The Guardian (Nigeria)

SERAP, 301 others sue Buhari over fuel price, electricit­y hike

- By Bertram Nwannekanm­a and Silver Nwokoro

SOCIO- ECONOMIC Rights and Accountabi­lity Project ( SERAP), one of the leading voices of # ENDSARS protests, Aisha Yesufu, and 301 other Nigerians have filed a lawsuit against President Muhammadu Buhari and the National Assembly over the fuel price increase and electricit­y tariff hike.

Wale Balogun, Emmanuel Ojo, Gideon Ibukuntomi­wa , Oladipupo Bello, Ikpaagodo Kingsley, Ayodele Adeyemi Fortune, Ismail Muhammad, Iyeke Lawrence, Are Okeoghene Bethel, Ibrahim Bibi Farouk , Chegwe Uche Christian,

Godswill Danlami and Prof. Ikeme Grant are among those who filed the suit marked:

FHC/ ABJ/ CS/ 330/ 2020 before the Federal High Court, Abuja. It was filed on their behalf by SERAP.

The plaintiffs are asking the court to declare illegal, unconstitu­tional and unfair the recent electricit­y tariff and fuel price hike.

According to them, top public officers cannot continue to receive big salaries and allowances and spend public money to finance their luxurious lifestyles while asking poor Nigerians to make sacrifices.

Joined in the suit as defendants are Vice- President Yemi Osinbajo, Senate President Ahmad Lawan, Speaker of House of Representa­tives, Femi Gbajabiami­la and the Revenue Mobilisati­on, Allocation and Fiscal Commission ( RMAFC).

According to the plaintiffs, President Buhari while presenting the 2021 budget proposal of N13.08 trillion to the National Assembly reportedly stated: “The new petrol pricing has freed up resources that were used for subsidy payments, while the new cost- reflective pricing in the electricit­y industry is meant to address the liquidity challenges in the sector.” But the plaintiffs are seeking “an order directing and compelling the RMAFC to cut the salaries, allowances and other emoluments payable to Buhari, Osinbajo, Lawan and Gbajabiami­la in line with the current economic realities, and principles of justice, fairness, equality and non- discrimina­tion”.

They argued that the 1999 Constituti­on [ as amended] makes it clear that the authoritie­s should harness Nigeria’s resources to promote and ensure the maximum welfare, prosperity, freedom and happiness of every citizen on the basis of social justice and equality.

According to them, the country’s resources ought to be harnessed and distribute­d to serve the common good, and not “to finance a life of luxury for politician­s”. The plaintiffs said increasing electricit­y tariff and fuel price in the middle of COVID- 19 was not in the interest of the country, adding that it amounted to “a fundamenta­l breach of constituti­onal oath of office”.

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