Attacks on N’Assembly | El-Rufai discloses security vote, salary.
On Monday, Kaduna State Governor, Nasir el-Rufai,
accepted the challenge of the Speaker of the House of Representatives, Mr.
Yabubu Dogara, by releasing details of his security vote, salary and
allowances.
The governor also released the disbursements to
the 23 Local Government Areas in the state.
El-Rufai, while releasing the details, again
challenged the National Assembly members to do likewise.
The governor said the federal legislature had the
most opaque budget in the country, adding that Nigerians had spent N1tn on the
lawmakers without knowing the details.
The governor had, at the National Assembly
retreat in Kaduna on Friday, dared members of the federal lawmakers to disclose
details of their N115bn budgetary allocation, salaries and allowances.
Dogara was reported, on Saturday, to have
challenged el-Rufai and other governors to publish their security votes.
In a statement on Monday by his Special Assistant
on Media and Publicity, Samuel Aruwan, el-Rufai said he had nothing to
hide.
The February pay slip of the governor indicates
that his monthly pay was N470, 521.71 after deductions.
According to the pay slip, details of the monthly
pay include basic salary, N185,308.75; hardship allowance, N370,617.50;
gross pay, N555,926.25, PAYE N85,404.51; total deduction amounts to N85,401.51
while the net pay stands at N470,521.74.
The governor noted that the amount might appear
puny, but it reflected what the Revenue Mobilisation Allocation and Fiscal
Commission approved as the salary and allowances of governor “adjusted to
reflect provision in-kind of accommodation and transportation.”
He said he accepted Dogara’s challenge as a
necessary step to improve and strengthen the nation’s democracy.
El-Rufai stated that he had consistently made the
budget of the state public unlike the National Assembly budget “which is
a single line item of over N100bn that divulges zero information or
details.”
On the local government funds, the governor
referred the lawmakers to the online portal, www.openkaduna.com.ng,
for relevant information.
“The proposed 2017 local government budgets,
currently before the State Assembly, are also already online on the same
website, and on www.kdsg.gov.ng. Approved
State Budgets 2016-2017 can be found on
http://openkaduna.com.ng/ Budget/approved-budget.
“We invite the Right Honourable Speaker to
download and peruse at his pleasure,” the governor added.
As regards the Kaduna State security vote,
El-Rufai stated, “As our Kaduna Comprehensive Security Architecture
outlines, the state is directing security spending on four pillars:
justice, technology, community engagement and support to security agencies. The
2017 budget details specific amounts:
“N1.5bn for the procurement and installation of
CCTV cameras for monitoring and surveillance towards reducing criminal
activities within the metropolis.
“N193m for procurement of geo-position
interceptor and location of GSM UMTS System to check the trends and
intercept/locate kidnappers’ GSM calls.
“N265m for the procurement of drones/unmanned
aerial vehicles to identify locations of armed bandits in our forest reserves
across the state and the establishment of a forensic laboratory to assist in
determining substantial evidence in cases that otherwise proved difficult in
the past.
“N2.6bn is allocated in 2017 to support the
network of federal security agencies in Kaduna with communications, logistics
and materiel.”
The governor insisted that the call to #OpenNASS
was not a personal one, adding that “it is one which the leadership of the
National Assembly owes to all Nigerians.”
He noted that it was disingenuous for the Speaker
to use state government budgets as the excuse for the opacity of the National
Assembly budget.
El-Rufai said in 2016, the National Assembly
budget for its 469 members was bigger than the capital budget of Kaduna State,
with close to 10 million inhabitants.
The Kaduna State governor added, “It is also
larger than the entire budget of several Nigerian states. Indeed, over the past
10 years from 2008, the National Assembly, as an institution, has cost the
country over N1tn without any detail on how this amount was allocated and
spent.
“There is no state government in Nigeria with a
budget nearly as opaque as that of NASS. In March 2016, this National Assembly,
led by its Chairman, promised to provide a detailed breakdown of the National
Assembly budget. Nigerians are waiting,” he said
The governor said he would like to reiterate his
call for the NASS leadership to do the same and disclose the details of the
National Assembly budget, and the salaries and allowances of its leadership to
Nigerians.
Dogara has directed NASS bureaucracy to publish details –House spokesman
In its reaction, however, the House said el-Rufai
was trying to be clever in publishing some items on his security vote the way
he did.
The Chairman, House Committee on Media and Public
Affairs, Mr. Abdulrazak Namdas, told The PUNCH
on Monday that Dogara’s charge to el-Rufai was that he should champion the
cause of transparency in all arms of government, beginning with the judiciary,
the executive and also to extend it to the governors.
Besides, Namdas added that in the presence of
el-Rufai, the Speaker directed the bureaucracy of the National Assembly to
publish the budget of the legislature, beginning with the 2017 budget, when
passed.
Namdas added, “He also talked about the security
votes of local government councils; how are the governors spending funds? That
has not been addressed.
“But, what is important is that the National
Assembly bureaucracy has already been directed to publish the details of the
budget.
“Dogara gave this directive right in the presence
of el-Rufai. The budget will soon be passed.”
Senate budget details will be made public after
appropriation bill passage –Saraki
The Chairman, Senate Committee on Media and
Public Affairs, Senator Sabi Abdullahi, could not be reached to speak for the
upper chamber.
But President of the Senate, Senator Bukola
Saraki, reiterated his position on January 30, 2017, that the budget of the
National Assembly for 2017 would be opened to the public.
Saraki had said a mechanism that would make
subsequent budgets transparent had been put in place.
When contacted, the Special Adviser to the
President of the Senate on Media and Publicity, Mr. Yusuph Olaniyonu, had
referred The PUNCH to the spokesman for the Senate.
But when reminded that Saraki had said the
National Assembly would publish its budget this year, Olaniyonu told one of our
correspondents that the Senate President still stood by his earlier position.
He stated that the budget of the legislature
would be made public after the passage of the 2017 Appropriation Bill.
Olaniyonu stated, “Yes, they are working on it
and it will be made known (to the public). At least, the national budget for
2017 has not been passed. When it will be passed, the details of the National
Assembly budget will be passed along with it. That is the plan by the Senate
President.”
Earlier in January, Olaniyonu had said the 8th
National Assembly would introduce what would be called e-parliament.
He had added that contrary to the public opinion
that lawmakers at the National Assembly solely spent the N115bn annual budget
of the legislature, the amount was meant for other arms of the Assembly.
These, he said, include the National Assembly
Management, the Senate, the House of Representatives, legislative aides, public
accounts committees of the Senate and House, general services, National
Assembly Service Commission, Nigeria Institute of Legislative Studies and
service order votes.
No comments
Post a Comment