The All Progressives Congress (APC) has
written to the Senator representing Kaduna Central Senatorial District,
Shehu Sani to come and explain his utterances regarding the
anti-corruption crusade of President Muhammadu Buhari
National Chairman, Chief John Odigie-Oyegun drafted a letter yesterday
evening to be sent to the senator inviting him to the party’s office in
Abuja to discuss his criticism of the president’s handling of the
allegations of corruption levelled against the Secretary to the
Government of the Federation (SGF), Mr. Babachir David Lawal.
Senator Sani had thrown a tirade on the
floor of the Senate on Tuesday accusing the presidency of lies and
hypocrisy, after the president wrote a letter to the Senate exonerating
Lawal of corruption allegations.
The senator was miffed by the content of
Buhari’s letter read by Senate President Bukola Saraki on the floor of
the Senate, in which the president accused the ad hoc Committee on the
Mounting Humanitarian Crisis in North-east chaired by Sani, of denying
the SGF fair hearing by failing to invite him to defend himself during
the investigation on the mismanagement of funds allocated to the
North-eastern section of the country as a result of the Boko Haram
insurgency.
The president, in his letter, also
concluded that the ad hoc committee’s report was an interim one,
obviously forgetting that the presidency had indicted and ordered the
arrest and arraignment of the former National Security Adviser, Col.
Sambo Dasuki, among others, in 2015, on the basis of an interim report
submitted to it by a presidential committee set up to investigate the
utilisation of funds for the procurement of arms by past
administrations.
Sani had described the letter as the
funeral of Buhari’s anti-corruption war, pointing out that when the
president wants to fight corruption outside the presidency, he uses a
disinfectant but when it is within the presidency, he uses a deodorant.
In another development, the ousted
Senate Leader, Ali Ndume, yesterday challenged Saraki to treat the
Senate’s 2017 budget differently from that of 2016, revealing that the
breakdown of the upper chamber’s budget for 2016 was hidden from other
senators.
Ndume, who made the remark while
contributing to the 2017 budget debate, had earlier raised a point of
order challenging Saraki’s alleged decision not to recognise him to
speak when it was his turn, claiming that in accordance with the budget
roster, he should have been the 16th person to contribute to the debate.
He said: “When you announced the debate
on the budget, you asked us to write our names and I wrote my name and
my name is listed. After Distinguished Senator Dino Melaye, I was
prepared and I was following but I didn’t hear you call my name. So, I
don’t know when I will contribute again.”
Responding, Saraki said he was not aware of the list that Ndume was talking about, maintaining that the authentic list he was using was the one before him.
Responding, Saraki said he was not aware of the list that Ndume was talking about, maintaining that the authentic list he was using was the one before him.
“Senator Ndume, as I sit down here, I
didn’t write this list. I take the order in directing the affairs of the
chambers and the list I have is the list I am using and I don’t know
whether that list is the one you are talking about.
“So, follow my list and you will be
called in due time. So, I don’t know the list you are talking about. The
only list that matters is the list I have in front of me and I am going
with that list,” Saraki said.
Eventually, when Ndume was called to
make his contribution, he insisted that the handling of this year’s
federal budget must be different from that of last year, insisting that
details of the budget must be well spelt out in a way that senators will
be conversant with the details of the budget.
He also tasked the Senate Committee on Appropriation to ensure that the federal government provides details of the entire 2016 budget, pointing out that doing so would enable lawmakers to follow up on its implementation.
He also tasked the Senate Committee on Appropriation to ensure that the federal government provides details of the entire 2016 budget, pointing out that doing so would enable lawmakers to follow up on its implementation.
He said: “We come here to pass the
budget without seeing the details. This is a government of change and
this must change. The details of the budget report should be known and
as required, must be considered holistically.
“Last year, we had several issues with
the budget. In fact, to some extent, very embarrassing and that is
because some of us are even innocent. I don’t know what was in the
budget because the details of the budget were not provided and this
should be done this year.
“The budget of the Senate is also not
known to the senators. It should be known this year. This is very
important because we cannot be taking blame or credit for what we don’t
know.
“Mr. President, if you look at 2016 budget, yes we have been given the budget performance, but what the 2016 budget contained in relation to 2017 budget is not available.
“Mr. President, if you look at 2016 budget, yes we have been given the budget performance, but what the 2016 budget contained in relation to 2017 budget is not available.
“There should have been a column where
the 2016 budget details will be enumerated. Then the 2016 budget would
have been detailed so that we know, because we could end up having
uncompleted projects.
“We could also end up having projects
that are new and that will never be executed because we provided for
them desperately in order to answer the call of our colleagues, yet they
will not be done; or for technical reasons, they will say they will not
do it.
“But if the budget of the 2016 column is
there and we know what has been released for particular subheads, then
we will know what is budgeted for this year. We will know how to do
actual budget work. The Committee on Appropriation should do that and
know the right thing.”
In his contribution, Senator Shehu Sani
(Kaduna Central), challenged the federal government to ensure that the
budget was not a mere compilation of figures, but a deliberate action
plan to achieve development, even as he advocated the need for Nigeria
to exploit the opportunity of its goodwill in the international
community this time to seek another round of debt forgiveness.
“Each year, the budget passes through the ritual of passing through the National Assembly and the state of Nigerians as far as their lives are concerned experience no change.
“Each year, the budget passes through the ritual of passing through the National Assembly and the state of Nigerians as far as their lives are concerned experience no change.
“On N1.663 trillion for debt servicing,
we should explore the goodwill that Nigeria enjoys today from the
international community to seek for further debt forgiveness, so as to
boost our economy to address other issues which we are faced with,” he
said.
Sani wondered if the N50 billion
education budget would address the rot in education sector and advocated
for a reduction of the N140 billion defence budget in view of the
perceived containment of Boko Haram in the North-east.
“The budget for education, will this
address the decadence in the sector? Will this end the perennial and
persistent Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU) strike? Will it
address the basic challenges of our education sector? The defence budget
of N140 billion – in a situation whereby we acknowledge the fact that
the insurgency has seriously been degraded – we need to see a scale down
of the defence budget so that the large sum of those monies could be
used for other sectors like in health and education,” he added.
Also contributing to the debate, Senator
Philip Aduda (FCT) said the N37 billion allocated to the Federal
Capital Territory (FCT) was inadequate, noting that contractors in the
territory were owed billions of naira.
He also advised the FCT Minister to entrench a tax system that will enhance revenue generation for the development of the FCT.
But Senator Babajide Omoware (Osun East)
lamented the increasing spate of unemployment in the country which he
said was an expression of the stunted growth in the economy.
He said the federal government must spend more if it wants to revamp the economy and also ensure there is a reduction in the recurrent expenditure while capital expenditure is increased drastically.
He said the federal government must spend more if it wants to revamp the economy and also ensure there is a reduction in the recurrent expenditure while capital expenditure is increased drastically.
“The number one solution to recession is
for government to spend more. The executive must fund small and medium
scale enterprises. There is about N50 billion in the budget for the Bank
of Agriculture (BoA) and Bank of Industry(BoI). That is not enough;
there must be a lot more money.
The challenge we have in Nigeria is not about providing this money. It is about ensuring that this money gets to those who need the money – the youths, the women.
The challenge we have in Nigeria is not about providing this money. It is about ensuring that this money gets to those who need the money – the youths, the women.
“In the last dispensation, money was
allocated to small and medium scale enterprises. People were not able to
access it. The government must design a method of ensuring that those
who actually require this money get it. This is the only way there can
be growth in the economy,” he stated.
Source: [ ThisdayNG]
Want To Increase Your ClickBank Traffic And Commissions?
ReplyDeleteBannerizer makes it easy for you to promote ClickBank products with banners, simply go to Bannerizer, and grab the banner codes for your favorite ClickBank products or use the Universal ClickBank Banner Rotator Tool to promote all of the available ClickBank products.