Chairman of the Senate Committee on Land Transport, Senator Gbenga Ashafa |
The Senate, yesterday,
gave what it described as a final warning to the presidency on its dealings
with the legislative branch of government, affirming that it would no longer
tolerate the presidency blaming the legislature for its failures.
Vanguard
report continues:
The
assertion which was a direct fallout from brickbats over the removal of the
Calabar – Lagos rail project from the final budget, came as presidency
officials, yesterday, affirmed that the rail project was in the budget but
removed by the committees of Appropriation in the Senate and the House of
Representatives.
The
claim which was stoutly rebuffed by the Senate and the House was, however,
backed by Chairman of the Senate Committee on Land Transport, Senator Gbenga
Ashafa, who said the coastal rail project was in the budget report presented by
his committee to the Senator Danjuma Goje-led committee on appropriation.
The
Senate, last night, in a sternly worded statement urged President Muhammadu
Buhari to sign the budget bill and not distract Nigerians from what it claimed
were acts of blackmail on the part of the executive arm.
The
statement singled out Minister of Transportation, Rotimi Amaechi for blame,
asking him to apologize for seeking to pitch one section of the country against
the other and asked him to resign if he cannot show evidence of the inclusion
of the projects in the original budget as presented by the president.
Senate’s
final warning
The
statement issued by Senate spokesman, Senator Abdullahi read in part:
“While the executive is mandated to prepare and lay before the National
Assembly a proposed budget detailing projects to be executed, it should be made
clear that the responsibility and power of appropriation lie with the National
Assembly. If the presidency expects us to return the budget proposal to them
without any adjustments, then some people must be living in a different era and
probably have not come to terms with democracy.
“We
make bold to say, however, that the said Lagos-Calabar rail project was not
included in the budget proposal presented to the National Assembly by President
Muhammadu Buhari, and we challenge anyone who has any evidence to the contrary
to present such to Nigerians.
“Since
the beginning of the 2016 budget process, it is clear that the National
Assembly has suffered all manners of falsehood, deliberate distortion of facts,
and outright blackmail, deliberately aimed at poisoning the minds of the people
against the institution of the National Assembly. We have endured this with
equanimity in the overall interest of Nigerians. Even when the original
submission was surreptitiously swapped and we ended up having two versions of
the budget, which was almost incomprehensible and heavily padded in a manner
that betrays lack of coordination and gross incompetence, we refused to play to
the gallery and instead helped the Executive to manage the hugely embarrassing
situation it has brought upon itself; but enough is enough.
“This
latest antics of this particular minister of transportation, Rotimi Amaechi, is
reckless, uncalled for and dangerously divisive. Apart from setting the people
of the southern part of the country against their northern compatriots, it
potentially sets the people against their lawmakers from the concerned
constituencies and sets the lawmakers against themselves. This manner of
reprehensible mischief has no place in a democracy. We hereby demand from Mr.
Amaechi a publicly tendered apology if he is not able to show evidence that the
Lagos-Calabar rail project was included in the budget. Otherwise, he should
resign forthwith.
“Finally,
by the provision of Section 81 (4) (a) and (b) of the constitution, the
President is allowed to sign the budget and kick-start the implementation of
the other areas that constitute over 90 per cent of the budget where there is
agreement between both arms, even as we engage ourselves to resolve the
contentious areas, if there were any. We, therefore, maintain that even these
contrived discrepancies are not sufficient excuse not to sign the budget into
law.
“We,
therefore, urge President Buhari to sign the 2016 budget without any further
delay. For every additional day that the president withholds his assent from
the bill, the hardship in the land, which is already becoming intolerable for
the masses of our people gets even more complicated. Certainly, as primary
representatives of the people, we shall not vacate our responsibility and watch
the people continue to suffer unduly.”
Lagos-Calabar rail project |
The
statement followed an earlier press conference where the Senate spokesman also
claimed ignorance of the presence of the projects in the budget presented by
the president.
House
spokesman, Namdas at a press conference also, yesterday, accused Amaechi of
bringing the Calabar – Lagos rail project to the National Assembly through the
back door.
According
to him, the report that the project was removed, and its budget appropriated
for the completion of the Lagos-Kano rail project was misleading and intended
to set the Southern and Northern parts of the country against each other.
Meanwhile,
fresh insights into how political infighting in the All Progressives Congress,
APC, and ego by senior officials of the National Assembly led to the extraction
of the Lagos – Calabar rail project and other key infrastructure projects of
the administration from budget 2016 have been unveiled.
At
the centre of the controversy, yesterday, were the chairmen of Senate and House
of Representatives committees on Appropriation, Senator Danjuma Goje and
Abdulmumin Jibrin. The reports of the two committees on Land Transport, Vanguard
learned, contained proposals for the Lagos – Calabar and Kaduna – Idu rail
projects which were both removed by the committees of appropriation in both
chambers. Vanguard is in possession of a text message purportedly sent to
committee chairmen in the House of Representatives by Jibrin, asking them to
defend whatever controversy could arise from the action in the media.
Presidency
officials were peeved by the fact that the legislature had seemingly removed
the carpet from under President Muhammadu Buhari’s feet, given the fact that
the action was done just as he was about leaving for China to negotiate foreign
assistance necessary to fast-track the projects.
Senate
spokesman, Abdullahi Sabi and his House of Reps counterpart, Abdulrazak Namdas,
yesterday, rebuffed assertions that the Calabar – Lagos rail project was
removed, saying in separate fora to journalists that the item was not in the
initial proposal submitted by the president.
They
also alleged that the Minister of Transportation, Rotimi Amaechi only brought
it to the attention of the legislators after the president’s presentation.
Lagos-Calabar
rail project in budget — Ashafa
Meanwhile,
the Senate Committee Chairman on Land Transportation, Senator Gbenga Ashafa,
maintained that the railway project was accommodated in the budget but was
surprised that it was removed.
Senator
Ashafa said: “I confirm that the Lagos to Calabar rail line was not in the
original document that was presented to the National Assembly by the Executive.
However, subsequently at the budget defence session before the Senate Committee
on Land Transport, the Minister for Transport, Rotimi Amaechi, did inform the
committee of the omission of the Lagos to Calabar rail modernization project
and indeed sent a supplementary copy of the ministry’s budget to the committee
which contained the said project.
The
Minister noted that the amount needed for the counterpart funding for both the
Lagos to Kano and Lagos to Calabar rail modernization projects was ₦120
billion, being ₦60 billion per project. “While the committee did not
completely agree with all the changes made in the subsequent document, being
fully aware of the critical importance of the rail sector to the development of
our dear country, distinguished members of the Senate Committee on Land
transport keyed into the laudable (Lagos to Calabar, rail modernization)
project and found ways of appropriating funds for the project without exceeding
the envelope provided for the ministry, he said.
Ashafa
continued: “In so doing, the committee observed that the Lagos to Kano rail
rehabilitation project had been allocated the sum of ₦52 billion as against the
sum of ₦60 billion which the Hon. Minister requested as counterpart funding
while no allocation whatsoever was made for the Lagos to Calabar rail line.
“Hence,
the sum of ₦54 billion that was discovered by the Senate Committee on Land
Transport to be floating in the budget of the Ministry of Transportation as
presented by the Executive was injected into augmenting the funds needed for
counterpart funding of both projects (Lagos to Kano and Lagos to Calabar Rail
modernisation), as at the time the committee defended its report before the
senate committee on Appropriation.
“The
Lagos to Calabar rail modernisation project was, therefore, included in the
Senate Committee on Land Transport’s recommendation to the Senate Committee on
Appropriations.
“With
regard to the Idu to Kaduna rail completion, the Senate Committee on Land
Transport did not interfere with what was provided for in the budget as sent by
the executive, being approximately ₦18 billion hence I am equally surprised to
read on the pages of the newspapers that the amount allocated to the said
project was reduced by ₦8 billion.
“While
I would have preferred to wait till Tuesday, April 12, 2016 (today) when the
National Assembly reconvenes in order to have the benefit of viewing the
details of the budget that was conveyed to the executive as passed, I am
compelled to place the facts in proper perspective as it relates to the
activities of the Senate Committee on Land Transport.
“Without
prejudice to the considerations and powers of the Senate Committee on
Appropriations with regard to the appropriations process, the foregoing is the
true reflection of what transpired at the committee level with respect to the
Land Transport sector of the Ministry of Transport,”Ashafa said.
Vanguard
learned, yesterday, that besides geopolitical interests, the removal of the
Lagos – Calabar rail project from Budget 2016 was done partly to spite Amaechi
supposedly for distancing himself from his former colleagues in the Senate,
notably senators Bukola Saraki and Danjuma Goje.
“Amaechi
was told by associates in the Senate that Goje was not happy with him and that
he had teamed up with the Buhari people against his former colleagues in
the Governors’ Forum,” a Presidency official conversant with the issue said.
The source further revealed that on account of the information, Amaechi had to
visit Goje to solicit his help on the passage of the budget proposals of the
Ministry of Transportation.
Amaechi
and his key aides were part of the president’s delegation to China and efforts
to reach his media assistant; Mr. Dave Iyofor were unsuccessful.
A
top presidency official stated that the Calabar-Lagos railway project alongside
the Lagos – Kano rail project was included in the draft budget of the Ministry
submitted to the Budget Office.
The
official challenged the House of Representatives and the Senate to produce the
report of their respective submissions to the NASS if they insist that the
project was not included in the budget.
The
officer said: “When the budget was collated by the Budget Office, and copies
sent back to the respective ministries for perusal, it was noticed that the
Coastal Rail Project was erroneously omitted at the compilation stage, although
the total amount did not change.
“The
Transportation Ministry immediately, through a memo, drew the attention of the
Budget and National Planning Ministry to the omission and it was corrected in
the amended version which the Minister took to the National Assembly and
defended,” he said.
He
insisted that it was the amended copy that the team from Ministry defended
before the National Assembly and not the one that had the error.
Another
presidency official who spoke to Vanguard also confirmed that the issue over
the erroneous submission made was trashed out between the president and the
National Assembly leadership. The National Assembly leadership, the source
said, asked the ministers to proceed to the committee levels to harmonize the
differences between the initial submission and the corrected version, an issue
that stoked the reports of a fake budget allegedly attributed to Senator Enang.
Vanguard
learned that although members of the Appropriation Committee of the House of
Representatives raised some issues about an assumed duplication of the project
because both the Lagos – Kano and Calabar – Lagos had the same figure of N60bn
each in the allocation, Amaechi explained that there were two different
projects that would be funded through the assistance of the Chinese government.
According
to the ministry, the sum of N80bn was also provided in the same amended version
for all other rail projects indicated.
The
source said Amaechi even met with the Chairman of the Appropriation Committee
in the Senate, Senator Danjuma Goje, who was his colleague as state governor,
on the two strategic rail projects; and also with the Chairman of the Senate
Committee on Transportation, Senator Gbenga Ashafa, and the projects were clearly
explained after which they were appropriately reflected in the Senate
Transportation Committee report to the Appropriation Committee.
“That
may be reason the Senate Committee Chairman on Appropriation has been quiet
since the controversy started because he cannot claim ignorance of the issue.”
The source challenged the Senate to produce the Transportation Committee report
that was submitted.
The
source also drew attention to the fact that the House of Representatives
Appropriation Committee Chairman, Jibrin admitted that the Transport Ministry
budget overshot by ₦54bn and queried if they were sincere, why the Ministry’s
attention was never drawn to it during the several interactions they had with
the National Assembly committees; but decided to distribute the funds to
projects which were either not included anywhere in the budget nor provided for
elsewhere.
He
also queried why the allocation for Kano Airport jumped from ₦60bn to the ₦92bn
reflected in the details sent to the President.
“Since
Jibrin was referring people to the original budget, let him also show the
people where either ₦60bn or ₦92bn was reflected in the original budget for the
Lagos–Kano rail project?” he insisted.
It
was also noted that provisions were made elsewhere in the budget for the
rehabilitation of major airports in the country and would not know why the
legislators decided to take the money apparently meant for the coastal rail
project to allocate for security and football fields, wondering what connection
such projects had with the ministry of transportation.
Meanwhile,
a text message allegedly sent out by Jibrin to select committee chairmen to
defend the extraction of the Calabar–Lagos rail project was, yesterday, in
circulation.
The text read in part: “To
all Hon Chairmen and Dep Chairmen of Standing Committees: As you are aware, we
have transmitted details of budget 2016. After consultation with the leadership
of both Chambers, the reports of all standing Committees were sustained in the
details. Though all items submitted by Committees were retained, you will see
additional inputs that were necessary to be accommodated via little cuts. You
are therefore enjoined to be prepared to justify reports both in media and
elsewhere; in case, the executive arm disagrees. We are already justifying your
reports, but you must join in doing so, especially in the media…”
Senators To Buhari:
Enough Is Enough On Budget Row
*Reps advise President to sign now *Buhari didn’t reject
budget, says Presidency
Senators yesterday
advised the Presidency to come clean on the 2016 Budget. It should admit its
errors and President Muhammadu Buhari should sign the document “without any
further delay”, they said.
The
Nation report continues:
The
upper chamber also asked the Executive to “stop engaging in surreptitious
campaigns of calumny against the Senate in order to cover up its serial
errors”.
The
Presidency tried to downplay the war of words on the all-important document,
saying the time for the President to sign it had not lapsed.
The
Chairman, Senate Committee on Media and Public Affairs, Senator Aliyu Sabi
Abdullahi, issued a statement on the alleged removal of some vital proposals
made by the Presidency.
Abdullahi
said the National Assembly “bent backwards to wring a coherent document out of
the excessively flawed and chaotic versions of the budget proposal submitted to
the National Assembly”.
“While
the executive is mandated to prepare and lay before the National Assembly a
proposed budget detailing projects to be executed, it should be made clear that
the responsibility and power of appropriation lies with the National Assembly.
“If
the Presidency expects us to return the budget proposal without any
adjustments, then some people must be living in a different era and probably
have not come to terms with democracy.
“We
make bold to say, however, that the said Lagos-Calabar rail project was not
included in the budget proposal presented to the National Assembly by President
Muhammadu Buhari and we challenge anyone who has any evidence to the contrary
to present such to Nigerians.”
Abdullahi
added: “Since the beginning of the 2016 budget process, it is clear that the
National Assembly has suffered all manner of falsehood, deliberate distortion
of facts and outright blackmail, deliberately aimed at poisoning the minds of
the people against the institution of the National Assembly.
“We
have endured this with equanimity in the overall interest of Nigerians. Even
when the original submission was surreptitiously swapped and we ended up having
two versions of the budget, which was almost incomprehensible and heavily
padded in a manner that betrays lack of coordination and gross incompetence, we
refused to play to the gallery and instead helped the Executive to manage the
hugely embarrassing situation it has brought upon itself; but enough is enough.
“This
latest antics of this particular Minister of Transportation, Rotimi Amaechi, is
reckless, uncalled for and dangerously divisive.
“Apart
from setting the people of the Southern part of the country against their
northern compatriots, it potentially sets the people against their lawmakers
from the concerned constituencies and sets the lawmakers against themselves.
This manner of reprehensible mischief has no place in a democracy.
“We
hereby demand from Mr. Amaechi a publicly-tendered apology, if he is not able
to show evidence that the Lagos-Calabar road project was included in the
budget. Otherwise, he should resign forthwith.
“Finally,
by the provision of Section 81 (4) (a) and (b) of the constitution, the
President is allowed to sign the budget and kick-start the implementation of
the other areas that constitute over 90 per cent of the budget where there is
agreement between both arms, even as we engage ourselves to resolve the
contentious areas, if there were any.
“We
therefore maintain that even this contrived discrepancies are not sufficient
excuse not to sign the budget into law.
“We
therefore urge President Buhari to sign the 2016 budget without any further
delay.
“For
every additional day that the president withholds his assent from the bill, the
hardship in the land, which is already becoming intolerable for the masses of
our people gets even more complicated.
“Certainly, as primary
representatives of the people, we shall not vacate our responsibility and watch
the people continue to suffer unduly.”
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