Tag: Speaker of the House of Representatives

  • Dogara schemes to return as Speaker

    UNKNOWN to many, the Speaker of the House of Representatives, Yakubu Dogara, had set for himself a political Everest to climb. He is nursing the ambition of retaining his current position in the 9th Assembly in spite of the dismal performance of his party, the PDP in the National Assembly election.  How he intends to accomplish this remains a mystery, considering that the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), on whose platform he has won a return ticket to the House, is clearly outnumbered by members of the House elected on the platform of the All Progressives Congress (APC).

    Dogara had emerged as the Speaker of the Eighth Assembly in 2015 against Hon. Femi Gbajabiamila, the preferred candidate of the APC, the party to which Dogara also belonged. He had achieved the feat by enlisting the support of the 123 members from the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) and some lawmakers from APC and other parties to beat Gbajabiamila with eight votes. Dogara scored 182 votes while Ggajabiamila polled 174.

    But the odds would seem to stark against Dogara more now than they did in 2015, considering the wide margin between the number of APC lawmakers and that of PDP in the House. But the optimist that he is, Dogara believes he can still pull through. He can still count on the support of Alhaji Atiku Abubakar and Governor Aminu Tambuwal who both rallied support for him in 2015 as fellow APC members and are incidentally in PDP with Dogara now.

    Read also: BudgIT to Saraki, Dogara: make NASS 2019 budget public

    Already, the PDP has declared that there is nothing that stops them from presenting a candidate for the Speaker’s seat. Their plan, like in 2015, is to woo over some members of APC in the House. How they intend to do that this time around, no one knows.

    A PDP insider says “when the come comes to become,” apologies to the late K.O Mbadiwe, money will play a major role. Another PDP top shot quipped: “We saw the power of money at the PDP presidential primaries in Port Harcourt last year, the power is still there.”

    Reminded that the APC could match them Naira for Naira, he quoted Senator Godswill Akpabio: “What money cannot get, more money will get.”

    Asked if we are to watch out for Naira rain, he said “anything can happen.”

    “With money, anybody can climb to the top of any political Everest,” he added.

    What an interesting race it promises to be.

  • Dogara is a sinking man, says Bauchi gov

    Bauchi State Governor Mohammed Abubakar on Tuesday dismissed Speaker of the House of Representatives, Yakubu Dogara as a sinking man desperate to hold on to any straw for survival.

    The governor, who spoke to newsmen at the APC National secretariat in Abuja, also cautioned as the nation’s number four citizen, the Speaker cannot afford to be careless in his utterances.

    He said: “Dogara is from a tiny community in Bauchi state and is contesting for one of the 12 House of Representatives seats in Bauchi state and I am contesting for Governor. Even if we will meet, we are going g to meet in that tiny area.

    “I understand where he is coming from. He is a sinking man and so, he is grabbing everything he can hold on to. I am not his opponent in the election.

    Read Also: Dogara, two others formally defect to PDP as House adjourns

    “What people failed to understand is that in 2015, the President did not win election in Dogara’s local government and I did not win election in his local government.

    “But today, Buhari is President of Nigeria and I am governor of Bauchi state. Secondly, people should understand that Dogara represents a total of 80,000 registered voters and I won elections in 2015 with over 300,000 differences. Please do your arithmetic and place it very well.”

    He went on: “Go to the website of the Federal Ministry of Finance, download the total allocation to Bauchi state from June 2015 till date and do a calculation.

    “You will have a total allocation for the entire Bauchi state. It is not up to N400 billion.

    “So, Dogara, as the number four citizen of Nigeria should be careful with his utterances because there is no way the number four citizen can afford to be reckless in whatever he says.

    “I have consulted with my lawyers and I intend to sue Dogara and so, I will not comment much on his claims.

    “I have said that Dogara should be careful in his utterances because he speaks without considering what comes out of his mouth.”

    On the marching order to security agencies to arrest electoral offenders, especially ballot box snatchers by President Muhammadu Buhari, Abubakar said: “Mr. President is the chief security officer of Nigeria. Anybody who snatches a ballot box is a common criminal under the law.

    “Therefore, stopping a criminal is not an act that should be politicized because we keep complaining of lack of free, fair and transparent elections in Nigeria and Mr. President is bent on ensuring that the 2019 elections are free, fair and transparent.

    “So, if it takes stopping criminals to ensure credible elections, so be it. There is nothing wrong about stopping criminal, even you as a citizen as the right under the constitution t9 stop criminals in the act of committing an offense.”

  • Shocking defeat awaits you if you contest, APC tells Dogara

    The All Progressives Congress (APC) has asked Speaker of the House of Representatives, Yakubu Dogara not to re-contest the House of Representative seat on the platform of the opposition party as “a humiliating defeat” awaits him.

    Reacting to the purported defection of the Speaker to the People’s Democratic Party (PDP), Acting National Organising Secretary, Yekini Nabena said it was not a surprise if the Speaker decide to join the opposition in view of his anti-party activities in the National Assembly.

    Read Also:Soldiers kill 10 kidnappers, bandits in Kaduna

    He said the anti-party activities became more glaring when the PDP won his local government of Bogoro during the recently concluded Senatorial election in Bauchi state.

    Nabena said “We have received several media requests for a reaction to the purported defection of the Speaker, House of Representatives, Rt. Hon. Yakubu Dogara from the All Progressives Congress (APC) to one of the opposition political parties, as reported in the media.

    “In reacting, a recent comment by President Muhammadu Buhari aptly sums Dogara’s reported defection: “The weakest people whose senses of expectation do not align with our vision have exited our Party”.

    “Dogara’s reported defection has not come to us as a surprise. It was only a matter of time judging by Dogara’s anti-party antics in the National Assembly where in connivance with the Senate President, Bukola Saraki, he exploited all available avenues to sabotage and undermine the APC-led executive.

    “Dogara’s anti-party activities which enabled one of the opposition Party’s sole victory in Bogoro Local Government Area (Dogara’s council) during the recent Bauchi South Senatorial bye-election won by the APC is another pointer, among several others.

    “Indeed, all politics is local. As a Party, we empathise with Dogara on his confusion and despair over his bleak political future given the fact that he is not on ground and a political paperweight in his home Bauchi state.

    “In his emergence as Speaker, Dogara was merely used by his political master to achieve their selfish political ends at the time. They have since moved on to pursue their individual political aspirations and left Dogara in the cold.

    “We would advise Dogara against his ill-advised decision to recontest his House of Representatives seat under the opposition Party he is linked with because a crushing and humiliating defeat surely awaits him.

    “As a Party, we remain united and committed to our Progressives ideologies. We urge Party faithful to consolidate on our strengths and collectively go into the 2019 general elections as a united and strong political fighting force to sustain the Change Agenda we are implementing for the benefit of Nigerians.”

  • Dogara dispels allegations of witch hunting over investigation of NDPHC

    The Speaker of the House of Representatives,  Yakubu Dogara has said that the investigation of the Niger Delta Power Holding Company (NDPHC) Ltd over alleged  misappropriation of over N10 trillion ($30b) should not be misconstrued as witch hunting.

    The Speaker said the company that is being funded by tax payer’s money has refused to follow due process by failing to present its expenditure to the National Assembly while spending without legislative approvals.

    He said the investigation of over $30b of public fund by the company since 2005 was borne out of the need to find a lasting solution to the challenges in the nation’s power sector that has adversely affected all efforts to transform the nation’s economy.

    Read Also:Plateau killings: Buhari meets Saraki, Dogara in Aso Rock

    NDPHC Ltd, established in 2005 was funded with $8.5b by the Federal, States and Local governments (LGs) with the Federal government bearing 47 percent of the cost while and 53 percent was shared by the State and 774 LGs.

    The shareholding composition of the company was 937,648,742 for the Federal Ministry of Finance Incorporated, 710,864,796 shares for States, 351,486,461 shares for LGS and 1 share for the Nigeria National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC).

    Dogara, spoke Thursday at an investigative hearing by the Darlington Nwokocha-led ad hoc Committee where he said the House was particularly concerned about making the NDPHC to work to fulfil its intended objectives as an important agency in the nation’s electricity industry.

    Represented by the Deputy Minority Leader, Chukwuka Onyeama (PDP, Anambra), the Speaker said the House will not relent until all allegations of misuse of N10.08 trillion (about $30b) by NDPHC is unraveled.

    He said the investigation became imperative as more than half of the money was sourced from the Excess Crude Account (ECA) belonging to the three tiers of government.

    He said: “From the information made available to the National Assembly, the NDPHC Ltd. has since 2005 invested over $30b, over half of which was sourced from the ECA belonging to the three tiers of Government, while the balance consists of funds from other investors.

    “As a Limited Liability Company, the operations, management and accounting procedures of the NDPHC Limited is subject to the overriding provisions of the Laws of the Federal Republic of Nigeria in general, and the Companies and Allied Matters Act, (CAMA), in particular.

    “However, the available information is that the Company has failed to comply with very serious and important provisions of the Law, such that the very essence of the company, and by extension the NIPP, is seriously threatened.

    “Furthermore, the NDPHC does not submit its annual budget and project plans for appropriation by the National Assembly, while, as alleged, it also generates Internally Generated Revenues (IGR) in trillions of Naira, which cannot be determined because it is neither divulged nor paid into the coffers of the Government, but rather expended by the company without Legislative approval or input from the other tiers of Government.

    “Most importantly, information available from the Corporate Affairs Commission (CAC) conveys very disturbing signals that the trillions of Naira purportedly invested into the NIPP by the Federal, the 36 States and the 774 Local Governments have not been securitized as only two billion Naira is said to be registered as shares in the CAC for the three tiers of Government”.

    However, while NDPHC’s Chairman, Managing Director (MD), Chinedu Ugbo claimed to be unaware of specific allegations of funds misappropriation, the Association Local Governments of Nigeria (ALGON) disclosed that it was unaware of its participation in the formation of the company.

    The MD sought the indulgence of the Committee to amend the presentation earlier made to the Committee after the legal representative of the company, Olusola Oke, a Senior Advocate of Nigeria (SAN) was denied audience by the Committee

    Ugbo afterward restated the submission of his legal adviser that he was unaware of the specific allegations of financial infractions.

    He pleaded for time to enable him report back at a later date for a comprehensive response to the allegations.

    On his part, the Director General of the Nigerian Governor’s Forum (NGF), Abdullateef Shittu, who could not make a comprehensive submission, however disclosed that shares belonging to the Local Governments were delivered through the NGF.

    Shittu pleaded with the Committee for more time to provide detailed information requested due to the short notice of the invitation.

    On his part, the consultant that represented ALGON, Mohammed Ali said the organizational was not aware of its investment in NDPHC.

    Ali said ALGON has never been invited to NDPHC’s Annual General Meeting (AGM) and neither has it received Share Certificate or dividends for its investments in the company since inception in 2005.

    ALGON demanded for 10 years audited account of the company to enable it make informed decision on what next step to take about its investment in the company.

    A member of the Committee, Abiodun Olasupo (Oyo state) wondered whether NGF was trying to shield certain interests by failing to make a detailed presentation on account of short notice.

    He said ALGON got the invitation same time with NGF and was able to make its presentation.

    Earlier, Committee Chairman Nwokocha said the House was forced to launch the investigation due to the avalanche of petitions on allegations against the composition, management and operations of the company.

    “This investigation into afford all stakeholders an opportunity to participate and be heard on this issue of national importance,” he said.

    The hearing was adjoined indefinitely.

  • Breaking: Buhari, Saraki, Dogara meet in Aso Rock 

    President Muhammadu Buhari on Monday met behind closed doors with the leadership of the National Assembly.

    The meeting started around 2.p.m when the Senate President, Bukola Saraki and Speaker of the House of Representatives, Yakubu Dogara arrived the President’s office.

    While the 2018 Budget proposal submitted to National Assembly last November is yet to be passed, other issues have also made the relationship between the two arms of government not too cordial.

    The latest was the threat by the National Assembly to invoke Section 143 of the 1999 Constitution towards starting impeachment process against the President for purchase military jets without lawmakers’ approval.

    The meeting was still in progress at the time of filing this report

    Details later…

  • Osinbajo warns board members against corruption 

    Vice President Yemi Osinbajo on Tuesday warned new board members against corrupt practices in their assignments.

    He spoke through the Secretary to the Government of the Federation (SGF), Boss Mustapha, while inaugurating boards of agencies under his office supervision.

    The boards inaugurated on Tuesday included the National Institute for Policy and Strategic Studies (NIPSS), National Boundary Commission (NBC) and Border Communities Development Agency (BCDA).

    Harping on government’s determination to win the battle against corruption, Osinbajo urged the new chairmen and members to totally eschew corruption.

    He said “Let me at this point reiterate the determination of this administration to succeed in the fight against corruption. In carrying out your responsibility as Board Members, you must therefore eschew corruption totally as Government will not hesitate to sanction all infractions.”

    He also urged the new board members to focus on economic development and revive the country from recession.

    Osinbajo also charged them to key into the Economic Recovery and Growth Plan of the Federal Government.

    He said “Nigeria has over the last 24 to 36 months, passed through a period of economic recession which necessitated the development of a home grown Economic Recovery and Growth Plan.

    “Which you are expected to key into, in view of the importance of your institutions to national economic stability.

    “I therefore expect robust policies initiatives from you as members of the board being inaugurated today,” the Vice President said.

    The management of the various organisations under the boards, he said, should be allowed to perform their duties without any interference from the board.

    The Speaker of the House of Representatives, Yakubu Dogara, who was represented by Femi Gbajabiamila observed that the board was critical to national development.

    “There is a lot of work to be done and I believe you will do a wonderful job.” he said

    The Chairman of NIPSS Board, Ignatius Longjan, who spoke on behalf of the members promised to be diligent in their studies.

    He said “In this national assignment given to yes, we will do it diligently and appropriately, we will not let you down.

    “We will carry out these assignments to the best of our ability, whatever will make Nigeria better, we will do it,” he added

    While Vice President Yemi Osinbajo is the Chairman of National Boundary Commission (NBC) and Border Community Development Agency (BCDA) Boards, Ignatius Longjan is the Chairman for NIPSS.

    Read Also: Osinbajo: Buhari administration is building a bright future for the youths

  • Let Peace Corps be, youths beg Buhari

    Let Peace Corps be, youths beg Buhari

    The non-signing of the Peace Corps of Nigeria (PCN) bill by President Muhammad Buhari is generating ripples among stakeholders especially youths in Ondo state.

    They faulted the action which would have facilitated employment for the teeming youths in the country.

    A medical expert, Thomas Ikugbese at a news conference in Akure said signing the bill would have boosted the image of Buhari’s administration.

    He expressed fear on possibility of more youths who were disappointed on the development not to go on suicide mission like it happened recently in Gombe state.

    Buhari had declined to assent to the Nigeria Peace Corps (Establishment) Bill passed in 2017 by the National Assembly.

    Speaker of the House of Representatives, Yakubu Dogara read the letter from the President who cited security concerns and financial implication as parts of the reasons for declining to sign the bill.

    Ikugbese who is a Presidential Candidate of the National Conscience Party (NCP) noted that the refusal of President Buhari to sign the bill would affect many youths who had hoped that the Peace Corps of Nigeria would provide them employment.

    He urged President Buhari to save youths from committing suicide by rescinding his decision and assent to the PCN’s bill.

    In the alternative, Ikugbese urged National Assembly to recall the bill to Parliament, muster two-thirds of the membership of the House of Representatives and Senate and pass it into law in spite of despite Buhari veto, if he fails to honour the bill.

    Ikugbese said that Nigeria with the population of 186 million and police numbering about 370, 000 need effective policing.

    He said, of the 370, 000 a staggering 80 percent of this number are assigned to private citizens, politicians, businessmen and private enterprises while leaving only 20 percent for the core police duties of peace and security.

    According to him, there are people in the security agencies and in the presidency frustrating efforts of President Buhari to append his signature on the bill.

    He said that the Peace Corps of Nigeria (PCN) was not in a competition with the police or other security agencies.

    He explained that the Presidency should not be scared of monthly remuneration that the Peace Corps of Nigeria will gulp from the scarce resources of the nation.

    The NCP Presidential aspirant noted that the fund to run the corps should not necessarily come from the federal government as those who required its service could pay.

    Read Also: Buhari withholds assent on Peace Corps Bill

  • Fuel crisis: Local refining is the only solution, says Dogara

    Fuel crisis: Local refining is the only solution, says Dogara

    The Speaker of the House of Representatives, Yakubu Dogara has said the country will continue to experience fuel crisis as long as it cannot refine the products locally.

    Dogara said though the leadership of the country is engaging stakeholders on how to surmount the challenge, he nonetheless opined that the country is not likely to overcome the recurring crisis if it continues with stop-gap measures.

    Dogara spoke Tuesday in his office while receiving the leadership of the Petroleum and Natural gas Senior Staff Association of Nigeria (PENGASSAN), where he said it would be foolhardy for anyone to think that there will be a permanent solution without capacity to refine petroleum products locally.

    He however disclosed that three Petroleum Industry bills would be given expedited action by the two houses of the National Assembly to avoid delay.

    He revealed that works on the bills are expected to be have been concluded and sent for Presidential assent before active politicking for 2019 general elections sets in.

    He said: “You mention this very embarrassing fuel situation which we have found ourselves and the state of our refineries.

    “My take on this is very simple and I’ve said it on a number of occasion that unless we are able to refine our own crude oil locally, we will never be in a position as a nation to say bye bye to fuel scarcity.

    “That is the truth; anyone who thinks we can depend on importation and still solve this problem in a permanent basis is deceiving himself.

    “When you import you depend on so many variables that are not within your control and anything can happen along the line that may result in this.

    “As far as am concerned, I see no reason why, with the quantum of crude we are churning out from Nigeria we cannot refine this product locally and end this shame once and for all.

    “It’s something we are looking at levels of  different strata of leadership in the country but whatever solutions we are going to proffer, will only be temporal.

    “The permanent solution will come when are able to refine the product locally, put it in the filling stations where it can be dispensed and then we can say bye bye to the scarcity.

    “But as far as that is not done, any measure adopted will just be a stop-gap measure  because we will depending on refineries outside and others variables that are not

    “This is where we are but to be candid this is a challenge we have to resolve as soon as we can.

    “At the level of leadership, engagements are on-going and hopefully we will be able find a solution but the permanent solution is when we are in a position, either through the existing refineries or building new ones but we must possess the capacity to refine the crude locally.”

    As part of the permanent solution, Dogara said the process of passing the three remain bills of petroleum industry would be abridged whereby the petroleum resources Committees of the two House would work together rather than separately.

    He said a joint public hearing would be conducted by the Committees where all stakeholders, civil society organizations (CSOs) and members of the public would be invited.

    He said the aggregate of the outcome of the public hearing is critical to the final report of the bills.

    Dogara also stated that to maximise time, there would be no need for Conference Committe once the reports of the bills are considered and adopted by the two chambers since the reports would be basically similar.

    Saying that the 8th National Assembly is desirous of creating further history having broken the jinx of passing the Petroleum Industry Governance Bill (PIGB), Dogara said the lawmakers are currently working on the physical aspect of the bills.

    “The process of passing the bills will be done in no time, by this time; we are taking a very short route to the passage of these bills in the sense that instead of working separately, the two Houses will work on them jointly.

    “At the end of the day what comes back to the plenary of the two houses will be a reflection of the work of the joint Committee and once it is passed, there won’t be any need for conference on the bill to harmonise the position of the two houses, it will be the same position for the two and it will be sent to the President for assent.

    “If we succeed in this, this section of the National Assembly would be making history though we have been doing that.”

    Earlier in his speech, PENGASAN  National President, Olabode Johnson, who led other members of the delegation asked for the intervention of the House in the lingering fuel crisis while asking for the revamping and rehabilitation of the nation’s refineries with timeline.

    The union also implored the government to effect strategies of adequate and sustainable crude supply to the refineries to enhance local refining.

    The group also asked government to remove all encumbrances associated with importation of refined products, enhance infrastructural facilities such as construction of additional Single Point Mooring and extension of such into deep waters to enable berthing of large vessels to ease the challenges of importation.

  • W/African Nations need strong laws to combat proliferation of weapons – Dogara

    W/African Nations need strong laws to combat proliferation of weapons – Dogara

    The Speaker of the House of Representatives, Hon. Yakubu Dogara, has said to combat the proliferation of small arms across the West African sub region; there is need for the enactment of strong laws.

    Dogara also noted that the high rate of youth unemployment and its attendant consequences – such as mercenary trading, insurgency and illegal mining – are contributory factors.

    He made the observations in his opening remarks at the Parliamentary Conference on Containment of Small Arms Proliferation and Terrorist Financing in ECOWAS, which held in Abuja on yesterday.

    He also reiterated the commitment of the National Assembly to working with other stakeholders to enhance security in West Africa.

    While lamenting the adverse effect of widespread insecurity on efforts towards meeting Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), he made reference to a report of the United Nations’ Office on Drugs and Crime which described West Africa as paradise for organised crime due to weak borders , corruption and other such factors.

    His words: “The sub-region has suffered from intra- and inter-communal feuds, local wars, armed insurrections, armed rebel activities  and terrorism, all of which have led to the proliferation of Small Arms and Light Weapons (SALW).  Small arms and light weapons are dangerous tools of violence in West Africa for obvious reasons.

    “Small arms are durable, highly portable, easily concealed, simple to use, extremely lethal and possess legitimate military, police and civilian uses.  In addition, the weapons are lightweight and so are used by child soldiers, who play a significant role in most crises afflicting the sub-region.”

    “As legislators, one area we need to address our minds to is the enactment of laws making gun possession difficult.  It has been observed that during conflicts, some ECOWAS Member States liberalized laws on gun possession in order to stimulate gun possession by civilians.  Arms were directly distributed to paramilitary groups by governments in order to fight rebel forces.

    “In addition, gun possession legislation was liberalized.  This development, therefore, enhanced diffusion of small arms in the sub-region.  However, after conflicts, small arms are recycled for use in new conflicts and crimes at home, or sold to other West African countries for use in new conflicts or to prolong ongoing conflicts.”

    According to him, the current situation is in direct contravention of a Declaration on a Moratorium on the Importation, Exportation and Manufacture of Small Arms and Light Weapons in West Africa which was adopted by the Authority of Heads of State and Government of ECOWAS on 31 October 1998, and became a legally binding and permanent convention in June 2006.

    The Speaker also identified youth unemployment and the resultant trade of mercenaries as one of the factors responsible for this.

    He said: “Eleven years after the adoption of the Convention in 2006, the issue of containment of small arms proliferation remains a challenge.  It is unfortunate to note that there is a thriving trade of mercenaries in West Africa, aiding the circulation and proliferation of small arms in the region, especially along the Sahel area.

    “Levels of youth unemployment are high and there are many able-bodied, disgruntled persons available, ready and willing to be trained and armed to fight.  Some of the youth who do not serve as mercenaries illegally migrate to Europe through the Sahara Desert and the Mediterranean Sea.

    “Some of the West African youth are currently trapped in Libya where slave trade business thrives.  Still on small arms proliferation, illicit mining, oil bunkering and insurgency are also responsible for enhanced diffusion of small arms and light weapons in the sub-region.”

    He further highlighted the link between terrorist financing and the proliferation of small arms, and stressed the need for all parliaments to ratify the ECOWAS Convention on Small Arms and Light Weapons, Their Ammunition and Other Related Materials.

    “A related issue that aids proliferation of small arms and light weapons within ECOWAS is terrorist financing.  The March 2017 report from Global Financial Integrity, Transnational Crime and the Developing World, notes that transnational crime is a global business.

    “It is valued at an average of $1.6 trillion to $2.2 trillion annually, out of which Small Arms & Light Weapons Trafficking accounts for $1.7 billion to $3.5 billion annually. Other illicit activities include counterfeiting ($923 billion to $1.13 trillion) and drug trafficking ($426 billion to $652 billion).”

    He said it is worth noting that revenues from transnational crime finance violence, corruption, and other abuses.

    “Very rarely do the revenues from transnational crime have any long-term benefits to citizens, communities, or economies of the sub-region. Instead, the crimes undermine local and national economies, destroy the environment, and jeopardize the health and wellbeing of the public.

    “As Members of Parliament, we need to ensure that our national parliaments ratify the ECOWAS Convention on Small Arms and Light Weapons, Their Ammunition and Other Related Materials.  I am happy to report that as at 10 November 2017, thirteen out of the fifteen Member States of ECOWAS had ratified the Convention.”

    He called on the remaining two ECOWAS Member States (The Gambia and Liberia) to accelerate the ratification of the Convention.

    “Beyond ratification, I call on national parliaments to ensure the domestication of the convention into their national laws.”

    In order to effectively combat the proliferation of small arms and terrorist financing, the Speaker suggested legislative interventions which will require that registered companies doing business within an ECOWAS Member State declare the names of ultimate beneficial owners, flag financial and trade transactions involving individuals and corporations in secrecy jurisdictions as high-risk and require extra documentation.

    According to him, there is also need to scrutinize import and export invoices for signs of mis-invoicing, which may indicate technical or physical smuggling; and share more information between agencies and departments on the illicit markets and actors that exist within a country’s borders.

  • Dogara leads Nigerian delegation  to Italy over Human Trafficking:

    Dogara leads Nigerian delegation  to Italy over Human Trafficking:

    Speaker of the House of Representatives, Hon. Yakubu Dogara,  is leading Nigerian delegation to Italy to discuss women empowerment and the fight against  human trafficking, statement from his office has said.

    The visit is sequel to the death of 26 Nigerian women in the Mediterranean  sea while trying to cross to Europe.

    The statement further reads: ” The Italian government had extended invitation to the Speaker to attend an international conference on “Women empowerment and the fight against trafficking in persons. The Partnership between Nigeria and Italy” which will take place in Rome.

    “The journey is also a reciprocation of the  official visit of the President of Italian Chamber of Deputies, Ms. Laura Boldrini,  to the Speaker in May 2017.

    “Edo State Governor, Mr Godwin Obaseki,  and  Director General of National Agency for the Prohibition of Trafficking in Persons (NAPTIP),  Ms Julie Okah-Donli, among others are also in the delegation .

    “The Nigerian delegation are  billed to attend the Conference on the invitation of the Italian Parliament who are seeking partnership with Nigeria to stem human trafficking especially the increasing number of Nigerian citizens that enter Italy every year.

    “During her visit to Speaker Dogara, in May this year,  Laura Boldrini, had lamented that in 2016 alone, 37,000 Nigerians arrived in Italy through the Mediterranean sea. The conference also seeks ways of empowering Nigerian women to stop the illegal and dangerous  migration of Nigerians to Europe.”