Tag: National Assembly

  • Buhari writes National Assembly, seeks confirmation of Service Chiefs

    Buhari writes National Assembly, seeks confirmation of Service Chiefs

    President Muhammadu Buhari has sent a letter to Senate President Ahmad Lawan, seeking confirmation of the recently appointed service chiefs.

    This was disclosed in a statement released today by the Special Adviser to the President on National Assembly Matters (Senate), Babajide Omoworare.

    Omoworare noted that the president’s letter to Senate President Ahmad Lawan was dated January 27.

    He stated that President Buhari never bypassed the National Assembly but only adopted the same procedure taken when the immediate past Service Chiefs were appointed.

    Read the full statement by Mr Omoworare below:

    President Muhammadu Buhari has communicated the appointment of the Service Chiefs to the National Assembly and has sought for the confirmation of the said appointment by the Senate through his letter to the Senate President dated 27th January 2021. This was done in furtherance of Section 18 (1) of the Armed Forces Act Cap. A.20 Laws of the Federation of Nigeria.

    READ ALSO TI rating: PDP blows hot; knocks Buhari, APC leaders
    Contrary to fears expressed in some quarters that President Muhammadu Buhari has “bypassed” the National Assembly in the process of appointment of the Service Chiefs and that he has no intention of seeking consideration and confirmation of their appointment, Mr. President upon nomination for appointment sought confirmation of the Senate for the appointment of Major General Lucky Irabor, Major General Ibrahim Attahiru, Rear Admiral Awwal Gambo and Air Vice Marshal Isiaka Amao as Chief of Defence Staff, Chief of Army Staff, Chief of Naval Staff and Chief of Air Staff respectively, vide his aforementioned letter.

    It is on record that this same procedure was adopted when the immediate past Service Chiefs were appointed. Upon announcement of the appointment of the then Service Chiefs – Major General Abayomi Olonisakin (Chief of Defence Staff), Major General Tukur Buratai (Chief of Army Staff), Rear Admiral Ibok-Efe Ibas (Chief of Naval Staff) and Air Vice Marshal Sadique Abubakar (Chief of Air Staff), Mr. President had written the 8th Senate on 14th July 2015 for confirmation. Whilst the correspondence was read on the floor of the Senate on 28th July 2015, consideration and confirmation of the appointments was carried out at the Committee of the Whole on 4th August 2015

    It will be recalled that the National Assembly will only resume plenary sessions on 9th February 2021 when hopefully Mr. President’s communication for consideration and confirmation of the nomination for appointment of the Service Chiefs would be undertaken.

    Before this administration, confirmation of Service Chiefs were not sought and obtained from the National Assembly in consonance with the provisions of Section 18 (1) of the Armed Forces Act Cap. A.20 LFN. We are aware that in Keyamo Vs. President & Ors, the Federal High Court set aside the Armed Forces Modification Order 2008 (purportedly made under Section 315 [2) of the Constitution) on 1st July 2013 and ruled that the confirmation of the National Assembly must be sought for the appointment of the Service Chiefs. We are in compliance with the spirit and letters of both the statute and case law

  • JUST IN: National Assembly postpones resumption

    JUST IN: National Assembly postpones resumption

    The National Assembly has postponed its resumption till Tuesday, February 9, 2020.

    Both Chambers on December 21st, 2020 adjourned plenary till January 26, 2021, to enable members to observe the Christmas and New Year festivities.

    Clerk to the National Assembly, Arc. Ojo Amos disclosed this in a statement in Abuja.

    He said the deferment of resumption was to enable lawmakers, who are members of the All Progressives Congress (APC), to partake in the party’s membership registration and revalidation exercise scheduled to begin on Monday 25th January 2020.

    Details shortly….

  • BREAKING: Over 300 fierce looking protesters storm National Assembly

    BREAKING: Over 300 fierce looking protesters storm National Assembly

    More than three hundred fierce looking protesters at about 12:00 pm on Tuesday took over the main entrance of National Assembly complex in support of SWAT.

    TheNewsGuru.com (TNG ) reports the protesters who embarked on procession from the Unity Fountain besides Transcorp Hilton Hotel were armed with clubs, iron and other harmful weapons.

    Few minutes after arriving at the National Assembly complex, they blocked major roads leading to the complex, thereby preventing free flow of traffic.

    In the bid to avoid break down of law and order around the National Assembly, the security operatives shutdown the National Assembly main gate as staff and other visitors diverted to the SGF gate.

  • 2021 budget: Drama as Buhari announces N128bn for National Assembly [VIDEO]

    2021 budget: Drama as Buhari announces N128bn for National Assembly [VIDEO]

    President Muhammadu Buhari on Thursday announced the National Assembly (NASS) will receive the sum of N128 billion as allocation in the 2021 budget as proposed.

    TheNewsGuru.com (TNG) reports there was a mild drama as President Buhari made the announcement during the presentation of the 2021 Appropriation Bill.

    Buhari paused as he read the proposed 2021 allocation for the NASS. This aroused laughter and applause on the floor of the House of Representatives where the 2021 Appropriation Bill was presented.

    Watch below:

    https://www.instagram.com/p/CGFSBxIgSAM/

    According to the president, the N128 billion forms part of the sum of N484.49 billion provided for statutory transfers in the 2021 budget estimates.

    The sum of N484.49 billion provided for statutory transfers in the 2021 budget represents an increase of N56.46 billion (or 13 per cent) over the revised 2020 provision.

    The statutory transfers provided in the 2021 budget estimates are N63.51 billion for the Niger Delta Development Commission (NDDC), N29.70 billion for the North East Development Commission, N110.00 billion for the National Judicial Council and N70.05 billion for the Universal Basic Education Commission.

    Others are N40.00 billion for the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC), N5.20 billion for the Public Complaints Commission, N3.00 billion for the Human Rights Commission and N35.03 billion for Basic Health Care Provision Fund.

    Buhari stated that, “in compliance with the Fiscal Responsibility Act 2007, all beneficiaries of statutory transfers will be required to provide the budget office of the federation with periodic reports on the allocation and expenditure of funds for inclusion in the quarterly budget implementation report”.

    TNG reports the 2021 Budget is themed ‘Economic Recovery and Resilience’ with the aim of promoting economic diversification and social inclusion.

  • Buhari’s ‘failed’ government conniving with NASS to revive rejected Water Resources Bill – Soyinka

    Buhari’s ‘failed’ government conniving with NASS to revive rejected Water Resources Bill – Soyinka

    …Says FG will soon add rain to Exclusive List

    …condemns DSS attacks, killing of IPOB members

    Nobel laureate and elder statesman, Prof. Wole Soyinka has berated the President Muhammadu Buhari led Federal Government and National Assembly for returning a rejected bill, the National Water Resources Bill for reconsideration and possible passage to law.

    According to reports, the House of Representatives on July 23, 2020, referred the National Water Resources Bill 2020 to a “committee of the whole,” for third reading and passage. The bill was widely rejected in 2018 when it became public knowledge.

    Soyinka, in a statement on Thursday titled, ‘MLK’s mighty stream of righteousness,’ kicked against the return of the bill and the killing of some members of the Indigenous People of Biafra by officials of the Department of State Services in Enugu on Sunday.

    He said, “A roundly condemned project blasted out of sight by public outrage one or two years ago, is being exhumed and sneaked back into service by none other than a failed government, and with the consent of a body of people, supposedly elected to serve as custodians of the rights, freedoms and existential exigencies of millions. This bill – Bill on National Water resources 2020 – is designed to hand Aso Rock absolute control over the nation’s entire water resources, both over and underground.

    “The basic facilitator of human existence, water – forget for now all about streams of righteousness! – is to become exclusive to one centralised authority. It will be doled out, allocated through power directives from a desensitised rockery that cannot even boast of the water divining wand of the prophet Moses. If the current presiding genius–and this applies equally to all his predecessors without exception – had a structured vision of Nigerian basic entitlements, Nigerians would by now, be able to boast the means of fulfilling even that minimalist item of COVID-19 protocols that call for washing one’s hands under running water! As for potable water, for drinking and cooking, let us not even begin to address such extra-terrestrial undertaking!

    “What next for the exclusive list? The rains? I declare myself in full agreement with virtually every pronouncement of alarm, outrage, opprobrium and repudiation that has been heaped upon this bill and its parentage, both at its first outing and since this recent re-emergence. It is time to move beyond denunciations however and embark on practical responses for its formal deactivation and permanent internment. Let all retain in their minds that, from the same source that preached the “streams of righteousness” is encountered the promise of “no more floods, the fire next time.”

    Dwelling on the ‘Black Lives Matter’ movement provoked by the racial killing of a black man by a United States cop and Martin Luther King’s speech to discard racism, the elder statesman noted that in the past few days he mulled over the watershed episode and was compelled to rephrase: Do Nigerian lives matter? Do farmers’ lives matter? Do IPOB lives matter? Do innocent lives matter? And most disturbingly: Do future lives matter?

    He added, “One passage in Martin Luther King’s “I have a Dream” has leapt to the forefront as a warning that relates to that final interrogatory – do future lives matter ? And it does so in a most literal manner, one that MLK could never have envisioned! It persists in echoing through the mind, reinforced by the recent killings of innocent humanity – mostly youths — in Enugu, by state forces, under the pretext – shall we presume? – of preventing secessionist agitations?

    The Nobel laureate further said the promulgators of the obscenity, high and low, should understand that the placid waters they think to control unjustly and grotesquely, would turn to be Martin Luther King’s “mighty stream of righteousness” that would overwhelm and sweep them off their complacent, and increasingly loathsome sectarian and conspiratorial heights.

    He said, “One polluted stream of human existence compounds the next. A violation here joins forces with its tributary of resentment there yonder, all seemingly unconnected. Martin Luther King’s streams of righteousness turn into a mighty torrent of repulse that overwhelms the perpetrators but, alas, takes down much else as collateral, irreparable damage. That is the only cause for regret and – restraint. Hence our duty to position that anguished question frontally, and call the world to witness our open propagation of that challenge: Do future lives matter?

    “Let Buhari and his myrmidons ponder that question in the deepest recesses of their hearts and minds. They should not bequeath to future generations the harvest of the grapes of wrath!”

  • Wike presents 15 Prado Jeeps to National Assembly members

    Wike presents 15 Prado Jeeps to National Assembly members

    Rivers State Governor, Nyesom Ezenwo Wike has presented 15 Toyota Land Cruiser Prado VX and TXL to lawmakers representing the State at the National Assembly and urged them to defend the interest of the State fearlessly.

    He has therefore advised them to resist distraction, remain united and consult the party regularly.

    Wike gave the charge at a brief ceremony for the presentation of 15 Land Cruiser Prado VX and TXL cars to members of the National Assembly at Government House, Port Harcourt.

    The Governor was represented by the Rivers State Chairman of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), Ambassador Desmond Akawor.

    Wike said the gesture would ease their movement and enable them to discharge their legislative duties effectively.

    He urged them to keep faith with the Party so they could collectively recover what was lost at the national during the forthcoming 2023 general election.

    Responding on behalf of the lawmakers, the Senator representing Rivers East Senatorial District, Senator George Thompson Sekibo expressed gratitude to the Governor for the gift.

    He noted that despite the challenges posed by the COVID-19 pandemic on the state finances, the Governor still saved funds to provide them vehicles.

    The member representing Khana/Gokana Federal Constituency, Hon. Dumnamene Deekor commended the Governor’s benevolence.

    He said the governor has been consistent in encouraging the federal legislators to protect the interest of Rivers people.

    Also speaking, the member representing Obio/Akpor Federal Constituency, Hon. Kingsley Ogundu Chinda assured the governor of their continued support.

    On her part, Hon. Boma Goodhead who represents Akuku-Toru/Asari-Toru Federal Constituency prayed for greater triumph for the Governor because he has always integrated the National Assembly members in the scheme of things.

    In his reaction, Hon. Awaji-Inombek Abiante representing Andoni/Opobo-Nkoro Federal Constituency said they would reciprocate the gesture by representing Rivers people well in Abuja.

    Also speaking, the Secretary to the State Government, Dr. Tammy Danagogo said there is healthy synergy between the national lawmakers and the state government.

    He said the synergy is made possible because Wike has remained a leader who unifies all segments of leaders.

  • National Assembly, Keyamo and 774,000 special jobs, By Ehichioya Ezomon

    National Assembly, Keyamo and 774,000 special jobs, By Ehichioya Ezomon

    By Ehichioya Ezomon
    Lately, Nigerians were treated to a back-and-forth argument over whose responsibility it is to implement the 774,000 short-term job openings, worth N52 billion, under the Special Public Works (SPW) programme in the 774 local government areas in the country.
    The disagreement has culminated in the House of Representatives declaring the portfolio of “Minister of State” as unknown to law, as preserved in section 145(1) of the amended 1999 Constitution.
    Specifically, the conflict is between the lawmakers and the Minister of State for Labour and Employment, Festus Keyamo, whose portfolio the House claims isn’t known to law, and by implication the Senate-cleared nominee heading the position.
    To the lawmakers, the “aberration” makes Mr Keyamo (SAN) to “refuse to be guided on the method adopted by Parliament for its proceedings, and his assertion that ‘only Mr President can stop our work,’ not our laws nor our institutions.”
    Thus, the lawmakers declared in a motion on Tuesday, August 18, 2020, that “this attitude may jeopardize the capacity of the National Assembly to oversight and ensure prudence, as enshrined in sections 88 and 89 of the 1999 Constitution.”
    “The House is determined to prevent any mischief, wastage of scarce public resources, lack of accountability and defeat of the aims and objectives of the Special Public Works programme,” the lawmakers said in their resolution.
    They urged the Ministry of Finance not to release any funds for the implementation of the programme “if it was in breach of due process, the Appropriation Act 2020 as well as the National Directorate of Employment, NDE Act.”
    And the “due process” is that “the Appropriation Act 2020, a valid law of the Federal Republic of Nigeria, is clear that the NDE is the implementing agency for the Special Public Works (SPW).”
    Deputy minority leader, Toby Okechukwu and, the chairman, House Committee on Aviation, Nnolim Nnaji, stated this in the motion: “The Need to Uphold the National Directorate of Employment (NDE) Act In The Implementation of the Special Works Programme.”
    The motion got overwhelming support of members when House Speaker Femi Gbajabiamila put it to a voice vote, thus temporarily halting implementation of the programme to “meaningfully engage” 1,000 youths from each of the 768 local government areas and six area councils of the Federal Capital Territory (FCT), Abuja.
    But the questions arise: Why should a stop-gap programme by the Federal Government to tackle unemployment become subject of flexing of the muscles between the executive and legislature?
    Why should the Minister of State, so designated by the executive, at least, since the return of democracy in 1999, suddenly become “unknown” to the National Assembly, which pulls out all the stops to abort his supervision of implementation of the job placements?
    The answer to these “whys” is self-interest couched in the eternal supremacy battle between the executive and legislature over which controls the purse, and what and how to allocate and disburse resources from the pool.
    Ordinarily, the work of the legislature ends at appropriation or allocation of resources to programmes presented in an annual budget or via a supplementary, while the executive takes care of implementation of those programmes.
    But in Nigeria’s peculiar brand of “separation of power,” the legislature, hiding under “we have the power of the purse” and “oversight,” wants to be the appropriator and implementer of budgets and programmes presented by the executive.
    If the legislators’ interest is really to ensure “oversight and prudence of scarce resources,” as mandated in sections 88 and 89 of the Constitution, they shouldn’t crave for allocation of slots, and even protest, as inadequate, the 30 slots each allocated to them.
    They weren’t satisfied with the fact that their constituents would benefit from the 1,000 jobs per each of the 774 local government areas in the country, perhaps because of our system that merges several local government areas to form a federal constituency.
    While many local government areas stand alone, lawmakers, representing constituencies of multiple councils, may gain more in the distribution of the jobs per local government area.
    Besides, the lawmakers’ initial worry was that Mr Keyamo’s stand for the executive to implement the SPW programme would deprive them of having slots allocated to them, which they would bandy as part of the “dividend of democracy” to their constituents.
    Consider these claims in Rep Okechukwu’s motion: “Note that the supervisory powers conferred on the Minister of Labour by Section 15 of the NDE Act do not condone any abnormalities or allow the Minister to do so without regards to the law.
    “Also… by our laws, as presently constituted, the NDE is an implementing agency with the Minister of Labour, not Minister of State, an aberration and indeed an entity unknown to the law, as the supervising Minister.”
    Yet, when slots were conceded to them, the legislators feared Keyamo could play some pranks; hence the clamour for the Minister of Labour, Dr Chris Ngige, to rise to his statutory responsibility of supervising the NDE on the job placements.
    The legislators’ protest isn’t new; it follows a familiar trajectory whenever government strives to tackle unemployment. Often, Nigerians learn through the “grapevine” about thousands of job openings in the ministries, departments and agencies (MDAs).
    These vacancies are filled, behind the scenes, by the powerful in the society. Even when the recruitments are publicised, thousands or millions of applicants go through rigorous processes, including forced physical exercises and payments of processing fees.
    In the end, only a negligible number of applicants get recruited from the available “limited” openings, while the bulk of the spaces are hijacked by those that decide the fate of the average Nigerian.
    Sometimes, the entire recruitment is aborted midway, after the applicants have gone through unimaginable processes, such as strenuous physical exercises, for paramilitary positions.
    Recall the tragedies during the recruitment into the Nigeria Immigration Service (NIS) in March 2014, with several deaths from exhaustion and stampedes at the Abuja and Lagos centres.
    The public outrage post-the scammed recruitments nationwide didn’t move government to sack the Minister of Interior, and refunds weren’t made to applicants of their processing fees, that reportedly raked in billions at N1,000 from the over one million applicants.
    Despite maltreating and cheating fellow Nigerians in need, the said former Minister is today a Senator of the Federal Republic of Nigeria. What recompense to the culprit instead of the victims!
    In the absence of deterrence, there will be controversies, as in the current job openings, as politicians and the powerful seek to corner, to themselves and their cronies, what belongs to the majority.
    * Mr. Ezomon, Journalist and Media Consultant, writes from Lagos, Nigeria.
  • NASC queries National Assembly Clerk for insubordination

    NASC queries National Assembly Clerk for insubordination

    The National Assembly Service Commission (NASC) on Thursday issued a query to the Clerk of National Assembly, Sani Omolori, for insubordination to the management of NASC.

    The query, a copy of which was made available to the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) in Abuja, was signed by the Executive Chairman of NASC, Mr Ahmed Kadi Amshi.

    The query read in part:

    “The attention of the National Assembly Service Commission was drawn to a Press Release titled: “Retirement age for staff of the National Assembly Service is 40 years of Service or 65 years of Age, whichever comes first” dated 15th July, 2020 and signed by M.A Sani-Omolori, Clerk to the National Assembly.

    “As you are very much aware, the Clerk to the National Assembly is an employee of the National Assembly Service Commission vide Section 6(1)b of the National Assembly Service Act, 2014 (As amended).

    “The Clerk to the National Assembly has no authority whatsoever to dictate anything to the Commission.

    ” Your press release is considered by the Commission as a gross insubordination to a constituted authority.

    “You are by this letter requested to explain to the Commission within twenty four (24) hours as to why disciplinary action will not be taken against you as per the provision of Section 6(2)b of the National Assembly Service Act 2014 (As Amended) for this gross insubordination.”

  • National Assembly Clerk fights back, rejects retirement by commission

    National Assembly Clerk fights back, rejects retirement by commission

    The Clerk of the National Assembly (CNA), Alhaji Mohammed Sani-Omolori on Wednesday rejected his compulsory retirement same day it was announced.

    TheNewsGuru.com TNG reports that the National Assembly Service Commission on Wednesday issued a statement in which it announced Sani-Omolori’s retirement with 151 others, including the Secretary of the National Assembly Service Commission (NASC), Mr. Olusanya Ajakaiye.

    The commission said workers who had attained the retirement age of 35 years in service or is 60 years of age should leave.

    It added that such workers will get their retirement letters soon.

    The commission’s statement was dated July 15, with the title: The National Assembly Service Commission Approves the Retirement Age for the Staff of the National Assembly Service as 35 years of Service or 60 years of Age, whichever comes first.

    It reads: “Pursuant to its mandate as provided for in the National Assembly Service Commission Act 2014 (as amended), the National Assembly Service Commission, at its 497th meeting held on Wednesday, July 15, 2020, has approved the retirement age for the workers of the National Assembly Service at 35 years of service or 60 years of age, whichever comes first.

    “To this effect, the commission has approved the immediate retirement of workers of the National Assembly Service who have already attained the retirement age of 35 years of service or 60 years of age.

    “Retirement letters would be issued to the affected workers accordingly.”

    The statement was signed by the Executive Chairman of the commission, Ahmed Kadi Amshi.

    But Sani-Omolori on Wednesday directed the affected workers to ignore the commission’s statement, saying it has no power to take such a decision.

    In a counter-statement, he said: “The attention of the National Assembly Management has been drawn to a statement, dated July 15, 2020, by the Chairman of the National Assembly Service Commission, informing the general public that the commission had approved the retirement age of workers of the National Assembly as 35 years of service or 60 years of age, whichever comes first.

    “The management of the National Assembly wishes to inform all workers and the general public that the extant regulation, as contained in our Revised Conditions of Service, duly passed by both chambers of the Eighth National Assembly, puts the retirement age of workers at 40 years of service and 65 years of age, whichever comes first.

    “The Resolution of the Eighth National Assembly on the Conditions of Service of Workers has not been rescinded nor abdicated by the National Assembly, which, under the authentic National Assembly Service Act 2014, as passed, is empowered to review any proposed amendment to the Conditions of Service by the Commission.

    “Therefore, the National Assembly Service Commission does not have the powers to set aside the Revised Conditions of Service, as passed by the Eighth National Assembly…”

  • JUST IN: Buhari snubs NASS, directs Keyamo to proceed with 774,000 special jobs

    JUST IN: Buhari snubs NASS, directs Keyamo to proceed with 774,000 special jobs

    President Muhammadu Buhari has given Minister of State for Labour and Employment, Festus Keyamo, the go ahead to recruit 774, 000 Nigerians under the Special Public Works Progamme (SPW).

    Recall that the National Assembly had told Keyamo to halt action on the planned recruitment, as the minister did not consult them before embarking on such move.

    They accused the Minister of trying to hijack the scheme from the National Directorate of Employment (NDE), the implementing agency of the project.

    But Keyamo said on Tuesday that the president had given him unfettered go ahead on the recruitment.

    “I have the instructions of my boss, Mr. President, to proceed unhindered,” Keyamo said in a text message on Tuesday afternoon.

    The lawmakers had invited Keyamo in June to give details of the Special Public Works Programme where 774,000 people would be recruited by the Federal Government under the National Directorate of Employment (NDE).

    The employment will be for three months, from October till December.

    During the meeting which was held at the National Assembly in Abuja, members of the Senate and House of Representatives Joint Committee on Labour sought to find out the method of selection of a 20-man committee from each state for the programme.

    However, a heated argument erupted between committee members and Keyamo over who should head the programme which was to be domiciled under the NDE.

    A rowdy session followed.

    The committee decided to go into a closed-door session to discuss the matter, but the minister refused, insisting that further discussions be held in the presence of journalists.

    This enraged the lawmakers who told Keyamo to apologise to the committee, but he ignored them.

    Thereafter, the minister was asked to leave the meeting since he refused to apologise to the committee members.

    The lawmakers claimed that Keyamo has no right to direct the committee on how to conduct its proceedings.

    This comes a day after the minister inaugurated a 20-man committee in 36 states and the Federal Capital Territory (FCT) by virtual means.

    According to him, 1,000 persons would be selected from each of the 774 local government areas in the country to be engaged by the government in the Special Public Works Programme.