Tag: Zakari Mohammed

  • Perm Sec tenure extension: Reps fault President’s Chief of Staff’s letter

    Perm Sec tenure extension: Reps fault President’s Chief of Staff’s letter

    Tempers flared on Tuesday at the House of Representatives Committee on Basic Education meeting with the Head of Service, Mrs Winifred Oyo-Ita over the extension of the tenure of the former Permanent Secretary of the Ministry of Education, Dr Jamilah Shu’ara.

    The committee had insisted on the need to be intimated with the extant laws on which her extension as permanent secretary was hinged, but the Head of Service could not provide any constitutional backing for her action, except a letter from the President’s Chief of Staff, Abba Kyari.

    It demanded to see the letter the HOS wrote which the Chief of Staff was responding to and also wondered why it took the Chief of Staff a year to respond, particularly only when the extension was under probe by the House committee.

    The Head of Service refused to produce the letter prompting lawmakers to insist that she must produce it by Thursday.

    The committee members were angry that the investigative sessions of the committee had been postponed twice at the instance of the HOS and a third one was given on Tuesday, effectively slowing the committee’s investigation.

    The Chairman of the Committee, Zakari Mohammed, faulted the letter by the Chief of Staff saying anyone in the Civil Service who has attained the age of 60 years or 35 years in Service ought to retire. The only other option is if the person is appointed by the President under section Kyari quoted ” but not an extension of tenure”.

    [quote font_size=”18″ color=”#000000″ bgcolor=”#dd9e40″ bcolor=”#dd3333″ arrow=”yes”]The letter from the President’s Chief of Staff, Abba Kyari dated 20th, March 2017 to the HOS purported to have approved the extension of Shu’ara tenure indicted the HOS by showing it was in response to a letter from her.

    The letter reads in part: “I write to acknowledge receipt of your letter ref. No. HCSF/1013/I dated March 17th, 2016.
    “In line with the provisions of 171 (2) of the 1999 Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria as amended, Mr.President has approved the extension of the appointment of Dr Mrs Jamila Shu’ara by one year in a special dispensation which should not be cited as policy[/quote]

    The committee has vowed to get to the bottom of the matter by Thursday.

    According to the Chairman of the committee, “the HOS is frustrating this committee from doing its job.”

    The lawmakers have been trying to investigate the mystery behind the second time extension of the tenure of Dr Jamilah Shu’ara a former Permanent Secretary in the Ministry of Education who was supposedly retired.

    Her tenure was extended from February 2016 to 2017 and again from 2017 to 2018.

    In the first instance, the Minister of Education, Adamu Adamu had appeared on behalf of Dr Jamilah Shu’ara when he was not invited prompting curiously from Rep members on his motive particularly when Shu’ara did not put up an appearance on that date.

    The ministry later wrote the committee that she has been removed as Permanent Secretary. Surprisingly, she was said to have been reinstated again and her tenure extended a second time.

     

     

  • Budget padding: Committee Chairman dares Jibrin

    Budget padding: Committee Chairman dares Jibrin

    One of the Chairmen of House of Representatives Committees alleged to have padded the 2016 budget with 2000 fictitious projects worth N284b, Zakari Mohammed has denied being involved in the scam.

    While challenging the former Chairman, Appropriation Committee, Abdulmumin Jibrin to make good his threat of petitioning anti-graft agencies, Mohammed noted that Jibrin is a sinking politician looking for who to drag down with him.

    Jibrin had alleged Mohammed, who is the Chairman, Committee on Basic Education and nine others of padding the budget with 2000 fictitious projects worth N284b.

    In a statement Monday, Mohammed explained that having known the kind of person Jibrin is, he (Mohammed) ensured that he avoided Jibrin and his antics during the 2016 budget preparation period.

    The Basic Education Committee Chairman also said he was unaware of padding in budget preparation for five years he has been the House of Representatives.

    The statement reads: “Ordinarily, I would have ignored his face-saving tweets but the fact that he is deceptively carrying many Nigerians along makes it imperative to protect my hard-earned integrity and about 10 years of unblemished career in as a political office holders.

    “Prior to joining politics, I had worked as a civil servant for 14 years with outstanding records. I cannot allow a desperado, who is also a gold digger, to rubbish my impeccable integrity.

    “I have not spoken or had personal contact with Jibrin since November 2015 because I have always had reservations on his conduct and over rated personality; he held every member in contempt and arrogated usurped powers to himself.

    “He was so overwhelmed by his ambition to drag me into his plot to the extent that he referred to me as the chairman of the House Committee on higher education because of his orchestrated mission against me.

    “I wish to place on record that throughout the period of consideration of the 2016 Appropriation Act, I did not meet or write Jibrin for assistance to include any item or project in my constituency not even when he sent Hon. Muktar Betera, chairman defence to some of us to write via our letter heads requesting for assistance from him.

    “Instead, I concentrated on my job as the Chairman of the House Committee on Basic Education. The proposals for Basic Education were easier in treating because the enabling Act of UBEC is explicit on how it should be funded. I want him to produce any of my write ups in my letter head to the public.

    “Our submission on the 2016 budget was a product of our committee’s relentless work, in conjunction with the Senate Committee on Basic Education.

    “I challenge Jibrin to point out the specific areas that our committee fell short of its duties.

    “I have no file with EFCC or its allied agency but the same cannot be said of the former Appropriation Committee chairman. Nigerians should therefore disregard his accusations because they are as a result of frustration of his removal.

    “As for Jibrin’s formal report to the EFCC, I am more than ready to appear before any agency or anywhere to prove my innocence. I have no skeletons in my cupboard.”

    On budget padding, Mohammed said it was a strange phenomenon, adding,  “What a sitting President brings to the National Assembly, according to Section 80(1) and (2) of the  1999 Constitution is an estimate which the Legislature is expected to consider and assist the Executive in reviewing appropriations for its plans and projects for the country for the fiscal year.

    “Jibrin should look elsewhere for his prey. I was a public servant first for 14yrs before taking political appointments  in 2002 as a Special Assistant, Commissioner for Sports and later Commissioner for Energy in Kwara State, including pioneering the first football academy in nigeria as chairman of the board and that of the state football team in my home state.my track records are clear and above board.

    “On getting to the National Assembly in 2011, I chaired the  sensitive media and public affairs committee and I was never found wanting in all aspects of my duties, financially or otherwise.

    “I went this far to let the sadistic Abdulmumin Jibrin know that as a student of government I have built a reputation on credible  slate without cutting corners. This assignment cannot be an exception because I have a family name and a lineage which is symbolized by diligence and  not riches at all costs.”

  • Sitting duck

    Sitting duck

    •National Assembly should do the needful on bills the president has failed to assent to

    Zakari Mohammed, Chairman, House Committee on Information disclosed a perilously inhibitive trend in blissful legislative/executive relationship during a lecture he delivered at the forum organised by Correspondents’ Chapel of the Oyo State Council of the Nigeria Union of Journalists (NUJ) in Ibadan. He said that ‘40 bills were awaiting President Goodluck Jonathan’s assent to become Act of the National Assembly;’ and cited “the political mood of the country’’ as the reason why the House of Representatives had refrained from deploying its constitutional powers on the issue.

    We have since noticed an evolving pattern of executive languor in the handling of, especially private bills, passed to the president for his assent to complete the process of such bills becoming Act of the National Assembly. For instance, in 2012, not less than 10 of the bills passed by the assembly were returned by President Goodluck Jonathan. In 2013, there were agitations in the National Assembly over the president’s refusal to give his assent to 28 private bills passed by the legislators. This had created a mounting obnoxious pattern where only bills that originated from the Presidency or from the Executive Council of the Federation (EXCOF) receive prompt presidential assent.

    President Jonathan should realise that most private bills have direct impact on the yearnings of the people at the grassroots, quite unlike executive bills which are mostly meant to tackle policy initiatives of the president and his team. Those private member bills are the bills sponsored by a senator or member of the House of Representatives, while executive bills are the ones sent from the Presidency to the National Assembly for consideration. What the presidency needs to appreciate is the fact that whenever such private bills are delayed, it is drawing back areas of necessary legal needs in the society and where denied outright, starting afresh the whole process of legislation could only be at high cost and time to the country.

    Nigeria cannot afford the luxury of this presidential torpor. Therefore, we demand to know if the cause of delay is the president’s inability to read and understand the bills. If this is the situation, what then are his aides doing if they cannot bail him out of his seeming phobia for private bills? The legislators should deploy constitutional provisions empowering them to override this presidential disdain for and impunity against bills, whether private or otherwise, that are duly passed by the National Assembly.

    The 1999 Constitution (as amended) in Section 58(4-5) provides, “Where a bill is presented to the President for assent, he shall within 30 days thereof signify that he assents or that he withholds assent”. It states further: “Where the President withholds his assent and the bill is again passed by each House by two-thirds majority, the bill shall become law and the assent of the President shall not be required.”

    Now that the president has failed to exercise the powers conferred on him by the constitution by not signing the bills passed by the legislature in order to give them the force of law, in flagrant violation of the stipulated 30 days and without any cogent reason, the National Assembly should do the needful if only to show that it is not subservient to the executive arm of government. The only time the legislature upturned presidential veto was in the case of the establishment of the Niger Delta Development Commission (NDDC) during former President Olusegun Obasanjo’s era. The relationship between the executive and the legislature, and even the judiciary, should be symbiotic and not a master-servant one that the president, through impunity, is attempting to foist on the legislative arm of government.

  • ‘Why Reps rejected emergency rule extension’

    ‘Why Reps rejected emergency rule extension’

    The House of Representatives has explained why it rejected President Goodluck Jonathan’s request for extension of the emergency rule in Borno, Yobe and Adamawa for the third time.

    At a briefing on Thursday, the Chairman of the House committee on Media and Public Affairs, Zakari Mohammed, gave reasons why lawmakers rejected the proposed extension.

    He said, “Based on Hon. Leo Ogor’s motion, we have not extended the emergency rule, rather we have asked the President to rely on the Section 8 of the Armed Forces Act which empowers him to deploy the military to troubled spots of the country. We relied on that bearing in mind that if we had approve this today, it would have been the fourth in the series.

    “You remember emergency rule started in May 2013 and therefore, we have done three extensions. If we had extended today, that would have been fourth in the series and anything you are doing, you should be able to take stock to be able to see whether or not that action you are taking is yielding results.

    “We would be doing more good if Mr. President relies on that more because if we are adopting a particular stand and is not giving us desired result, we should be able to change course.

    “And the armed forces should be empowered to deploy soldiers or members of the armed forces to any troubled point of this country for them to take necessary action. So, I think that is what came out from the executive session we had where this issue was looked at closely.”

     

  • Alison-Madueke’s N10b jet expenses: court insists on House’s appearance

    Alison-Madueke’s N10b jet expenses: court insists on House’s appearance

    The House of Representatives yesterday refused to obey an order by a Federal High Court in Abuja directing it to appear and explain where it got its information that the court has stopped the investigation of the Minister of Petroleum Resources, Mrs Diezani Alison-Madueke for allegedly expending about N10billion in hiring aircraft.

    The court has insisted that the order it made on April 29 stands and that  House of Representatives must obey the order by appearing before it.

    Justice Ahmed Mohammed had made the order on April 29 upon  reports quoting the House of Representatives’ spokesman, Zakari Mohammed as claiming that the planned investigation of Mrs Alison-Madueke and the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation(NNPC) by the House’s Committee on Public Accounts had been stopped by the court.

    The House of Representatives reportedly told the media on April 28 (a day the Minister and top officials of NNPC were expected to  appear before it) that it was suspending its investigation into the N10b aircraft lease allegation on account of a purported restraining order from the court.

    Yesterday, the House was neither represented by its official nor a lawyer, prompting plaintiff’s lawyer, Etigwe Uwa (SAN) to observe that the House of Reps (who is the 2nd defendant in the case) was treating the case with levity and urged the court to compel its appearance in court.

    Uwa noted that the House of Reps has consistently refused to attend court despite being served with court processes and hearing notices as directed by the court.

    He added that even when the House was served with the court’s order to show cause why the plaintiffs’ prayer restraining order and order for maintenance of status quo, as contained in its motion on notice, should not be granted, the House of Representatives ignored the court, but instead, addressed a press conference where it claimed to have been restrained by the court.

    “After that, an order directing the 2nd defendant to appear and explain its position. We also confirmed this morning that hearing notices were served on the defendants as was directed by the court on the last date. In the circumstance, the 2nd defendant has not treated this matter with the seriousness it deserved.

    “The 2nd defendant did not explain why it is only this morning that a counsel is being instructed. Our position is that as regard the substantive suit, we do not oppose an adjournment.

    “With regard to the non-appearance of the 2nd defendant in spite of the order of this court, to appear and explain the source of the order in question, we urged the court to make an appropriate order to bring the 2nd defendant before this court in line with the order made, and also, direction that will allow the res in this matter to be preserved in the interim,” Uwa said.

    Earlier, he told the court about a telephone conversation between him and a new lawyer, Mr A. B. Mahmoud (SAN) engaged by the House of Reps. He said Mahmoud told him he was briefed on telephone to handle the case, and that he could not attend court because he had not been received the court processes from his client. Uwa said Mahmoud, who promised to send a junior colleague, requested for an adjournment to enable him file the necessary response.

    At that point, a young man stood up and announced that he was from A.B. Mamoud’s chambers, but was only asked to witness proceedings and not to participate. The judge refused to recognize him on the ground that he was not properly dressed. He was dressed in just suit, but without wig and rob.

    Lawyer to the 1st defendant (National Assembly), Yakubu Maikyau (SAN) confirmed that the House of Reps instructed A. B. Mahmoud to handle the case some minutes before the court’s proceedings.

    He urged the court to grant the House of Reps some indulgence, by granting an adjournment to enable its lawyer appear to explain the true position of things.

    Ruling Justice Mohammed held that although the court was willing to indulge the House of Reps, it must obey the order directing it to appear and explain where it got the restraining order it referred to during its press conference.

    “As far as this court is concerned, the order of April 29, 2014, requesting the 2nd defendant (the House of Representatives) to appear before this court to clarify whether it was served with a restraining order by this court, regarding the investigation of the plaintiffs in this case, still stands’’.

    Justice Mohammed consequently adjourned May 26 for the House to appear as per the order of April 29.

    “Today, as the return date, and being the date the 2nd defendant was expected to appear the court is told that the 2nd defendant has engaged the services of Mr. A. B. Mahmoud SAN to represent it in court. While it is the constitutional right of the 2nd defendant to be represented by the legal defendant of its choice, the point should be made that the order of court made on April 29 directing the 2nd defendant to appear before this court still stands.

    “The need for the 2nd defendant to appear and give a clarification cannot be overemphasized. One hand, the 2nd defendant has stated to the whole world that this court has restrained it from conducting further enquiry against the Minister of Petroleum Resources. On the other hand the record of this court shows that no such restraining order was made by this court.

    “Now, I pause here to ask this question. Is it not in everybody’s interest to know what documents the 2nd defendant relied upon to make the press statement under reference, that it was restrained from conducting further investigation? The answer is in the affirmative.

    “However, in the interest of justice, I will excuse the absence of the 2nd defendant in court today, believing that as a responsible institution, it will honour the order of the court and appear on the next adjourned date. This matter is hereby adjourned to May 26 for the 2nd defendant to appear as directed on April 29 to clarify this issue of being served with a restraining order. Hearing notice is also to be served on the 2nd defendant against the next adjourned date,” the judge said.

    He consequently adjourned May 26 for the House to appear as per the order of April 29.

     

  • PDP, APGA, LP, Accord gang up against APC

    PDP, APGA, LP, Accord gang up against APC

    A GROUP of lawmakers, under the aegis of the National Unity Group (NUG), has announced plans to block the moves by the All Progressives Congress (APC) to shut down the Executive through legislative blockade, including the delay of this year’s budget.

    The group comprises members of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), the All Progressives Grand Alliance (APGA), the Labour Party (LP) and Accord (A).

    It chided the APC for directing its members to block all bills from the Presidency.

    Addressing reporters yesterday at the National Assembly, the NUG described the APC’s call as unpatriotic, bad and anti-progress.

    It warned those in the House of Representatives to present its views instead of personal opinions.

    The NUG promised that the APC would be “robustly resisted” on all fronts in the House.

    Its erstwhile spokesman, Zakari Mohammed, is a member of APC, having defected from the PDP. The deputy, Victor Ogene, is a member of APGA.

    Bitrus Kaze (PDP, Platueau), who read the statement in company of other members, said the multi-party group was committed to good governance, national stability an Pan-Nigerian consensus-building.

    The statement said: “Any attempt to tamper with the 2014 budget and, hence, the Transformation Agenda of the Goodluck Jonathan administration, would be met with robust resistance.

    “No Nigerian anywhere will stand by and watch an opposition, with mischief and power lust, to frustrate the hopes of tens of millions of Nigerians with regard to health care, schools, universities, agricultural grants and projects, foreign investment promotion, water supplies, road works, utilities and other infrastructure, including electricity, solar street lights and a dozen other necessities and obligations of Nigeria, as a responsible nation whose duties are enshrined in Chapter II of the 1999 Federal Constitution.

    “If this budget is not passed soon, there will be hunger in the land and the APC plan for anarchy will have succeeded.

    “We, in the NUG of the House of Representatives, wish to add our voice to those calling for peace over the tension in Rivers State, as mentioned above, and in Ogun State as well as Ekiti, where APC factions have violently engaged themselves as sitting APC governors try to foreclose challengers. We are also hoping the situation in Kwara, Borno and Kano, occasioned by APC thugs forcibly taking measures against the PDP.

    “Given the wrong premise upon which they are operating, we dispute the bogus claims of majority status by APC and call on our colleagues in the opposition to always strive to advise their colleagues to obey judicial pronouncements, no matter how unpalatable to their political dreams and ambitions…”

    Section 68 is clear about elected members and their parties – you don’t cross-carpet when and how you like.

    “That further, we call on those purporting to act as spokesmen of the House to always endeavour to wear the toga of nonpartisanship and to always be sure what they are feeding the public are based strictly on House resolutions rather than their partisan ends.

    “That we fully commend the leadership of the House for the skilful handling of a difficult set of circumstances and continue to urge them to continue to put the interests of the nation ahead at all times.

    “As a multiparty platform, the National Unity Group, NUG, stands ready always to defend the Nigerian constitution as a matter of priority no matter whose interests are offended”.

    On the issue of budget consideration and approval, Friday Itulah (PDP, Edo) responded saying the document would go through the normal legislative process.

    “The budget would go through the Committees and then presented to the Committee of the Whole where the majority would decide its fate. It is about a simple majority and we are ready to ensure that the majority will carry the day.

    “Since it is the budget, it will no longer require a simple majority, it is not an issue of two third. So, the possibility of somebody trying to block the decision of the House will not arise.

    “But if they attempt we will have to show them that it is the majority that decides what happens in the House”.

    When asked about the numerical strength of the group made of four Parties, Tajudeen Yusuf (PDP, Kogi) refused to give specific figure, saying PDP remains in the majority.

    He also said that there was no defection and that those that felt that they have defected were only on ‘astral travel’.

    He said: “The constitution is clear on cross-carpeting, you don’t cross carpet the way you want it, there are guidelines. Moreover, we only have colleagues that have expressed interest to join other Parties, so the PDP is still intact.

    “Talking about the Party in the majority, even without adding members from Labour, Accord and APGA, the PDP is way above two-third. We are in clear majority, we just don’t brandish numbers.

    “We are challenging APC to publish the names of its members

    The PDP number, Accord, APGA and Labour in the House is way above two-third.

    “There is no merger between the PDP and the other three Parties, we are just united for national development”.

    Kaze, in conclusion said the commitment of the group to the Nigerian Project is irrevocable, “We accordingly invite House APC members, our colleagues – and by extension the other Parties in the House – to always strictly seek to add value to our national quest for democracy and development.

    “We, therefore, call on our colleagues whose sense of duty and patriotism remains unquestioned to reject the latest APC “directives” as unpatriotic and bad anti-progressive. They must reject all efforts to destroy the Nigerian economy,” he added.

  • ‘New Constitution to be ready July’

    The Chairman, House of Representatives’ Committee on Media and Public Affairs, Zakari Mohammed, on Sunday said the country’s new Constitution would be ready by July.
    Mohammed told the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) in Okuta, Baruten Local Government Area of Kwara State, that the delay in producing it was as a result of wide consultation.
    He said the task of amending a constitution is a tedious job and not a job which people would sit down and conclude easily.
    “But we are looking at the month of June or July as when we are going to have a clean copy of the new constitution for Nigeria.
    “For what we did in the House of Representatives, we went to the 360 Federal Constituencies and, as much as possible, we were able to gather the views of the people.
    “What we have reported is exactly what we pushed forward for them, and what we are saying is that at the end of the day, we are going to have a constitution that is workable for the Nigerian people,’’ Mohammed said.

  • Presidency, House rift over budget deepens

    Presidency, House rift over budget deepens

    The House of Representatives will begin the scrutiny of the 2014 Appropriation Bill this week. VICTOR OLUWASEGUN and DELE ANOFI examine the aspects of the budget that may deepen the existing conflict between the Presidency and the House.

    The budget controversy is not over yet. The document was submitted to the National Assembly was late. The budget, according to many legislators, has not reflected any serious attempt by the Federal Government to alleviate the suffering of the masses. They also frowned at the delay, stressing that timing is critical to its passage and implementation.

    The N4.6 trillion budget, which was laid before the two chambers by the Minister of Finance, Dr. Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala, on December 19, last year is likely to be a bone of contention between the executive and legislature as the National Assembly resumes sitting this week.

    The House has already complained about the breach of the Fiscal Responsibility Act by the Federal Government. The legislators pointed out that the government failed to submit the Medium Term Expenditure Framework (MTEF), six months before the budget was laid before the National Assembly. The Spokesman of the House, Zakari Mohammed, said that the breach has implications for the due process.

    This year’s budget is premised on 2.3883 million barrel per day. Many lawmakers are of the opinion that a budget in which the recurrent expenditure is over 72 percent and the capital expenditure is 27 percent may be counter-productive.

    Last year, the differences in the crude oil benchmark between the National Assembly and the Executive on the one hand, and the two chambers on the other, were resolved. While President Goodluck Jonathan proposed $74, the Senate approved $76.5. But, the House raised it to $79, contrary to the position of the joint Committee of the two chambers on the MTEF.

    The Minority Leader, Hon. Femi Gbajabiamila, who spearheaded the opposition to the $76.5 benchmark, said that, since the MTEF was a rolling plan, it was better to stick to the 2013 benchmark. He was supported by the members of the House.

    A five-member conference Committee on the 2013-2015 Medium Term Expenditure Framework set up by the Speaker, Aminu Tambuwal, met its Senate counterpart and agreed on the $ 77 per barrel as the oil benchmark for the budget. The members of the committee are the Chairman, Finance Committee, Abdulmumin Jibrin, the Chairman Aids, Loans and Debt Management, Adeyinka Ajayi, Daniel Reyenieju, Abdulrahman Terab and Fort Dike.

    Recent analysis of the budget has shown some projected expenditure in the budget, which may generate a fresh row between the Presidency and the House during the budget debate. For instance, in the budget, the Federal Government plans to spend N7 billion on the proposed ‘National Dialogue’. The All Progressives Congress (APC), which is now in majority in the House of Representatives, thinks that the ‘National Dialogue’ is a waste of time.

    The fact that President Goodluck Jonathan did not give a breakdown of how the funds would be utilized may not help his case.

    The Minister of Finance, Mrs. Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala, said: “The Capital budget is N1.1 trillion; its about 27 percent of the budget and the recurrent is about 72 percent”. She explained that the budget, which excludes the SURE-P of about N268 billion for the Federal Government, “is the budget that continues Mr. president’s drive to really diversify the economy and create jobs.”

    The public perception is that the House of Representatives is more thorough when it comes to budget scrutiny. There was a rift between the House of Representatives Committee on Finance and the Minister of Finance over “the 50 questions on the economy” last year.

    The Finance Committee had generated the questions after reviewing key aspects of the Medium Term Expenditure Framework (MTEF) and the Fiscal Strategy Paper ( FSP) submitted to the National Assembly by the Presidency. The committee focused on crude Oil production, Crude Oil benchmark price, revenue management and diversification, debt profile and debt service payment, high non- debt recurrent expenditures, capital projects implementation and financing terms amongst others.The committee said that the House would not consider the budget, until the questions are answered. The committee gave the Minister two weeks to answer the questions in writing. Last week, the minster forwarded his reply.The Chairman of the House Committee on Rules and Business has said that the budget consideration was one of the important issues on the agenda of the House this week. Hon. Zakari Mohammed said that the minister’s response to the 50 questions will aid the House during the debate.”The Finance Committee was given a responsibility by the mandate of the House and the Committee must report back to the House what it was asked to do,” he said.

    The Minister of Finance seems to have eventually understood the import of the position of the lawmakers on the 50 questions by responding with a document of over one hundred pages. Areas that may further cause friction between the Presidency and the House are not difficult to envisage. One of these is the alleged fraudulent utilisation of the ‘Service Wide Vote’ in previous budgets, which may cause the House to put this component in the 2014 budget under the microscope.

    The House Committee on Public Accounts headed by Solomon Olamilekan-Adeola has vowed to probe the misappropriation of the Service wide vote. He alleged that trillions of naira were wrongfully applied.

    For this year, the capital expenditure figures captured under the Service Wide Vote of the Federal Ministry of Finance is in excess of N433.5 billion. Although the lawmakers may welcome the N100 billion meant to finance constituency projects for federal legislators, they may likely scrutinise the remaining expenditure on the service wide vote, which include N62.8 billion for special intervention, N8 billion for national job creation scheme; N30 billion for the sinking fund for infrastructural development; N14 billion for Nigeria Electricity Liability Management Company (NELMCO) and N16 billion for the bulk trader.

    Uunder the miscellaneous heading of the service wide vote, N27.5 billion is proposed for the unexplained contingency funding, while N5,149,600,000 will be set aside for adjustments to the recurrent budget. There are other nebulous expenses. They include N5 billion for capital cost adjustments, N21 billion earmarked for election logistics support and the N7 billion proposed for payment of outsourced services for the Federal Government and another N10 billion for a special account not specified.

    With the service wide vote, the Ministry of Finance gets the largest chunk with N1.6 trillion allocation from the budget proposal. This total allocation of N1,653,424,146,940 is 35.6 per cent of the budget for 2014.

    The position of the Public Account Committee was that the Service Wide Vote should not be more than five percent of the budget or it should be eliminated from the budget. The Committee believed it is a drain pipe on the economy because it is often manipulated and subjected to abuse, to the detriment of the economy.

    Also, there is the issue of the non-compliance of MDAs with Section 22 of the Fiscal Responsibility Act, which mandates government-owned corporations listed in the schedule to the Act to pay 80 percent of their operating surplus into the Consolidated Revenue Fund (CRF) of the Federal Government. In a document by the Fiscal Responsibility Commission to the House Committee on Finance, the Commission said many of the MDAs are saying they could not comply with the section because of “Presidential Directives.”

    Consequently, the House Committee on Finance held an investigative hearing to ensure that the internally Generated Revenue (IGR) of listed corporations are captured in the revenue framework viz the 2013 budget. It is also expected that the lawmakers would demand that all of over 800 MDAs of government would be listed in this year’s budget. How the hitherto unlisted MDAs would react to the new development remains to be seen, as the remittance of government share of the IGR was shrouded in secrecy.

    The reduction in the expected income to the nation due to oil theft is one area that will generate controversy. Okonjo-Iweala, while giving reasons for the lower budget estimates for 2014, as against that of 2013, said: “ You can understand that we have some revenue challenges, which we had been very clear on all along because of the losses we suffered in terms of oil revenue. Also, there are losses from non- oil revenue due to the lower customs duties. But the House is not likely to accept this excuse.

    During the inauguration of the Ad-Hoc Committee on Crude Oil Theft on December 11, last year, Tambuwal accused the Presidency of collusion in crude oil theft. He said: “We must realise that, without the protection of highly placed people, without the connivance of officials and experts in the sector, the activity of illegal bunkering would have been curtailed long ago.

    “No country can endure such blatant rape of its resources by a few criminals, who seem to grow bolder by the day. And no self respecting parliament can watch this kind of gross sabotage and not intervene.”

    Mitchell Rivasi The Acting Co- President ACP- EU, Michael Rivasi, said at the 10th regional meeting (West Africa) of the ACP-EU Joint Parliamentary Assembly in Abuja in July last year, that the loss of 400, 000 barrels of oil per day is huge. She said that there must be collusion by government officials and the major oil companies.” We need to get traceability on oil to avoid theft. We need to apply the Kimberly process. Every oil has its DNA, Major criminality is involved. How can you have 400,000 barrels stolen in a day?”

    She suggested that the international community should not “take oil that has no certificate of origin” but further wondered “how will this be effective if the government officials are colluding and are issuing the certificate of origin for stolen oil?

    The House may therefore, not accept the assertion that the oil theft is the major reason for the reduction in the 2014 budget because of its belief that the Federal Government is aiding it. Besides, the legislators are cynical about the claim of a reduced income in the face of the accusation by the Central Bank Governor, Mallam Lamido Sanusi, that the Nigeria National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) failed to remit $49.8bn to the Federation Account from January, 2012 to July 2013. Although the missing $49.8 is said to have been creatively scaled down to $10 billion, the Presidency is seeking the resignation of the CBN Governor over the misinformation. Gbajabiamila said that the House would not assist the President in sacking Sanusi, adding that, when the National Assembly asked Jonathan to sack Oteh, the Director-General of the Securities and Exchange Commission, he refused.

    Obviously, the missing fund may be another source of contention during the budget consideration.

    Another issue is the flagrant contravention of the appropriation law the Executive. In this case, the issue of the N255 Armoured cars purchased by the Aviation Minister, Ms. Stellah Oduah, readily comes to mind.

    The report by the Nkiruka Onyejeocha-led House Committee on Aviation had urged President Jonathan to review the continued engagement of Stella Oduah as the Minister of Aviation due to the roles she played in the procurement of the vehicles for her use by the Nigerian Civil Aviation Authority (NCAA)

    The report, which indicted the Minister of having contravened the Appropriation Act, 2013 and the approved revised thresholds by exceeding the ministerial approval limit of N100 million, was considered and adopted by the House. The Minister approved N643m for the purchase of 54 vehicles.

    The debt sustainability will be another point of focus in the 2014 budget. The debt stock, as at June 2013, stood at US$6.9 billion. The unbridled borrowing has always been a sore point between the Executive and Legislature. Recently, the Adeyinka Ajayi-led House Committee on Aids, Loans and Debt Management, began to probe the debt profile. But the Federal Government has always claimed that it borrowed based on the national need, adding that over 40 percent of the country’s debt stock was incurred by the states.

    A letter from the Secretary to the Government of the Federation ( SGF) Senator Anyim Pius Anyim, in response to a query from the House of Representatives on the non-compliance with the Fiscal responsibility, in terms of overt borrowing, said: “The Federal Government is quite clear and definite with its policies and strategies for borrowing and public debt management. Hence, it recognizes that it would borrow only when it is absolutely necessary and as much as possible on concessionary terms.”

    Anyim argued that the Federal Government is “ guided by the 3 per cent fiscal deficit/GDP ratio prescribed by the FRA, 2007.”

    In spite of this, the House Committee on Finance has lamented the non-existence of a debt exit strategy by the Executive

    The poor implementation of the previous budgets will also likely come up for debate. Speaking of the 2013 budget releases and implementation, the Finance Minister, Mrs. Ngozi Okonjo- Iweala told reporters on December 19 last year that: “of the previous budget implementation, I believe we released 64 percent of that budget.”

    But members are likely to question her assertion as the House believes that implementation of 2013 budget did not even reach the 40 percent threshold. Recall that the House had once threatened President Goodluck Jonathan with impeachment over low budget implementation.

    Subsidy funding might be another sore point between the House and the Executive. The Dakuku Peterside-led House Committee on Petroleum Resources (Downstream) has been mandated to probe the NNPC over the subsidy for Dual Purpose Kerosine (DPK) to ascertain the actual amount spent on kerosine subsidy from 2010 to 2013. Dakuku said that the country had spent over N63bon subsidizing kerosine in the last three year, i.e 2010,n2011 and 2012 at N110b, N320b and N320b respectively for those years.

    But conflicting claims by the Minister of Finance and the NNPC on the source of money through which kerosine is subsidized and the amount involved therein would set the House scanning subsidy components in the 2014 budget thoroughly. Of the N4. 6 trillion proposed as the 2014 budget, subsidy estimates and debt payments would cost over N2 trillion.

    The plan for the Presidency to deposit N1.5bn for an 11th aircraft in the presidential fleet may meet with reservation. Already, the aircrafts of the PAF include two Falcon 7X jets, two Falcon 900 jets, a Gulfstream 550, one Boeing 737 BBJ (Nigerian Air Force 001 or Eagle One), and a Gulfstream IVSP, one Gulfstream V, Cessna Citation 2 aircraft and Hawker Sidney 125-800 jet.

    A lawmaker joking said: “the House may not approve this item unless, of course, the Presidency is able to convince members that it is starting a viable commercial airline operation.”

    The fact that the President and Vice President Namandi Sambo are to spend N2.4 billion for both foreign and local trips may not go down well with the lawmakers, neither would they rush to approve N34.5 million for the purchase of two animals for the Villa Zoo.

    Nigerians also expect the lawmakers to be interested in knowing why over N2 billion was allegedly budgeted by an establishment like the National Mathematical Centre (NMC), Sheda, for the fueling and maintenance of aircraft, sea boats and railway equipment which it does not have.

    The Centre reportedly appropriated “N509,216, N429,056 and N465,522 on the maintenance of aircraft, sea boats and railway equipment” with an extra N293,974 and N421,224 earmarked for same.

    Sequel to the consideration of the 8-clause recommendation in the report by the House Committees on Finance, Appropriation, Legislative Budget and Research, and Aids, Loans and Debt Management, the accepted parameters for 2014-2016 MTEF were: (i) “Crude Oil production of 2, 3883 mbpd, 2,5007mbpd and 2,5497 mbpd for 2014, 2015 and 2016 respectively; (ii) “average exchange rate of N160/USD for the next three years; The third clause, “ adoption of US$76.50 per barrel as the benchmark price of crude oil,” was rejected after a stormy debate.(it was eventually agreed at $77 by both chambers (iv) “Corporate Tax and VAT rate of 30 percent and 5 percent respectively; (v) “ that the Government should strengthen and consolidate its fiscal strategy to narrow the gap between projected and actual revenue for the period 2014-2016 curtailing oil theft and diversifying the economy to increase tax bases so as to increase tax revenue; (vi) “ that the details of the SURE-P projects to be executed be attached as an addendum to the annual budget estimates for approval by the a National Assembly.

    As the House resumes plenary from the Christmas and New year break, and begins consideration in the 2014 budget, it is apparent that it will definitely not be business as usual.

    Though the issue in which the House advised President Goodluck Jonathan to sack the Director General of the Security and Exchange Commission, Arumah Oteh because she is not qualified and the refusal of the do such, and the same treatment the President gave the House Committee on Aviation’s report on the N255 million armoured car scandal involving the Aviation Minister, Stella Oduah, has cast the National Assembly as a toothless bulldog, members say a more assertive NASS is in the offing.

    Speaking on if or not the House would be thorough in considering the 2014 budget, Dakuku Peterside, Chairman House Committee on Petroleum Resources (Downstream) said:

    “The members of National Assembly are duty bound to defend the interest of Nigerians. They have a responsibility to ensure that funds are judiciously applied for the good of all Nigerians not for the good of individuals. They are under a moral duty, they are under oath to defend the interest of the generality of Nigerians especially the common man on the street,

    “ It is not the elite that voted them into power, the elites in all communities are infinitesimal, not more than 2 percent of Nigerians. And so, 98 percent of the common people put them in power. And I don’t believe that under the leadership of Tambuwal, the House will renege on that duty- it will not. So, I’m confident that the House of Representatives which is the custodian of the budget will do justice to this budget and the final outcome will impress Nigerians.”

    Mohammed was emphatic last week that the House will not be a rubber stamp for the 2014 budget. “We must consider the budget because its a money bill, but we will not be blackmailed or bamboozled to just assume its a case of garbage in, garbage out. Anybody who thinks it is going to be like that is just joking because we are going to ensure a sense of fairness in its consideration to the benefit of Nigerians who are our employers,” he said.

  • club’s relegation: Ex-Kwara United FC chairman blames fans

    Zakari Mohammed, a former chairman of the Management Board of Kwara United Football Club, has blamed the club’s fans for its relegation from the GLO Premier League.

    Mohammed told the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) in Gure, Baruten Local Government Area of Kwara on Monday that the fans had never learnt their lessons as a group.

    “Each time the club went on relegation, the case was always that the situation was because the club’s fans manhandled match officials,’’ he said.

    Mohammed, who is now the Chairman, House of Representatives’ Committee on Media and Public Affairs, said it was important that fans of the Ilorin-based club paused to think.

    “There is nothing wrong if a team can come to Ilorin to pick points, since Kwara United also go to pick points elsewhere. The game is between 11 men on either side. So, let us allow the ethics and, of course, the rules of the game to prevail, so that things can go on smoothly,” he said.

    The lawmaker warned the fans against the win-at-all-cost syndrome, saying that was always the cause of the club’s problem. He, however, urged Gov. Abdulfatah Ahmed of Kwara to appoint those who were committed to football, and who could also turn things around, to administer the club.