Tag: NASS

  • 2021 Budget presentation: Presidential operatives take over NASS

    2021 Budget presentation: Presidential operatives take over NASS

    Ahead of today’s budget presentation by President Muhammadu Buhari, presidential security operatives have taken over security apparatus of the National Assembly (NASS) complex.

    TheNewsGuru.com (TNG) reports that in a bid to ensure there are no security hitches during the presentation, presidential security operatives on Thursday took over NASS security apparatuses.

    TNG noticed that the four major entry points into the complex was taken over by mobile police men and DSS operatives from the Presidential Villa.

    Buhari is expected to arrive the venue by 11 am today to present the 2021 budget of N13.3 trillion as against that of 2020 that was N10.3 trillion.

    Last year’s budget presentation was hitch free unlike that of 2018 that the opposition ensured the president had problems presenting his budget speech.

    On Monday and Tuesday, the executive and the legislature had a retreat in preparation for the budget presentation today.

  • NASC confirms appointments of Olatunde, Akabueze as Clerks to NASS, House of Reps

    NASC confirms appointments of Olatunde, Akabueze as Clerks to NASS, House of Reps

    The National Assembly Service Commission (NASC) has com firmed Mr. Ojo Olatunde as the substantive Clerk to the National Assembly, a statement from the NASC has indicated.

    The statement, issued by the Executive Chairman of NASC, Mr Ahmad Amshi, also named Mr Chinedu Akabueze as the substantive Clerk to the House of Representatives.

    The NASC Commission had on July 17 and 20 appointed Ojo and other top management staff to their different positions on acting capacity.

    Amshi, in the statement, said the confirmation of the officers was approved at NASC’s 506th meeting held on Sept 30.

    He said their appointments also took effect from Sept 30, except for Akabueze whose appointment would take effect from Nov 25.

    The other officers whose appointment were confirmed are :

    Bala Yabani, Deputy Clerk to NASS, Dauda Ladan, Clerk of the Senate, Yusuf Danbatta, Secretary to NASC, and Orunwase Osaze, Secretary Human Resources and Staff Development.

    Others are Ademola Adebanjo, Secretary, Legal, Ramatu Ahmad, Secretary, Research and Information, Basir Hamza, Secretary, Health Service, Sani Tambuwal, Secretary Health Services.

    Also confirmed was Aimua Ehikioya, Secretary, Special Duties, Liman Sanda, Secretary, Procurement, Estate and Works, Oladoyin Suraj, Secretary, Inter Parliamentary and Protocol, while Iloba Ugochi was appointed Deputy Clerk of Senate (Legislative).

    He said Navati Illiya was confirmed as Deputy Clerk of the Senate (Administration) while Damzariya Himidu was confirmed as Deputy Clerk of House of Representatives.

  • Nigeria @60: Why Nigerians are now in pains – Rep Nkem-Abonta [INTERVIEW]

    Nigeria @60: Why Nigerians are now in pains – Rep Nkem-Abonta [INTERVIEW]

    As Nigeria commemorates its 60th Independence anniversary, certain issues of national importance have come to the fore, even with the Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC) and Trade Union Congress (TUC) having to suspend, at the last minute, the planned strike to protest against the pains Nigerians are passing through.

    Issues ranging from the issues of fuel subsidy removal, electricity tariff hike, the suspended strike by NLC and TUC, the drums of secession, the issues of insecurity, the water resources bill, the much-awaited Petroleum Industry Bill (PIB) that was recently sent to the National Assembly (NASS) by President Muhammadu Buhari, and many others have topped national discourse.

    In this explosive interview, the member representing Ukwa East/Ukwa West Federal Constituency, Uzoma Nkem-Abonta addressed these many issues besetting the country Nigeria and alluded reasons why Nigerians are now in pains, even in the President Buhari’s administration that promised change.

    Q: What is your take about the strike suspended by Labour?

    A: If you ask me, I think God loves Nigeria. The strike will cost us a lot of things: injuries and loss of economic activities. Nigeria is at the brink of economic collapse and if we push it further, it will get into depression or recession or whatever the economists call it.

    I think that we should seek a political and economic realistic solution rather than strike. The effect of COVID-19 is enormous, untold; we cannot say it all then another self-imposed sit at home, another self-imposed quarantine, strike or whatever you want to call it, will not be too healthy for us.

    I am not saying they have no justifications to embark on strike. I am not saying they are not pained enough to go on strike. But I think we can look for a middle cause. We can look for a soft landing ground. Because strike, now at this present time that we are struggling to breathe because of COVID-19 and bad governance, will not help us.

    Therefore, I want to plead with the labour unions to sheath the sword. Their grievance is right. The annoyance is right. But they should not because of anger, because they are angry about confused persons who are at the affairs of the nation and throw the nation into darkness. They should be pathfinders, they should be directing, so that we can get out of the quagmire we find ourselves because of bad and maladministration.

    Q: What is your take about the subsidy regime of this administration, considering the fact that former President Goodluck Jonathan tried to no avail to remove fuel subsidy in 2012?

    A: Well, I do credible opposition. I am not among those that do what I call legislative rascality or even executive rascality. No. That they came now to do deregulation or increase fuel [price], I can only tell those that occupied Nigeria to look for a way and apologize to Jonathan.

    They are burying their heads in shame. They used opposition then to spoil the government. I cannot behave like them. I cannot be as rascal as they were in Lagos occupying Nigeria. Shame unto them! Where are they now?

    I cannot occupy Nigeria because deregulation, subsidy removal is the only thing that can put us on a sound footing. But before then, certain things must be put on the ground. So, we cannot say because of opposition, we will condemn sound economic principles. We cannot say because of opposition, we look at settings that would be useful to us and we say it’s not true.

    We can only say do it in the right manner, at a proper time, with the proper settings, put in all the modules, taking into consideration the totality of all. You cannot just do one thing without considering others. It’s like somebody who suffering from appendicitis for example and you are giving that person just panadol. No. You must be able to operate. You bring in anaesthesia to kill the pain. Nobody will do a medical operation without killing the pains. Have they now killed the pains? No! You must do certain things to kill the pains of the operation. They just took Nigerians into theatre and cut us into two with not even panadol. That is why Nigerians are now in pains

    So, we are saying that the government in power should look at those things that will cushion the effects that will kill the pains arising from their actions. It is a mark of insensitivity on the part of the government.

    During the COVID-19, we came out, including the House to say, providers, do not even charge at all. Give the people free light. Bear in mind, is COVID over? So, what are you increasing? That is policy somersault. That shows they are confused. That shows they are not stable. That shows they did not plan before they talk before they made statements.

    We agree here, including the House, say, providers, please, do not charge for now. Even DStv, MTN, all of them; we said please, come down, see what we can do. In other climes, some even paid their landlords some certain percentage for tenants not to suffer. We subsidy all until we get out of the COVID.

    I am saying that the timing is ill. To do it now is as if you do not care about the suffering of the people. We are not yet out of the COVID. So, is that palliatives now, to hike it up? If they had agreed for when Jonathan did in 2012, by now the pains would have gone. We would have been reaping the benefits.

    Opposition does not mean spoil things. It means put them to notice to do good. That is the opposition we are doing. That is PDP for you, and we will continue to do so. We are credible. So now, Nigerians have now known the intentions and realities of Jonathan that he meant well by doing that.

    Q: What would you say about the trillions of naira spent on subsidy since the emergence of this administration, considering the fact that we were that the government was subsidizing fuel?

    A: I cannot find the budget provision for subsidy. In the legislative parlance, it is extra-budgetary expenditures. Now, we are witnessing the highest subsidy regime than ever in all angles: Dollar subsidy, oil subsidy and all whatnot.

    The amount claimed used in subsidy now in this regime surpasses over and above what the previous government has done on subsidy yet they say no subsidy. I do not want to say they lied. Do you know whether it was borrowed or dashed money that they use in subsidising? It could also be borrowed fund or dashed fund or a grant.

    But I cannot find that amount of money in the budget provision for it. So, how did they get it? They still owe us an explanation. They should tell us where they got money to do this subsidy. Then, we will know whether they lied or not. If it turns out now that China dashed us money to do subsidy, would I hold them responsible? I will not.

    Q: Nigeria is 60. Some of you were lucky to be born close to that period while some of us were born after 1960. Is there really anything to celebrate about Nigeria?

    A: I always say it and believe that the big Nigeria can use our unity to grow or use our size to grow. The Westerners, from what I read, are saying, 60-year-old marriage don try. Make dem divorce since dem pikin supposed don grow by now, but by now, we do not even have pikin. We are still crawling.

    At 60, we are crawling because Nigeria is overloaded. At 60 nothing to celebrate because of our structure and we need to restructure if we must move. At 60, we need to see a feasible thing that can impress us. At 60 we are battling with insecurity. At 60 we are battling economic problems. At 60 we are battling with extreme hunger. At 60 Nigeria is still listed as one of the poorest countries.

    At 60 what can we: Is there good water? Is there good road? Is there electricity? At 60 we lack all the necessary things that we need. We are told life starts at 40, and expectancy calls us 60. So that means if you look at life expectancy now Nigeria has always outlived its expectancy going by that set-out standard.

    Saying we are called the Federal Government of Nigeria, how many years after, we are running a unitary system of government. The centre is overloaded. That is why the vehicle Nigeria cannot move. You cannot take a Toyota Corolla and you put something that a trailer should carry; it won’t move. That is the problem of Nigeria. The way Nigeria is structured presently; it is difficult for us to move Nigeria.

    Therefore, at 60 we should come down now, go back to the table and restructure Nigeria. I challenge you.

    We are now in 2020. Now, you look at Nigeria in historical perspective, those 60 ago, in 1960, and look at the economic advancement, the GDP then and now, you will see that we were marching forward how many years ago. I will illustrate.

    In 1983, somebody that is being paid $500 or convert that to naira then; somebody was earning N500 in 1983 it was a big money. As a Corper by the year 1989, 1990, I was earning two hundred and fifty kobos. Now that person that was earning N500 in 1983 lived well. If you convert it to dollar, dollar was at N60 to a dollar, then he was earning over N200,000. Now the person retired as a perm sec and he is earning N250,000 which is now less than $1,000; can’t you see that he was matching back for the last 30 years that he was working because what he earned then when it was N500 was now bigger than the N300,000.

    In 1982, a brand new Peugeot Pan with insurance was N6,500 and they will give you one-year service free; today N6,500 cannot fill the fuel tank of a vehicle, can you see where we are getting to. In 1982 if you are found with N7,000 they will call the police for you, but a schoolboy will hold N7,000 and nobody will think anything happened. So how did we get here, from where and how do we get out of here?

    So at 60, all we should do is gather, go and clean the table and start drawing, there is nothing to celebrate. It calls for solemn gathering, a call for fasting and prayer, we should go to the Eagle Square, call all the pastors and bishops and imams and pray for Nigeria for a change and then look for how to shed the excess load we are carrying, Nigeria is overloaded at the centre and that is why without FAAC or whatever they call it, some states cannot work. They need the FAAC to be able to pay salaries.

    We emulate other persons, other regimes; we should apply it to us. We must decongest Nigeria so that every component of the federalism, should practice true federalism and fiscal federalism where you can grow at your pace and limit and timing.

    If you go to the United States, what obtains in New York is not the same with Texas, or Maryland or Chicago, every state to their own ability or whatever. So we must review all these things for Nigeria to move on.

    As of now, we are not even moving go-slow, we are stagnant, we are rolling back the hill, we need a wedge to put it and then we now remove the excess load so that can move off. If we don’t wedge it, it will roll back and get into a ditch and scatter.

    So the Southwest is saying they are going on a match to ask for what? It could be their right to do the match but my plea is can we come back again and restructure Nigeria. Everybody is saying restructure; nobody has gotten the will to restructure. We need to restructure because what we have now cannot take us much.

    I was speaking somewhere and I told them that this constitution has suffered several alterations because it is not home-grown, because it is not by the people, for the people. If you open the constitution it says we the people of Nigeria, was I a military man then, so how can it be we the people of Nigeria, it was by the military juntas, the supreme military council forced it on us, it is not our constitution.

    And upon attaining democracy, all we should have done was to subject that constitution to a healthy plebiscite, any section that does not fly remains deleted. Every year we come and we are doing alterations, we have done first, second, third, fourth, going to the fifth alteration. So we have multiple constitution pieces here and there we must be able to put them together.

    So why not subject the whole thing to a plebiscite, anyone that does not meet the standard remains out of it, that is a very clean way to do it and then we can now say we the people of Nigeria have done this by us and for us, otherwise this one was done by about 12 members of the supreme military council and some lawyers and they gave it to us and then we used it.

    And there have been several reports of national conference and there were recommendations, where are the reports. Is there anything we can pick from there and work with but we need a collective Nigeria, we need a total Nigeria, we need a united Nigeria, our diversity will now be our strength if we manage it well.

    I am looking forward to when we are going to have a united Nigeria, where would be strong enough to do business so that we can now be the giant of Africa. Now we are oversized people, giants are very healthy and strong; giant cannot be beaten by a small person. Ghana terrorizes us, Cameroon terrorizes us then you say you are a giant, but when small people are beating you, then you are not giant! How can you be a giant when all the small boys are beating you?

    Q: Is there any way NASS can adopt this plebiscite that you talk about on this current constitution?

    A: Well, what we are also doing as tradition as prescribed by this constitution is a kind of plebiscite but on representative capacity. Whatever we do is being sent to the states for the states assembly to also vote; so it is an indirect plebiscite we are doing but in a piecemeal. We pick only sections canvassed by us, debated by us, collected by us, approved by the national assembly and then sent down to states for their inputs then they will vote.

    So we are the representative of the people, the state assembly is also a representative of the people but we know how independent they are with their governors and so on and that is why when they asked for local government autonomy and state autonomy then it failed. Could that be the wish of the people, no; it was the wishes of the governors then.

    Therefore, what I am saying is that we should be more pragmatic and realistic in the constitutional alteration to be meaningful, to be realistic because there are a whole lot of sections that have either outlived their useful that should be amended or otherwise. I will give you a typical example.

    Section 315, particularly 45, listed some items NYSC, Land Use Act, Public Complaint Commission about five items that you cannot tinker or adjust. Now in all realistic nature, the basis for NYSC is it still there, it needs some modifications, all great nations like America started it but they have already modified it, now can you modify it without the constitution, no.

    Land Use Act, what do we do there; it is so stringent the way you can even alter it in the constitution, it provided another different thing in clause 9 in alteration. Can you use that now to amend the constitution, the answer is no and now we are trying to smartly amend the constitution with a bill called water resources bill.

    Q: Tell us about this water resources bill, what is the controversy about?

    A: For me, the controversy about water resources bill is we don’t have jurisdiction to talk about that bill, we don’t have the powers to discuss that bill, it ultra verse our rights because the content is not in the exclusive legislative list which we have cease of domain. Go to the constitution, look at 63, 64 of the exclusive list, you will see the restrictions put therefore. The Land Use Act is an existing law, not just an existing law, tied to the constitution where lands are domiciled in the state.

    The water resources bill is now saying river bank, your borehole, your reservoir, the one in your pot of soup, the one in your fridge, that water belongs to the federal government then Nigeria, we now sit, we won’t even scrawl, we are trying to decongest exclusive list you are now bringing more things to the exclusive list. So when the federal government will now begin to superintend water in my village, in your village and in everywhere and so on, can’t you see that it would be cumbersome then Nigeria will be getting overloaded and overloaded?

    And we are saying by virtue of these constitutional things I mentioned, I am saying that we should not even use that because it will amount to amending the constitution using law; so they should now allow us to bring out land use act from the constitution, amend it and then we can talk about whether water resources bill can come or not.

    The water bill offends constitutional provisions, it offends our sensibility, it offends the federal character; federal character presupposes that the components that form the federation will have some little bit of autonomy and now you are saying the river, the waterfronts and the water banks will be administered by the federal government.

    It is tantamount to saying, before they deleted some clauses, before the last session it was 3 nautical miles from the bank and I asked if you know Bar Beach very well, 3 nautical miles will get to those houses there, that means the whole VI will go. Now they said waterfront, who defines where is now the waterfront?

    Will it now mean 10 feet, 10 metre, 1 km, who is the definition; it will also resort to controversy. So there is everything wrong with the water resources bill and the House must follow our rules. The Supreme Court have said it severally that where there is a prescribed rule, if you do not follow that rule, any decision reached is a nullity; you will begin the journey again.

    And here I contend strongly that the rule was not followed but we will use legislative mechanism to also correct what I deemed legislative mistakes or error. Let’s concede that was an error so we are employing legislative mechanism to correct it and that is what we are going to do.

    Q: People are saying the legislature of today is a rubber stamp one. How are you going to counter this when that time comes, supposing the government of the day decides to use its strength of numbers in the House?

    A: If you are talking about number yes, they may have the numbers that is APC. But I want to also believe that if we are looking at legislation, lawmaking, party sentiments are not and should not be considered.

    Let me also ask you, the man holding the rubber stamp is he not bordered by water; so will he stamp his death warrant? Is APC not in the north don’t they have water? We are saying good laws for the people and it is not about numbers and I am not talking about what we are going to do, I am talking about the breach in the constitution.

    Can we through an Act being proposed in the House amend the constitution, the answer is no. So is the water bill not offensive to the constitution, yes it is. Is the water bill not contradicting land use act, yes it does.

    So we are saying let the water bill go, let’s amend the constitution first so that it can come, if we can amend the constitution then put your bill otherwise. Open exclusive list, 63, 64, you will see that water is not on the exclusive list only to the extent of water passing through two states. The water in my village passed only my state, so you can’t say water, is not even borehole, reservoir you can draw to wash vegetable, feed animals and so on, they give you the licence of the amount of water you need.

    Water is life we are told, land we are told in elementary economics is the first factor of production and now you are saying water in the land, water in the sea, water by the sea bank, water by the shore, water everywhere belongs to the federal government.

    We are saying this in sympathy to the federal government, the federal government you are carrying too much load, we want to help you to take away your load so that you can run, move. We are not saying it because we don’t like the bill, we are saying it because the bill offends our constitution, the bill offends the existing laws, the bill will put too much load on the federal government, we want the federal government to move, we want to lighten their load.

    Q: The PIB has defied passage and signing into law over the years. Why is it taking so long?

    A: I came to parliament in 2008 and I met the PIB and I am doing 16 years now and PIB is still with us, yet we are talking about pump price, deregulation, this and that. Why are we treating symptoms of our sickness when we know the sickness, why are we treating symptoms of our sickness when we have diagnosed the main problem worrying us. If we had done PIB we won’t be worrying about pump price today, it would have been in the past.

    Let me use this opportunity to plead with the federal government to take the issue of PIB seriously. I once said they should treat it as a project, complete it on time that Nigeria may move forward.

    Look at other climes, the Arabs, what they have done with the oil industry, why is our own different? Look at how they have unbundled the oil sector, why is our own different?

    So I plead with them that enough is enough of this joke. If they don’t want to, they should tell us that, no, no, that for life, it is a no go area. You don’t give people hope when you mean otherwise because PIB if achieved will set the thing rolling.

    My fear is that the oil sector is dwindling; it is almost going, so the PIB is even late, it is of no use if the oil trend continues the way it is going and with the scientific inventions are we going to drink the oil?

    So we should turn attention to serious scientific development because people are now talking about electric cars. So we should make haste while the sun is there.

    If I were the government now, PIB should be in the next six months achieve it and let’s see how we can manage the oil again and then see what we can do and this piecemeal may not be good.

    I want to challenge my colleagues to bring proper PIB. I want to challenge my colleagues to do, this is an executive one coming, if it does not satisfy the yearning and aspiration of the people, we get another one, consolidate it and move on.

    May God in His infinite mercy grant the legislators the wisdom, the boldness, the political will to attend to this issue otherwise we would be playing the ostrich that is what we are doing now.

    There is nothing wrong in having legislative-executive convenience but any marriage that is under undue influence or being forced is rape, it is no longer consensual. So we should be able to know the difference.

  • JUST IN: Buhari announces date to present 2021 Budget to NASS

    JUST IN: Buhari announces date to present 2021 Budget to NASS

    President Muhammadu Buhari will present the 2021 budget to the joint session of the National Assembly next week.

    Senate President, Dr. Ahmad Lawan disclosed this on Tuesday during plenary.

    The senate just resumed from their recess and has immediately swung into action.

    The upper chamber had been on recess since July, 2020.

    According to Lawan, the president would present his budget next week for quick passage of the appropriation bill into law.

    In 2019, the 9th Senate made history for quick passage of the appropriation bill into law without allowing it to drag into 2020.

  • Insecurity, Water Bill, PIB, deregulation, restructuring of Nigeria may shape NASS agenda as it reconvenes today

    Insecurity, Water Bill, PIB, deregulation, restructuring of Nigeria may shape NASS agenda as it reconvenes today

    By Emman Ovuakporie

    After a two month annual recess, the National Assembly may urgently look into pressing national issues such as the state of insecurity in the North East, the controversial Water Resources Bill, Petroleum Industry Bill, PIB and other national issues.
    Thenewsguru.com, TNG in this brief analysis x-rays the various issues that may shape NASS agenda as Nigerians grapple under the weight of economic hardship imposed by the FG.
    During its annual recess, so many ugly developments had cropped up that urgently need the attention of Nigerian lawmakers.
    Still basking in the image of a rubber stamp legislature designed as anything flies, provided is from Mr President, the upper legislative Chambers may need to firm up as the issues at stake could further throw Nigeria 50years behind.
    Insecurity in the North East took a dangerous dimensions last weekend as within 24hours, Borno Governor, Babagana Zulum’s convoy was attacked twice by Boko Haram insurgents.
    The third attack within a space of three months that the number one citizen and Chief Security Officer of Borno State escaped death by the whiskers.
    This calls for a lot of rethinking about insecurity across Nigeria as some roads like Kaduna-Abuja road and Lokoja-Abuja express are now headquarters of kidnappers.
    Nobody is spared because the rich also cry as they must ply the roads to connect their homes and constituencies as the case maybe.
    Disappointed by the deliberate refusal of the Federal Government to sack the longest serving Service chiefs in Nigeria, the North East elders last week for the umpteenth time demanded for their sack.
    This as usual will get no response from the Muhamnadu Buhari led administration that believes loyalty of uniformed men must be retained till 2023.
    Water Bill:
    The controversial Water Bill that was miraculously passed through the backyard in the House of Representatives is one legislative piece that must be properly x-rayed by the Senate.
    The Bill which contravenes the Land Use Act is one piece of legislation that will either properly wear the ninth Assembly the full garb of a rubber stamp legislature or rubbish all the good things this Assembly stood for.
    Opposition that could even push for it to be killed in the Green Chamber is still lumbering since the inception of the ninth House.
    Deregulation:
    The Nigeria Labour Congress, NLC did not disappoint Nigerians as it was expected that as usual nothing meaningful could have been achieved if the planned strike to force government to reverse price of fuel that was jerked up from N145 to N162 had commenced.
    Market forces will now determine the prices of fuel at the detriment of Nigerians who predominantly live below $1 per day.
    This singular increase has made virtually every consumable item double in prices since it was slammed on Nigerians.
    PIB:
    The Methuselah Bill in Nigeria, unarguably the oldest bill in this clime, finally, will be passed by this ninth Assembly after its snail like speed of over 20years.
    This ninth legislative body is capable of performing miracles and both leaders of Assembly have repeatedly vowed to speedily pass it when crude oil is fast losing its relevance in the world order.
    Nigerians are patiently waiting for the miraculous passage.
    Restructuring of Nigeria:
    Again, the call to restructure Nigeria has mounted the centre stage. It’s no longer a jocular issue.
    A group in the South West has vowed to embark on a peaceful rally on October First, the day the Union Jack was lowered.
    Questions are being asked about the validity of 1914 Amalgamation of Nigeria.
    At sixtty, definitely Nigeria is no longer a beautiful bride and the question of the marriage that made Nigeria possible remains one big question that’s begging for attention.
    The question on the lips of many Nigerians is whether this ninth Assembly can midwife Nigeria via its many lackluster constitutional reviews which is every four years sacrificial offering?
  • Group slams leadership of NASS over corruption in NDDC

    Group slams leadership of NASS over corruption in NDDC

    …urges Lawan, Gbajabiamila to ‘save Niger Delta region now’

    Act For Positive Transformation Initiative, a civil society organization has again berated the leadership of the National Assembly (NASS) over its failure to curb alleged ongoing looting of public funds to the tune of several billions of Naira by the Interim Management Committee (IMC) of the Niger Delta Development Commission (NDDC).

    The Group in separate letters addressed to both the Senate President and the House of Representatives Speaker on Monday called on the legislature to as a matter of urgent public importance take necessary steps toward saving the Niger Delta region from going into developmental oblivion, occassioned by alleged unmitigated looting of funds meant to develop it.

    The letters dated 28 September, 2020, and which were signed by the Head, Directorate of Research, Strategy and Planning, Mr. Kolawole Johnson, was titled: ‘Save The Niger Delta Region Now’.

    The group noted that several billions of Naira have been siphoned from the coffers of the Commission despite efforts by the National Assembly to investigate pending allegations of corruption by the IMC.

    “Your Excellency, barely one month after the alarm was raised, new records show that over N27 billion was looted between June 29th and July 29th, 2020. This fact can be confirmed ofdicially from relevant agencies of government.

    “After the Commissions many diatribes against the institution you lead and an open walk-out on your investigative committee, Mr. Speaker, came out openly to tactically sheild the acting MD of the Commission, Prof. Pondei, from interrogation after a poorly orchestrated fainting drama. While the hearing was goin on, the management of the Commission has the effrontery to continue the looting of the peoples resources through extra-budgetary expenditures. Yet the National Assemly has looked away as though it is acting in connivance with the looters”, the letter said.

    It alleged further that “over N8 billion has left the coffers of the NDDC the very day the Senate Ad-hoc Committee began its hearing on the ellegations of malfeasance and financial recklessness in the Commission. Durimg the hearing, a member of the Committee berated the officials of the Commission for halting payment on desilting. Later that day, over N6 billion was moved out of the NDDC account in the name of desilting”.

    “This sudden movement for an item that has not veen paid for more than 10 months prior to that day deserves a second look. Close to N20 billion has been looted via desilting sonce then. In summary, extra budgetary expenditures in the three months is in excess of N35 billion as at today.

    “July 29, while the country was on holiday, the management looted N5.8 billion via fraudulent emergenxy desilting. Note tjat the so-called desilting paid for were for non-existing water ways. The Olu of Igbakoda. Oba Afolabi Oladimeji Odidiomo, has confirmed in a letter to President Muhammadu Buhari that the river NDDC claimed to have desilted with billions of Naira in his domain does not exist. Similar stories abound across the region”, the letters alleged.

    The group also wondered why despite the mudslinging against members of the National Assembly by the managent of the Commission, the attitude and body language of the leadership is “awe-inspiring”, adding that “the standard of the institution has taken a north-ward dive, ot may never recover again if nothing is done now”.

    The group therefore urged the leadership.of the National Assembly to bring sanity back to the NDDC and halt the alleged free pillaging of the peoples resources.

  • Edo 2020: On no account should anything happen to Wike, Rivers NASS caucus tells IGP

    Edo 2020: On no account should anything happen to Wike, Rivers NASS caucus tells IGP

    …says siege on PDP Govs a breach by Nigerian police

    The Rivers State National Assembly caucus has cautioned the Inspector General of Police, Mohammed Adamu that on no account should anything happen to the Governor of Rivers State, Nyesom Wike who is on an official assignment to Edo State.

    This was contained in a statement jointly signed by Senator George Sekibo and Rep Kingsley Ogundu Chinda, both leaders of the Rivers State, National Assembly Caucus.

    The caucus condemned the siege allegedly laid by over 300 police men on the hotel Wike and other Peoples Democratic Party, PDP governors lodged in Benin City, the Edo State capital.

    In the statement, the Rivers NASS caucus said “the attention of the Rivers State caucus in the National Assembly has been drawn to the very unfortunate, undemocratic and unjustifiable siege by over 300 gun wielding policemen on the Hotel where His Excellency, NYESOM E. WIKE, Governor of our dear Rivers State is staying in Benin City, the Edo State Capital.

    “We are troubled that this shameful action is led by no less a person than DIG Leye Oyebanji who has and is still issuing threats to the Governor to leave Edo State even when the Governors of Kano and Imo States are freely moving around Benin City without molestation, threats, harassment, intimidation and confinement.

    “We are aware that the Governor is the Chairman of the Peoples Democratic Party’s National Campaign Council just as Ganduje represents the same to the APC.

    “Furthermore, the Rivers State Governor has committed no offense and is also protected by immunity under our laws.

    “We are afraid that this action will further widen the fractured parts and points of Nigeria especially at this time when the report of the obvious slide to the status of a failed State.

    “Let us warn that should anything untoward befall our Governor, the consequences could be dire as we call on Mr President to reign in all actors in this shameful, dishourable and undemocratic show of shame and ensure a free, fair, credible and peaceful election.

    We call on the international community to note the conspirators in this naked rape on democracy and democratic institutions in Nigeria.

  • National Assembly shifts resumption by two weeks

    National Assembly shifts resumption by two weeks

    The National Assembly on Friday postponed resumption of plenary sessions by two weeks.

    The Acting Clerk to the National Assembly, Arc. Olatunde Ojo, in a statement in Abuja, said lawmakers would now resume on Tuesday 29th September, 2020.

    It will be recalled that the Senate and the House of Representatives had on Thursday July 23, 2020 adjourned plenary sessions to Tuesday, September 15, 2020, to enable lawmakers observe their annual vacation.

    Ojo however did not give any reason for rescheduling the resumption date in his statement.

    The statement reads: “This is to inform all Distinguished Senators and Honourable members of the National Assembly that the resumption of plenary session earlier scheduled for Tuesday, 15th September, 2020 is hereby rescheduled for Tuesday 29th September, 2020.

    “We regret any inconvenience caused by this change of date.”

  • Christian Elders to NASS: Nigeria needs new constitution, not another wasteful amendment

    Christian Elders to NASS: Nigeria needs new constitution, not another wasteful amendment

    The National Christian Elders Forum (NCEF) has frowned at another attempt by the Senator Ahmed Lawan led Ninth Senate to ammend the 1999 Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria.

    The forum made of eminent Nigerians said nothing concrete will come out of the fifth attempt in 20 years to review the constitution.

    In a memo titled: “Review of Constitution: Wrong therapy for serious disease” signed by NCEF chairman, Elder Solomon Asemota, SAN, the forum told the ninth National Assembly to save the nation’s scarce resources arguing that what Nigeria requires is a brand new Constitution.

    “It is with mixed feelings that the National Christian Elders Forum (NCEF) received the news of yet another Constitutional Review, proposed by the ninth Assembly. This would be the fifth Alteration in 20 years as previous Assemblies have undertaken similar exercises usually with a budget of one billion Naira. This humongous budget, at a time when the country is on the brink of another recession, is worrisome,” NCEF argued.

    According to the Christian Elders, “while Constitutional amendment, in a clime where there is sincerity in government is a welcome exercise, one is at a loss why Military Decree 24, which transmuted into the 1999 Constitution, without the input of Nigerian citizens, requires any amendment in the first place.

    “The patriotic step for any conscientious National Assembly would have been to legislate a Bill demanding a new Constitution. This, to our mind, would require a Conference of Ethnic Nationalities, the true owners of Nigeria, to re-negotiate the country and draw up a People’s Constitution of the people, by the people, and for the people,” the statement added.

    The Christian Elders further contend that the “perennial merry-go-round Amendments have not solved any problem for the country since it is often devoid of patriotic sincerity or the political will to make any meaningful change in the country.

    “For example, the 8th Assembly in the Fourth Alteration in 2017 made 32 amendments to the Constitution and there is no significant improvement in the country. On the contrary, Nigeria grew worse by every index of measurement.

    This proposed Amendment exercise would be the 5th Alteration in 20 years. What Nigeria requires is a new Constitution. “Bearing in mind the insensitivity of the current Administration to progressive views, NCEF would like to sound a note of caution for the benefit of Nigerians. Given the direction of Government in the past five years, there is ample justification to be apprehensive about a Constitutional amendment by a National Assembly that gives impression of subservience to the Executive arm of Government,” NCEF stated.

    The Elders therefore urged Nigerians to note the following points and remain on high alert to ensure that the proposed Constitutional Review is not a Trojan horse designed to legitimize sectional ethnic and religious discriminatory agendas that are opposed to the peace, unity, progress and well being of Nigerians. “According to local parlance, Nigerians, shine your eyes: In December 2019, CJN Hon. Justice Tanko, called for the amendment of the country’s Constitution to accommodate more of the peculiarities of the Shari’a law in a secular State.

    “The CJN was quoted as saying, ‘… we have the number to amend the constitution to suit our own position as Muslims.’ That call was condemned by many well meaning Nigerians. We hope that this exercise is not an attempt to railroad Nigeria, a secular state, into a full Islamic theocratic state.

    “Rather than increase any religious content in the Constitution, as advocated by the CJN, any Constitutional Review should be used to expunge reference to ANY religion in the Constitution of Nigeria. Any mention of religion in the Constitution is in violation of Section 10 of the same Constitution and by reason of Section 1 is unconstitutional.

    “It should be recalled that in 2011 in Harvard, USA, his eminence the Sultan of Sokoto who is also the President of the Nigerian Supreme Council of Islamic Affairs, NSCIA, was reported to have said during a public function, ‘I do not recognize any Nigerian Constitution and the only Constitution I recognize is the Koran.’ This statement speaks volumes.

    “What Nigeria requires is resolution of the conflict between Democracy and Sharia in the Constitution and we are certain that this Administration, with its compliant 9th Assembly, will work to the contrary. Therefore, the proposed Review of the Constitution by the 9th Assembly should be seriously scrutinized,” the Christian Elders argued. Continuing, NCEF hoped that the proposed Constitutional review will not be used to legitimize toxic Bills like Social Media Bill, Hate Speech Bill, Water Ways Bill, RUGA, Grazing Reserve, Grazing Colony, as well as dismantle the Federal Character Principle which the current Administration has flagrantly violated and abused.

    The Christian Elders recalled that a Senator promised that he was going to the NASS with the intention of sponsoring amendment of the Constitution to make President Buhari life-president. “The statement should not be dismissed as inconsequential. It is hoped there would be no subterranean move in this direction considering statements by some unpatriotic elements that this President should be allowed to do third-term.

    “This Amendment, if it becomes inevitable, should dismantle the obnoxious Exclusive Legislative list that has hindered the Federating Units from maximizing their potentials and resources. “Most of the 68 items in the Exclusive Legislative list that are supposed to be in the Concurrent List, which currently has only 12 items, should be appropriately designated so that the States can become functional and viable. The Eminent Nigerian Christians are proposing a Constitutional Amendment that will provide opportunity for the National Assembly to legislate on the immediate implementation of the Report of the 2014 National Conference. According to them, “most of the issues listed for amendment are adequately treated in the Report of the National Conference. All that is required is the political will to implement it. It would be of immense benefit to Nigeria if the salient portions of the National Conference Report are included in the proposed Amendment.

    “This exercise gives the National Assembly the opportunity to legislate on a Truth and Reconciliation Commission for Nigeria as the basis for healing and reconciliation of all the ethnic nationalities in the wake of the insurgency and the discriminatory policies of the current Administration.

    “The sectional and discriminatory policies of the President Buhari administration have shattered trust and broken relationships amongst the divergent groups making up Nigeria. “The National Assembly should also consider this exercise as a temporary measure to restore balance to Nigeria while rapid arrangements are made by Government for Ethnic Nationalities Conference that would re-negotiate Nigeria and draw up a proper Constitution of the people by the people.

    “It should be clear to all and sundry that Decree 24 which transmuted into 1999 Constitution has not guaranteed national unity, peace, progress and prosperity for Nigeria. After 20 years of appreciable failure, it should therefore be consigned into history, like the Military regime that gave birth to it. It is not people’s Constitution. Nigeria requires a new Constitution of the people, by the people, and for the people,” the Christian Elders advocated.

    TheNewsGuru.com, TNG reports that the forum is made up of eminent Nigerians including: Gen. Joshua Dogonyaro (rtd) (Vice-Chairman), Prof. Joseph Otubu, Dr. (Mrs) Kate Okpareke, Dr. Ayo Abifarin, Gen. Zamani Lekwot (rtd), Elder Moses Ihonde, Elder Nat Okoro, Gen. Theophilus Y. Danjuma (rtd), Elder Matthew Owojaiye, Hon. Justice Kalajine Anigbogu (rtd), Elder Shyngle Wigwe, DIG P. L. Dabup, Sir John W. Bagu, Dr. Saleh Hussaini, Elder Michael Orobator, Hon. Justice James Ogebe (rtd), Dr. Chukwuemeka Ezeife, Dame Priscilla Kuye, Dr. S. D. Gani, Mrs. Osaretin Demuren, Prof. Yussuf Turaki, Lady Mariam Yunusa, Prof. (Mrs) Deborah Enilo Ajakaiye, HRM Oba Dokun Thompson, Dr. Taiwo Idemudia (Diaspora) and Pastor Bosun Emmanuel (Secretary)

  • Leaked document: How NASS probes end up in dustbins

    Leaked document: How NASS probes end up in dustbins

    …Executive not sincere in implementation of probe reports-Reps

    …between July 2019-June 2020 Reps conducted more than 30 probes

    …only 2 probe reports have left committee stage

    …as executive treat investigative reports with disdain

    Year in year out, the Nigerian National Assembly (NASS) conducts investigative hearings that at the end of the day end up in archival dustbins.

    TheNewsGuru.com (TNG) in this report x-rays how the NASS had fared in ensuring its reports on its numerous probes on Ministries, Departments, Agencies and MDAs are implemented.

    But the ugly truth staring Nigerians in the face is the fact that the outcome of probes are not taken seriously by the executive arm of government.

    Between July 2019 and June 2020, the House of Representatives alone conducted more than 30 investigative hearings, Niger Delta Development Commission (NDDC) not inclusive.

    In a document exclusively made available to TNG, the list of investigative hearings within 12 months was 30 from July 2019-June 2, 2020. Out of the 30 only two of the listed investigative hearings had gone beyond Committee stage.

    See Document Below

    The two probes include; ‘Need, To Investigate The Circumstances of The Alleged Abscondment by Five Nigerian Soldiers of the Operation Harbin Kunama 111 with large amount of cash’.

    The second has a direct bearing on the House which is entitled: Personal Explanation (Order eight Rule (5) $10 millon Bribery Alleged Against The House of Representatives’, promoted by Hon Idris Ahmed.

    This clearly mirrors the actual situation in both legislative Chambers as what matters most is the issue at stake.

    Some of these investigative hearings have a timeline of between 14 days to 40 days.

    Some of the listed investigative panels were constituted as far back as July 2019 and they are still at the committee stage.

    Giving credence to the fact that the executive arm treats the eventual reports churned out with levity.

    Why Executive Treat NASS Reports With Disdain

    An attempt to extract Information from lawmakers met a brick wall as only a few despite a questionnaire sent over two weeks ago responded.

    One of such Lawmakers who spoke under the condition of anonymity told TNG that “it’s true that our resolutions are always treated with levity by the executive arm of government because they shield the MDAs by sweeping them under the carpet to escape justice.

    “The kind of government in place also determine what happens, remember the case of Aviation minister in Goodluck Jonathan’s administration, she was shoved aside because of our report.

    “If the government had shielded the minister nothing will happen to her, so the bottom line is what executive wants that goes because we do not have powers to prosecute or implement.

    The Peoples Democratic Party, PDP opposition leader in the House of Representatives, Rep Kingsley Ogundu Chinda aptly captured it when he told TNG that:

    “Executive is insincere and present APC government under Buhari say what they don’t mean and don’t mean what they say.

    According to Adams, they are playing politics with serious matters like economy, security, health and education.

    “Most of the outcome of Parliamentary probes are revealing and they can’t enforce the recommendations because it’s against them and their private economic interests.

    “Most of the outcome of the probes is indicting on them. Implementing some will amount to suicide. The situation in this administration has remained a recurring decimal as the National Assembly could only bark but cannot bite”.