Jumbo pay for members of the National Assembly not sustainable
THE National
Chairman of the Ondo State Eminent Person Group (OSEG), Mr. Banji Alabi has
said the jumbo pay for members of the National Assembly is not sustainable and
that their insistence to continue to earn the same pay is insensitive and a
gross contempt against the average Nigerian whose monthly wage could not
sustain him for a week and yet bears the brunt resulting from the economy
woefully mismanaged by them and their accomplices in the other arms of government.
In an
interview, Mr. Alabi who is both an accountant and a tax consultant said, “It
is very despicable and mind-boggling reports that every member of the National
Assembly takes as high as N600, 000, 00 as wardrobe allowance annually, when
the yearly salary of the average Nigerian is far less than that and when in
actual fact none of them could commit half of the same amount to such a
wasteful life-style in their private life.”
While
commending the Revenue Mobilisation and Fiscal Allocation Commission (RMFAC)
for disclosing what a National Assembly lawmaker earns as wardrobe allowance,
the OSEG chairman however noted that it is a bit belated and that the
disclosure falls short of the total pay each lawmaker earns annually.
According to
him, “It is belated because members of the former Seventh National Assembly
were notoriously and selfishly allowed to earn that heart-breaking and economy
killing jumbo wardrobe allowance, their fat but undisclosed salaries and other
related allowances, which they have escaped with.”
He wondered
why the fiscal agency had in the past refused to avail Nigerians with this
information even when some Nigerians had sought for it.
“It is heart-warming, it gives Nigerian a relief and rekindles their confidence and trust in the Buhari presidency when President Muhammadu Buhari recently announced he would affect a pay cut in his salary and the aides that would work with him.
“It is
however disheartening to hear members of the National Assembly seeking to
maintain the status-quo in their salary and allowances.
“President
Buhari as the country’s number one citizen today, has shown leadership by
example, what people expect is that other senior citizens, including members of
the National Assembly would follow suit and not to engage in this poisonous
discordant tunes.
“This
attitude surely portrays the lawmakers as not being on the same page with the
president and this is very dangerous to the overall wellbeing of the country,
especially the fight to rescue the economy and national security. As far as I
am concerned, any member of the National Assembly who fails to follow the good
example shown by the president is an enemy of the people of Nigeria who should
be handled the way enemies of a nation are treated.”
The OSEG
boss expressed his anger over what he called the insincerity of members of the
National Assembly to the plight of the poor masses in the country who according
to him were ecstatic when the message of change was preached to them in the
campaigns that trailed the last General Elections in the country.
“It is
certainly sad and ironical that the National Assembly largely dominated by
members of the All Progressives Congress (APC) and who rode to power on the
vehicle of change are today resisting change and insisting that the old order
must be maintained.
“The change
that Nigerians want is the change that would rejuvenate the prostrate economy,
the change that would revamp the country’s battered image, the change that
would rekindle ordinary Nigerian’s hope in the country and strengthen his
resolve to work for and defend the country, must immediately begin with members
of the National Assembly. The change must be seen in their salaries and
allowances.
“The
lawmakers cannot afford not to be part of or even lead the change that would
guaranty quality standard of living for the poor and abandoned ordinary citizen
of the country who has over the years being the victim of the tiny but powerful
people who have continued to misrule the country.”
The tax
consultant frowned at the practice of awarding contracts for constituency
projects to the lawmakers, a practice he described as unconstitutional and
against the principle of accountability and transparency.
According to
him, “It is nothing but outright corruption for lawmakers to conceive projects
to be cited in a particular place and also go ahead to award contracts for the
execution of the same projects to the same persons
“The
practice where lawmakers are allocated funds in the name of constituency
projects is an aberration in democracy and under the principle of separation of
powers. It is illegal and it is an affront on the powers and functions of the
executive arm of government, I am of the opinion that this only happens in
Nigeria, it is certainly not obtained in other democracies all over the world.”
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