Tag: National Assembly

  • 2018 budget ready, to be passed to NASS for approval before month end – FG

    The Federal Government has reiterated its determination to pass the 2018 budget to the National Assembly before October ending.

    This disclosure was made by the minister of state for Budget and National Planning Hajia Zainab Mohammed at a press briefing to mark the end of the 23rd Nigerian Economic Summit in Abuja on Thursday.

    Hajia Mohammed said the prepared 2018 budget will be presented to President Muhammadu Buhari shortly for the Federal Executive Council (FEC) approval before the budget is finally transmitted to the National Assembly.

    The minister noted that the Federal Government hope to commence the implementation of the budget from January 2018.

    We are working closely with the legislature. We want to ensure the budget is passed in December so that it start to work from January 2018” she said.

    Zainab Mohammed who was silent on when the Medium Term Expenditure Framework (MTEF) will be presented to the National Assembly said she was optimistic that the 2018 budget will passed in time to meet the January commencement of the fiscal year as planned.

    The MTEF is supposed to be submitted to the legislature months before the budget but with the minister’s revelation that the budget will be submitted this month, it is unclear if the budgeting process will not be thrown into another controversy.

    The MTEF is supposed to guide the legislators in passing the main budget and pointing them in the general direction of government’s fiscal activities for the coming three years.

    Speaking on the power sector tariff crisis, Zainab Mohammed stated that “it is clear no new investor will come without tidying the issue tariff adjustment. They insist the current tariff is not sustainable but the new tariff will be a joint agreement with all stakeholders.”

    The Federal Government she said: “will carry out another privatisation exercise for the power sector because what we sought to achieve by the previous privatisation has not been achieved. It has not worked well.”
    According to her, “government is still a shareholder in the current arrangement and so we want to call all existing stakeholders to the table and agree on way forward. We will agree on the level of shareholding and other issues so that this power issue can be addressed once and for all.”

    According to the minister, power “is key to economic development and it is something the government is determined to ensure it works.”

    On private sector players’ worry that government heavy local borrowing has crippled banks’ ability to lend to them, the Minister said “the government will reduce local borrowing for private sector to get adequate credit to operate.”
    Regarding recommendations aggregated for the successful execution of the government’s Economic Recovery and Growth Plan (ERGP), she said: “We will review them and we have said the functional economic laboratories will be set up across the country in two weeks from now. We are not waiting for months. It is part of the recommendations.”An issue that generated a lot talk at the summit was the multitude of bills pending before the National Assembly which if passed will accelerate economic growth. Zainab Mohammed on her part said “there are pending bills and we always try to carry out economic impact on them. For instance, the Competition Bill has the capacity to create 381,000 jobs annually, generate revenue of N148.3 billion yearly. It will also lead to a 10 per cent reduction in price of goods.”

    For the National Transportation Commission Bill, it will also boost job creation and government revenue,” the minister said.

     

  • INEC announces date for 2019 Presidential, National Assembly elections

    The Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) has confirmed the dates for the Presidential and National Assembly elections, which will hold in 2019.

    INEC chairman, Professor Yakubu Mahmood, made this announcement while meeting with members of the Commission and all Resident Electoral Commissioners (REC), at the INEC Headquarters’ Conference Hall, Abuja on Thursday.

    According to him, the Presidential and National Assembly elections have been fixed for Saturday, 16th February, 2019.

    The event was live-tweeted on INEC’s official Twitter handle.

    “Above all the 2019 #NigeriaDecidesGeneral Elections is exactly 505 days away from today.

    “The Gov. State Assembly and Federal Capital Territory(FCT) Area Council elections are fixed for Saturday 2nd March 2019.

    “As part of our preparations for the elections, we shall discuss the on-going Continuous Voter Registration (CVR) exercise.

    “As you are aware, the foundation of a free and fair election rest on credible Voter Register.

    “So far, 2,786,405 citizens have registered in the ongoing exercise out of which 1,619,513 (58%) are Male while 1,166,892 (42%) are female.

    “The Presidential and National Assembly elections have been fixed for Saturday 16th February 2019.

    “In addition 108,752 unclaimed PVCs were collected. 132,431 requested for transfer while 261,429 requested for replacement of their PVCs.

    “We wish to assure Nigerians that INEC will continue to explore ways by which we can improve on all d processes associated with the ongoing CVR.

    “On this note, let me once again welcome all RECs to this meeting. Thank you and God bless,” some of the updates read.
  • BREAKING: Youths protest at National Assembly

    Some youths on Tuesday protested at the National Assembly, shutting down the main entrance after security officials allegedly denied them access.

    According to reports, the protesters are members of the ‘I support #NottooYoungtoRun’ movement who seek a constitutional backing for young Nigerians to be able to vie for elective positions.

    Details later…

  • How to solve a problem like Magu – Azu Ishiekwene

    Azu Ishiekwene

    This National Assembly appears quite anxious to make laws that might improve our lives. One example is the bill this week by the Senate for victims of gunshot wounds to get treatment without first paying with their blood.

    There has been quite a basketful of bills like that, promising to show us that federal lawmakers have hearts of flesh.

    The dangerous edge to their zeal is the growing feeling among them that they can make the law, interpret it and also enforce it and no one can do anything about it.

    After a bruising fight with the Minister of Power, Works and Housing, Babatunde Raji Fashola, over whether or not the National Assembly can top up the appropriation bill, including removing significant national projects and replacing them with budgets for boreholes and similar “constituency projects” in their constituencies, the Senate turned on Acting President Yemi Osinbajo for insisting that the EFCC Chairman, Ibrahim Magu, will not be removed.

    In a disgraceful tit-for-tat, they vowed that Magu would only be confirmed over their dead bodies, adding that they would withhold further screening and confirmation of executive nominees until Magu is removed.

    The Clerk of the National Assembly may well order body bags and call in the ambulance because we’re fed up with politicians who are so obsessed with their ego that they hardly show any regard for the common good.

    What’s wrong in a healthy debate?

    Osinbajo is Acting President and the Senate may disagree with him without insisting that he has to sacrifice his freedom of expression to retain his post. That is wrong.

    Recently, I’ve found Osinbajo’s tentativeness on a few matters quite annoying. So, I was pleased when he told the Senate pointblank that 1) the National Assembly has no business topping up the budget and, 2) the Senate has to get used to Magu being EFCC chairman or wait for possibly another six years.

    What is it about the appropriation bill that they cannot keep their sticky fingers in check and use it as a tool to get the best value for the country for every naira budgeted? Why should the National Assembly become so blinded by the narrow interests of its members that it would, for the second consecutive time in a row, disregard an existing high court judgment against mutilating the budget to its own advantage?

    And as for Magu, what is his crime? Politicians, at least those in the ruling APC, say they want to fight corruption. Magu has been doing his bit for the last 18 months without a letter of appointment and in spite of opposition from the same politicians and career influence peddlers who say they want to fight corruption.

    Where the lawmakers want to make a law to grant amnesty to looters, Magu has said he is determined to follow through their prosecution. Where they considered themselves sacred cows, he has called them out. And where they have tried to blackmail him, he has defended his integrity.

    It’s a matter for regret that the convictions have been few and slow but that’s precisely because politicians, judges and senior lawyers have made no secret of their vested interest to frustrate the process and protect one another.

    They think we’re helpless, that’s why they insist on fighting corruption on their own terms and when they are challenged they threaten to take the government hostage. The arm twisting and blackmail have gone beyond the limits of subtlety. They have become glaring and dangerous.

    The federal legislators consider themselves so infallible and their seats so impregnable that Senate President Bukola Saraki and his deputy, Ike Ekweremadu, told us that the only sovereign that can remove a senator is the Senate itself – everything else, including a constitutionally provided recall process, is a waste of time. Without seeming to know it, they are constituting themselves into a body of hostage takers, with the country, its people their interests as their supposedly helpless victims.

    It’s also a measure of the conceit of the National Assembly that not only does it remorselessly whip any dissenting member into line; it thinks it is entitled to deal with non-members with the same ruthlessness.

    That explains why they summonsed Customs CG, Hameed Ali, for not to wearing uniforms; PACAC Chairman, Itse Sagay, for rebuking them; and Fashola for appealing to their conscience and commonsense.

    And it’s precisely because of this their exaggerated sense of their worth that they have threatened to paralyze government if Magu is not removed.

    Of course the government itself has not made Magu’s job – or the fight against corruption – easier. For example, in spite of two separate court orders asking it to publish the names of treasury looters since 1999 and the recoveries made so far under President Muhammadu Buhari, the government is still speaking in tongues.

    The combination of a spiteful Director of State Security, a weak Attorney General and Minister of Justice and a dithering, almost aloof, President, has often produced mixed signals about the government’s resolve to fight corruption openly and relentlessly.

    I’ve heard lawmakers complain that the press treats the National Assembly unfairly, that there’s more corruption and lawlessness in the executive branch than anywhere else, but that the executive has learnt through years of practice and connivance with the press, to hide its dead bodies.

    Maybe that’s true, even though it’s the moral equivalent of saying if two wrongs don’t make a right, try a third. Instead of mounting barricades of greed and self-interest in the way, without a care in the world for the public good, lawmakers will be in a stronger position to face the executive if they put their own house in order first.

    But there’s little evidence that self-examination is of any interest to them. They prefer to blame the press – perhaps justifiably up to a point – for their “over-exposure”, and for helping to pile on pressure from their constituencies that leave them perpetually broke.

    Yet, they conveniently forget that for every Dino Melaye that parades his collection of exotic cars on social media; for every senator that hosts a sex fair; for every senator that is a fugitive from justice; and for everyone of them who makes a dance video, there are millions of people out there who think that only two things happen in Abuja: clowning and money sharing.

    Federal lawmakers are in a hurry to make record bills that might save us. That’s grand. They should start with the small things: homework, punctuality and a little honesty with their constituencies and about their remunerations.

    Their failures in these areas, and not Magu’s continued stay at the EFCC, have done them and the country far greater disservice.

     

    Ishiekwene is the MD/Editor-In-Chief of The Interview magazine and board member of the Paris-based Global Editors Network

     

  • Nigeria constitution hasn’t vested NASS with powers to increase budget – Falana

    Human rights lawyer, Mr. Femi Falana, said, yesterday, that a Federal High Court never ruled that the National Assembly, NASS, had powers to increase estimates of the Appropriation Act.

    His reaction came against the backdrop of claims by the House of Representatives that a Federal High Court had ruled that NASS had powers to increase or review upward budget estimates laid before it by the executive.

    But Falana said in a statement that no court ruled that the legislature could upwardly review the budget.
    He said: “Sometime in 2014, I had cause to challenge the extent of the oversight powers of the National Assembly to rewrite the Appropriation Bill or increase the budget estimates presented to it by the President.
    (See Suit No FHC/ABJ/CS/295/2014: Femi Falana v the president and three Ors).

    “In dismissing the case, the respected learned trial judge, the Honourable Justice G. O. Kolawole, questioned my locus standi to institute the action after he had described me as ‘a renowned human rights crusader’ and acknowledged my humble contributions to ‘the development of human rights jurisprudence in Nigeria’.

    “In justifying the dismissal of the suit, his lordship said the reliefs sought in the case qualified me to be described as a ‘meddlesome interloper’.

    “No doubt, the learned trial judge said the National Assembly is not a rubber stamp parliament. The incontestable statement has since been twisted to give the very erroneous impression that the power of the National Assembly to increase the budget has been judicially recognised.

    ‘’With respect, the summary of the decision of the court by the National Assembly is grossly misleading.

    “In the entire 22-page judgment, the learned trial judge never said the National Assembly has the power to increase any budget proposal submitted to it by the President.

    “On the contrary, the Federal High Court made it categorically clear that the National Assembly lacks the legislative powers to prepare ‘budget estimates’ for the President or ‘disregard the budget proposals laid before it and substitute it with its own estimates’.”

    “Even though I have taken the legal battle over the dismissal of the case to the Court of Appeal, I wish to state, without any fear of contradiction, that the learned trial judge concurred with my submission that the constitution has not vested the National Assembly with powers to increase the budget.”

    It would be recalled that the National Assembly and Minister of Power, Works and Housing, Babatunde Raji Fashola, had been at daggers drawn over claims by the minister that the lawmakers had tampered with his ministry’s budget estimates.

  • Sun Trust Bank denies withholding National Assembly aides’ salaries

    The management of Sun Trust Bank on Wednesday denied reports that it withheld the salaries of legislative aides in the National Assembly salaries.

    Mr Usman Abdulqadir, Executive Director for Finance and Risk, made this known at the press briefing in Lagos.

    Abdulqadir said the bank had executed all mandates given to it with respect to making payment on behalf of its customers promptly.

    “In this vein, as banker to some of the NASS accounts, the bank has received the mandate to make payment to various beneficiaries and those payments have since been relayed, some via REMITA, to the relevant banks.

    “We advice that persons who are yet to receive payments executed by us should have first checked with his/ her bankers to trace where such payments are held.

    “We categorically restate that we do not fail to honour any obligation to our clients,” he said.

    The executive director said the bank deeply regretted report that an individual lost his life.

    “We extend our deepest condolences to his family and the entire NASS family,” he said.

    The News Agency of Nigeria reports that legislative aides at the National Assembly protested the nonpayment of their salaries on Tuesday in Abuja.

    The protest was due to the death of one of the legislative aides, Hassan Abiodun, over a ruptured appendicitis because he could not pay N165,000 medical bill for the recommended surgery.

    The deceased, who died on Friday, June 9, was a legislative aide attached to the Deputy Speaker, Honourable Yussuff Sulaimon Lasun.

    The aides, who all dressed in black attire, met Senate President Bukola Saraki, who is also the Chairman of the National Assembly Commission.

    Dayo Fadugba, the spokesman of the aides, accused the Clerk of the National Assembly, Mr Sani Omolori, of having an ulterior motive over his preference for a new bank to pay their salaries.

    According to him, “From all indications, it is manifest that the bank does not have the capacity and infrastructure to handle the volume of transaction the Clerk has foisted on it.

    “Indeed, we are convinced that the decision is motivated by ulterior motive aimed at bolstering the financial standing of the micro finance bank masquerading as a commercial institution.”

    Abdulqadir said Sun Trust Bank Nigeria Ltd., is a commercial bank duly licensed by the Central Bank of Nigeria.

  • Court grants Bala, former minister’s son permission to travel for Hajj

    Court grants Bala, former minister’s son permission to travel for Hajj

    Under trial former FCT Minister’s son, Shamsudeen Bala, was on Wednesday granted permission to travel for lesser hajj by a Federal High Court, sitting in Abuja.

    At the resumed hearing, the defence counsel, Kanayo Okafor, prayed the court to release the international passport of the defendant to enable him travel for the lesser hajj.

    The prosecution counsel, Mr Ben Ikani, who opposed the application, stated that the defence was trying to delay the trial.

    After listening to both counsels the judge, Justice Nnamdi Dimgba, granted the defendant permission to travel for the hajj.

    Dimgba ruled that a member of the National Assembly shall write an undertaking to guarantee that the defendant would be back to the country.

    He ordered that the EFCC would verify the identity of the NASS member before releasing defendant’s international passport.

    The judge further ordered that the defendant must deposit his international passport to the registry of the court within 24 hours of his return to the country.

    He adjourned the matter until June 26 for continuation of trial.

    TheNewsGuru recalls that Shamsudeen was re-arraigned on May 30, on an amended 15-count charge bordering on money laundering.

    He was re-arraigned alongside four companies – Bird Trust Agro Allied Limited, Intertrans Global Logistic Limited, Diakin Telecommunications Limited and Bal-Vac Mining Nigeria Limited.

     

  • NASS committed to making laws to improve business environment – Dogara

    NASS committed to making laws to improve business environment – Dogara

    The Speaker of the House of Representatives, Mr Yakubu Dogara, has assured that the National Assembly will act on legislations that will improve Nigeria’s business environment.

    Dogara gave the assurance on Monday in his remarks at the one year anniversary of National Assembly Business Environment Roundtable (NASSBER) in Abuja.

    He commended NASSBER for the successes it had achieved over the last one year, saying that the group’s efforts would lead to robust and responsive private sector.

    “Looking back the last 12 months, NASSBER is but a success story of novel synergy, dialogue and engagement between the legislature, development partner, the private sector, the bench and citizens.

    “The National Assembly will continue to play a central role not only in governance but also ensuring that we deliberate and act on frameworks that will improve Nigeria’s business environment.

    “This we will do through the review of relevant legislations and provisions of the constitution.

    “A little over a year ago when NASSBER was inaugurated, we were very confident it was the right step to take if we were indeed committed to bringing our economy out of recession, and stimulating long term economic growth.’’

    Dogara urged members of the NASSBER Committees to provide the strategic guidance needed to move the roundtable initiative forward.

    He added that they were on course to having the law as a proactive instrument to promote development and, therefore, influence and change present realities.

    The speaker congratulated DFID ENABLE project, the Nigerian Economic Summit Group (NESG), and the Nigerian Bar Association – Session on Business Law (NBA-SBL) for their service to the nation through the project.

    He said that the outcome of their efforts will lead to an agile private sector that could respond to global opportunities.

    “As a result of this effort, I am more confident that our economy would attract ‘agile private sector that can innovate and respond to global opportunities’ as contemplated in the Economic Recovery and Growth Plan (ERGP) of this government,” he said.

    The speaker also commended the Senate President, Dr Bukola Saraki, for demonstrating leadership and an unwavering commitment to the NASSBER process.

     

  • Buhari’s Absence: Presidency dismisses report on political, constitutional crisis

    Buhari’s Absence: Presidency dismisses report on political, constitutional crisis

    Presidential spokesman Garba Shehu has dismissed an article speculating that Nigeria faces imminent political and constitutional crisis on account of President Muhammadu Buhari’s absence to attend to his health in London.

    The article was written by a Nigerian historian, Max Siollun, entitled “The Gentleman’s Agreement that Could Break Apart Nigeria,” published in the United States-based Foreign Policy magazine.

    Shehu, who is also the Senior Special Assistant to the President on Media and Publicity, described the article as “needlessly sensational and exaggerated speculations by conspiracy theorists’’.

    The presidential aide explained that it was misleading to compare President Buhari’s case to that of the late President Umaru Yar’Adua, adding that the circumstances were completely different.

    According to him, unlike Yar’Adua, President Buhari has duly complied with the constitutional requirements by formally notifying the National Assembly of his intention to go for medical treatment and handing over to Prof. Yemi Osinbajo as Acting President.

    “While Yar’Adua was too severely ill to transmit a letter formally to the Senate President and the Speaker of the House of Representatives, President Buhari is not in such medical state, and therefore, the country is not currently facing any complications on account of his absence,’’ he added.

    He noted that under Yar’Adua, there was uncertainty about the role of the Vice President because the late President was not in a position to formally transfer power to his deputy, which necessitated the resort to the doctrine of necessity to enable Dr. Goodluck Jonathan to act in his absence.

    The media aide explained that “currently, none of these circumstances prevail in Nigeria on account of President Buhari’s absence for medical treatment’’.

    According to him, having transferred power formally to Vice-President Yemi Osinbajo, President Buhari did not leave Nigeria with any power vacuum.

    “Therefore, any suggestions of uncertainty or constitutional crisis are imaginary and exaggerated.’’

    He explained that with the Acting President Osinbajo already running the affairs of the country in the absence of President Buhari, people should stop creating artificial fears of crisis or uncertainty.

    He noted that governance had not grounded to a halt because President Buhari had duly complied with the constitution.

    Shehu appealed to conspiracy theorists not to pollute the polity by needlessly seeking to create an atmosphere of fear, uncertainty and suspicions in the country.

    The media aide said that the president publicly admitted he was sick and taking treatment and that he never pretended about his health condition, with the open admission.

     

  • My relationship with Buhari cordial – Saraki

    The President of the Senate, Dr Bukola Saraki, has said that his relationship with President Muhammadu Buhari remained cordial, despite false claims in some social media.

    He made this known when the National Executive of the Islamic group, Jamaatu Izalatul Bidiah Wa Ikamatus Sunnali (JIBWS) led by its President, Mohammed Jingiri visited him at the National Assembly.

    The President of the Senate debunked allegations that he and the Senate are working against President Buhari.

    ”I want to assure you of the good cooperation between the legislative arm and executive led by President Muhammudu Buhari.

    ” Since the commencement of this Senate, I think we had about 196 requests from President Buhari for confirmation of his nominees and we have confirmed 185.

    “I think, we have only rejected 11. By Mathematics, that is over 90 per cent.

    “I want to assure you there is a lot of noise, you will see in the newspapers, radio and social media, please, be assured that the two arms of government are working closely together, more than in past sessions of the Senate.

    ” In January, I went to see him and assured him of our cooperation and we have continued to work closely.

    “I want to assure you as we always say, let us be judged by our actions and not by talk

    ”I want you to convey the same message to your followers, who because of social media and the fake news they hear over radio, they get wrong impression that we in the Senate are working against the President.

    I assure you that we have a very cordial relationship with the Executive,” he said.

    Saraki also reaffirmed the commitment of the Senate in ensuring good governance, economic stability and creation of jobs for the teeming unemployed youths.

    He promised to ensure that all Bills to be passed by the Senate would ensure that religious sentiments of Nigerians were taken into consideration.

    The Senate President told the group that the Gender Bill currently before the National Assembly would be fair to all religious groups.

    ” I want to reassure you on our greatest concern, particularly in the issue of Gender Bill. Here in the National Assembly, we pass laws and whatever law we pass, we take into consideration the religious aspects.

    ”There is no law that can disregard the religious sentiments of the citizens.

    “So, we have discussed that whatever final version of the law that will come for discussion, because it is still for discussion, it is just a proposal, it should not be one that would have conflict with religion. I want to assure you of that”, he said.

    According to him, the final version of the gender bill will be such that all religious sentiments are taken care of and Nigerians would be proud of.

    Saraki pledged that the senate will continue to play its roles by bringing political balancing and stability into consideration.

    “We will do what we know is best for this country. We will strive to work to keep this country together”, he said.

    Earlier, the leader of the group, Mohammed Jingirr, commended the Senate President on his role in the arrangement that led to the rejection of the Muslim-Muslim Presidential ticket for the All Progressives Congress (APC) in the 2015 presidential elections.

    He added that Nigeria was not ripe for such an arrangement, which did not take into consideration the need for religious balance in the country, as all religious interest must be represented at all times, including elections.

    According to him, religious balancing must at all times be respected in Nigeria as only this will ensure harmony.

    The Islamic cleric also commended the National Assembly for rejecting same sex marriages and capital punishment, describing them not in line with Islamic injunctions.

    He also urged the Senate President to ensure that the current Gender Bill reflects the tenets of all religions.

    Sheik Jingiri called on the Senate to ensure equality of representations in political appointments in line with the population of states.

    He also called for cordial relationship between all arms of government for the benefit of the people.

    The leader of JIBWS prayed for the quick recovery of President Buhari, who is currently on medical vacation in London.