Nigerian Legislators: Living Large Amid Mass Poverty
Nigeria is in a recession, but that has not stopped its lawmakers from enjoying luxurious lives on the taxpayers’ money,
Punch's Gbenro Adeoye writes:
They Don’t Care About Us’ is the fourth single from the Michael Jackson’s album, History, which was released in 1995. There, the late music legend spoke about police brutality and human rights abuses, with a chorus that goes thus – ‘All I want to say is that they don’t really care about us’.
In the song, Jackson went on to say, “Tell me what has become of my rights. Am I invisible because you ignore me? Your proclamation promised me free liberty, now I’m tired of being the victim of shame. They’re throwing me in a class with a bad name. I can’t believe this is the land from which I came.”
Jackson might have been speaking about another place with peculiar issues, incidentally; the song’s chorus correlates with the way many Nigerians view their leaders and some of the recent actions of federal and state legislators have clearly cemented the belief.
For instance, when the Edo State House of Assembly recently approved the construction of houses for former governors and their deputies, which should not be more than N200m and N100m respectively in any location of their choice, all hell broke loose.
The report was met with wide condemnations from the public, many of whom questioned such a move at a time when the country is in a recession and arguably in its worst economic state.
A report by The Punch titled, ‘Edo lawmakers approve N200m houses for ex-governors’, generated comments that were largely abusive and critical of the state’s lawmakers.
One of the readers simply named Paul, said, “Outright rubbish! What did they do to deserve this especially at this period when majority of the masses are suffering and starving? Insensitivity of the highest order! Are they not okay with the ones they looted or what?”
Another reader identified as Feranmi, said, “This is nonsense! After looting the state for years, they will still get free houses. Why can’t they pass a law that such money be used to pay civil servants that are working round the clock?”
A reader identified as ‘Trust Only God’ described the report as the “worst news in 2016”, and the lawmakers as “lawbreakers and criminals”.
It should be noted that states like Akwa Ibom and Lagos also have similar attractive benefits for their past governors and deputy governors.
Meanwhile, according to a lawyer and political analyst, Mr. Tunde Esan, one of Nigeria’s biggest problems is that majority of the people see positions of power as opportunities to enrich themselves and their families.
He said, “The big problem is the way we see governance in this country at any level, so there is no connection between our leaders and the people.
“People see public positions as opportunities to enrich themselves and get their generations and the ones unborn out of poverty. So when people aspire to get to positions of authority, it is not about serving the people, it is all about what they can get in four or eight years.
“Their belief is that if they can steal enough money, they can recoup the money they spent on their campaigns, buy a house in London, drive the best cars, send their children to the best schools and set them up for life regardless of what happens to the country.”
Also, when the House of Representatives recently started taking delivery of 360 cars worth N3.6bn, at a time the country is in a recession, some Nigerians described it as conclusive proof of their claims that Nigerian lawmakers, who are expected to represent their people, are far disconnected from their constituents and their realities.
For example, the Executive Chairman, Campaign Against Corrupt Leaders, Mr. Debo Adeniran, had described the spending as unnecessary, saying, “The members of the legislative body of the country should realise that Nigerians didn’t vote them into power to allocate wealth to themselves so that they can live like princes and princesses while the majority of Nigerians wallow in poverty and barely survive on a dollar per day.”
Also, a senior lecturer in the Department of Political Science, University of Nigeria, Nsukka, Dr. Christian Ezeibe, in a telephone interview with Punch, described Nigeria’s political system as flawed because “it has become too attractive.”
“While other countries try to make their private sectors attractive to create jobs for the youth, Nigeria continues to make its politics attractive.
“An average Nigerian youth tells you he wants to be a politician, as if it is a profession. We have long debated on whether legislating should be done on a part-time basis or not and I will go with part-time.
“It should not remain a full-time job for illiterates who don’t even understand the process of lawmaking,” he said.
It was learnt that the Peugeot cars for the House of Representatives’ members would arrive in Abuja in batches till January 2017, when all 360 members of the House would have got one. Even the about 137 members that had been in the House before the Eighth Assembly would also get from the batches of cars, which are officially known as ‘committee’ vehicles.
Before the delivery of the vehicles, the House of Reps had been embroiled in a lingering budget padding scandal, in which ex-Chairman, Committee on Appropriation, Abdulmumin Jibrin, accused some principal officers of the House of padding the 2016 Budget by over N40bn.
In another allegation, he said 10 principal officers had ‘embezzled” over N10bn as “running costs” between 2003 and 2016, depending on the time each accused lawmakers has spent in the House.
Jibrin identified the officers as Dogara; Lasun; House Leader, Femi Gbajabiamila; Deputy Leader, Buba Jibril; Deputy Whip, Pally Iriase; Ogor; Deputy Minority Leader, Chukwuka Onyeama; Ado-Doguwa; Minority Whip, Yakubu Barde; and Deputy Minority Whip, Binta Bello-Maigeri.
However, Jibrin was later suspended by the House for 180 legislative days for allegedly breaching the lower chamber’s practices and precedents.
Earlier in the year, at the onset of Nigeria’s economic crisis, the Senate also began taking delivery of 108 Toyota Land Cruiser SUVs that were said to have cost N35.1m each.
But a statement by the President, Nigeria Labour Congress, Mr. Ayuba Wabba, had called on the Senate to return all the vehicles to the supplier or face the anger of Nigerians. However, the threat was ignored.
Wabba had described the decision of the Senate to buy the luxury vehicles as proof that the lawmakers were greedy and insensitive to the economic plight of Nigerians, while alleging that their action was also criminal.
Wabba said the price of each of the vehicles was inflated by 100 per cent from the normal price of N17m to N35.1m and the senators had taken loans in August 2015 for the same purpose.
He had also questioned why the money spent on the vehicles could not be put to use in the senators’ various constituencies, while condemning their choice of luxury lives amid severe economic challenges facing the masses in the country.
Similarly, a lawyer and political analyst, Mr. Yemi Adetoyinbo, also said it was unfortunate that the country’s lawmakers could consider “such wastefulness of resources at a time when over 27 states could not pay workers’ salaries.”
“It is the height of irresponsibility and the highest level of noncommittal to the welfare of the people who voted them to power for our lawmakers to be spending fortunes on vehicles while the people are wallowing in poverty.
“It shows that they are disconnected and detached from the masses. And in Edo, to say that former governors will be getting N200m houses and their deputies will be getting N100m houses is also the height of irresponsibility.
“It is funny that all these are coming at a time when the country is living on borrowing and the President is even proposing to borrow $29.9bn.
“The President should denounce the actions of the lawmakers. Otherwise, it will appear that he is paying lip service to improving the welfare of the masses. No country should give us any aid anymore if what we have now cannot be used to pay workers’ salaries and improve the lives of Nigerians who have no food to eat,” he said
Adetokunbo, however, called for “massive protests in the country, to be led by the NLC and Trade Union Congress against the political class.”
According to Esan, until Nigerians realise that they have the power to recall their lawmakers and even get their governors and the President impeached, the situation will remain the same.
He said, “People should realise that if their lawmakers are not doing their bidding, they can be recalled. If your governor is not performing well, you can talk to your lawmakers to impeach him.
“We should understand that they are our servants and not our lords. It is because we don’t use our powers that they get to such positions with the mentality of an emperor. It is extremely sad.”
Ezeibe’s suggestion is that academics and civil servants should be allowed to contest for any political position without having to resign their appointments in their places of work, saying that would encourage more people with substance to go into politics.
He said, “First, I will suggest that lawmaking should be made a part-time job. Then, civil servants, professors and other academics should be allowed to contest for political offices without having to resign their appointments.
“Until we allow civil servants, academics to freely participate in politics, so that they can contest and if they don’t win, they return to their classrooms, the situation will remain the same.”
But perhaps, the most scathing attack yet on the country’s legislature came from a former President of Nigeria, Chief Olusegun Obasanjo, during the week, when he described the National Assembly as a den of corruption.
He said, “Once you are a member, you are co-opted and your mouth is stuffed with rottenness and corruption that you cannot opt out as you go home with not less than N15m a month for a senator and N10m a month for a member of the House of Representatives. The National Assembly is a den of corruption by a gang of unarmed robbers.
“If the judiciary is being cleaned, what of the National Assembly which stinks much worse than the judiciary? Budget padding must not go unpunished. It is a reality, which is a regular and systemic practice. Nobody should pull wool over the eyes of Nigerians. Ganging up to intimidate and threaten the life of a whistle-blower is deplorable and undemocratic.”
Obasanjo, who spoke during a lecture he delivered at the First Akintola Williams Annual Lecture in Lagos titled, “Nigeria yesterday, today and tomorrow: Governance and accountability,” also accused the legislators of using funds earmarked for constituency projects to enrich themselves.
The ex-President said, “These constituency projects are spread over the budget for members of the National Assembly for which they are the initiators and the contractors directly or by proxy and money would be fully drawn with the project only partially executed or not executed at all. The National Assembly cabal of today is worse than any cabal that anybody may find anywhere in our national governance system at any time.
“Our lawmakers are lawbreakers. They are the accused, the prosecutor, the defenders and the judge in their own case. Most of them conduct themselves and believe that they are not answerable to anybody. They are blatant in their misbehaviour, cavalier in their misconduct and arrogant in the misuse of parliamentary immunity as a shield against reprisals for their irresponsible acts of malfeasance and/or outright banditry.’’
He, therefore, urged Buhari to investigate the so-called constituency projects of the past and the present sets of federal lawmakers and bring culprits to book.
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