Senate President, Dr. Bukola Saraki, has
formally replied the letter the former President, Chief Olusegun
Obasanjo, wrote to the National Assembly on January 13, accusing the
federal lawmakers of corruption, greed, lawlessness and impunity.
In his reply, dated January 29, Saraki,
according to Premium Times, responded to Obasanjo’s concern, saying the
eighth National Assembly, under his leadership was already taking
deliberate steps to strengthen the country’s democratic institutions and
ensure prudent management of resources.
“This is to ensure that we plug all leakages and minimise waste across our expenditure systems.”
“Likewise, the eighth National Assembly has made the issue of plugging leakages and cutting wastages in our public expenditure system a major priority that should not be toyed with. This may have happened in the past but it will not happen with us,” he said in the letter.
“This is to ensure that we plug all leakages and minimise waste across our expenditure systems.”
“Likewise, the eighth National Assembly has made the issue of plugging leakages and cutting wastages in our public expenditure system a major priority that should not be toyed with. This may have happened in the past but it will not happen with us,” he said in the letter.
The former president had in his letter
addressed to Saraki and the Speaker of the House of Representatives,
Yakubu Dogara, accused the lawmakers of fixing and earning salaries and
allowances far above what the Revenue Mobilisation Allocation and Fiscal
Commission (RMAFC) approved for them.
He also alleged that most of the 109
senators and 369 members of the House of Representatives were receiving
constituency allowances without maintaining constituency offices as the
laws required of them.
He faulted the plans by the lawmakers to
acquire new exotic cars for themselves, saying: “Whatever name it is
disguised as, it is unnecessary and insensitive.”
He advised that “a pool of a few cars
for each chamber would suffice for any committee chairman or members for
any specific duty.”
“The waste that has gone into cars,
furniture, housing renovation in the past was mind-boggling and these
were veritable sources of waste and corruption.”
“That was why they were abolished. Bringing them back is inimical to the interest of Nigeria and Nigerians,”Obasanjo said.
But in his response, Saraki told the
former president that the lawmakers were fully aware of the challenges
the nation was facing, saying: “As leaders with a duty, we will not
disappoint Nigerians in their yearnings for a more transparent public
expenditure system.”
On corruption, Saraki said the National Assembly was working with President Muhammadu Buhari to stem the menace in the country.
According to him, the legislature was
already overhauling its oversight functions to make it more effective in
exposing corruption in federal ministries, departments and agencies.
“We are hand in glove with the president on this matter and this is why we are overhauling our oversight functions to make it more effective in exposing corruption in the Ministries, Departments and Agencies (MDA).
“We are hand in glove with the president on this matter and this is why we are overhauling our oversight functions to make it more effective in exposing corruption in the Ministries, Departments and Agencies (MDA).
“We recognise the hard work our anti-corruption agencies are putting into this fight.
“The Senate is resolved to support them to perform their duty effectively by providing them with adequate funding where necessary, as their work is integral to our oversight responsibility.”
Obasanjo had written the National Assembly to amplify widespread concerns that federal lawmakers were insensitive to the economic hardship facing their country, and had continued to live in opulence at taxpayers expense.
“The Senate is resolved to support them to perform their duty effectively by providing them with adequate funding where necessary, as their work is integral to our oversight responsibility.”
Obasanjo had written the National Assembly to amplify widespread concerns that federal lawmakers were insensitive to the economic hardship facing their country, and had continued to live in opulence at taxpayers expense.
As the Senate President’s letter got to
Obasanjo, the federal lawmakers were allegedly taking delivery of exotic
cars for themselves even when the nation’s monetisation policy forbids
them from doing so.
The acquisition of the cars was also
done in disregard of the advice of the former president urging the
lawmakers to discard the plan.
The National Assembly is yet to make
details of its 2016 budget public despite widespread calls on them to
emulate the other arms of government – the executive and the judiciary –
and do so.
Source: Thisday
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