ABUJA—THE Senate yesterday tackled
former president, Chief Olusegun Obasanjo over his allegation that the
National Assembly was
using constituency projects to siphon public
funds, saying the former president was out to denigrate the sanctity of
the parliament.
The Senate also claimed that it was Obasanjo’s administration which
approved that the constituency projects be built into the national
budget which was executed by the executive and challenged Obasanjo to
furnish Nigerians with details of how the National Assembly members
became executors of the national budget, rather than being law makers.
Chief Obasanjo had on Wednesday during a book launch in Abuja,
accused the federal lawmakers of corruption. He said: “Apart from
shrouding the remunerations of the National Assembly in opaqueness and
without transparency, they indulge in extorting money from departments,
contractors and ministries in two ways. They do so during visits to
their projects and programmes and in the process of budget approval when
they build up budgets for ministries and departments who agree to give
it back to them in contracts that they do not execute. They do similar
things during their inquiries.”
According to the former president, “corruption in the National
Assembly also includes what they call constituency projects, which they
give to their agents to execute but invariably full payment is made with
little or no job done. In all this, if the executive is not absolutely
above board, the offending members of the National Assembly resort to
subtle or open threat, intimidation and blackmail. When the executive
pays the huge money, normally in millions of dollars, all is quiet in
form of whitewashed reports that fail to deal effectively with the
issues investigated”.
Responding to Chief Obasanjo’s allegations, the Senate, speaking
through the chairman of its Committee on Information, Media and Public
Affairs, Senator Enyinnaya Abaribe, described the allegation of
corruption against it by the former president as unfortunate and an
attempt to tarnish the image of the National Assembly.
The Red Chamber said in the statement that it was unfortunate that
the former president would distort the issue of constituency projects to
mean a direct monetary advance to lawmakers and thus amounting to the
“promotion of corruption” by the National Assembly.
Describing the allegation as spurious, Abaribe in the statement said
the former President’s comment was distant from the truth and nowhere
near reality, adding that if it were so, the former President would not
have tolerated such for the period he was president of the country.
According to him, “President Obasanjo for the avoidance of doubt, was
the initiator of the constituency project in the year 2000 as a means
of ensuring that projects were fairly spread across the country using
Senatorial zones as the spring board.
“To ensure execution of the projects, President Obasanjo again
factored the constituency projects into the annual budgets to be
implemented by the executive depending on availability of funds. That is
to say that no lawmaker ever comes close to the funds or even determine
the contractor for the said projects or when the said contract would be
awarded.
“So, it looks curious and surprising that President Obasanjo would
turn around after over ten years of initiating such a project to allege
that the National Assembly is performing the function of both the
executive and the parliament.
“Is it not preposterous for anybody to believe that members of the
National Assembly would, against the provisions of the constitution with
regards to application of separation of powers, award contracts ‘to
their agents to execute’ and expect the Presidency under a President
Obasanjo or any other President for that matter to pay for what they are
not part of?
“Such allegation stands logic on its head, as it amounts to an
indictment of the Presidency for wilfully contravening the budget laws
by ceding its power to execute to the National Assembly, if it was the
case.”
The Senate according to Abaribe therefore, challenged the former
President to go a step further to furnish Nigerians with details of how
the National Assembly members became executors of national budget rather
than being law makers.
He said: “It will also help to clear the allegation once and for all,
if any presidency official not only from the time past but currently,
could come forward and explain the true position of the so-called
constituency projects. Doing so would at least set the records
straight.”
The Senate spokesman cautioned political leaders to be wary of the
consequences to our democracy of dragging the revered institution of
lawmaking to public odium just to score some political point.
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