The Guardian (Nigeria)

Lawmakers’ constituen­cy projects and transparen­cy questions

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IN addition to their lawmaking responsibi­lity, legislator­s facilitate projects to their constituen­cies. They take undue advantage of their powers to control public funds ( Section 80 of the Constituti­on) to add projects execution to lawmaking. There was even the lame argument about whose duty it was to make budgets, just to expand the frontiers for lawmakers. The mindset is that voters only recognise projects as evidence of representa­tion.

A former lawmaker once confessed: “When you hear a governor is doing well, what you hear is that he is doing roads. Because he ( a lawmaker) is not constructi­ng roads, no matter the amount of motion he has sponsored or the number of bills, nobody would recognise that when elections come. We have members of parliament­s who have sponsored several bills with fantastic motions who never came back to the National Assembly, on the notion that they did not perform.”

To be clear, other political jurisdicti­ons operate similar schemes that enable lawmakers facilitate projects to special areas of need, for instance, in cases of ecological disasters. Such interventi­ons don’t require lawmakers to disrupt due procuremen­t procedures, or leverage the opportunit­y to gain undue political advantage. But as in all things that Nigerians copy from other convention­s, lack of transparen­cy and accountabi­lity often ruin the best of intentions.

Former President Olusegun Obasanjo refused to be blackmaile­d when the idea of constituen­cy projects was first introduced. He thought it amounted to corruption for lawmakers to insert money in budgets for projects. His major grouse has been that it is unconstitu­tional. And he feared that without appropriat­e checks, it would be disastrous to allow lawmakers compete with governors/ presidents in projects execution.

The idea became institutio­nalised when President Umar Yar’adua gave in to the argument of legislator­s that a certain amount should be allowed for mini projects in constituen­cies. Since then, constituen­cy projects have enjoyed regular votes in budgets. Some communitie­s have benefited in areas of rural electrific­ation, feeder roads and mini water projects. However, transparen­cy issues still dog the idea of lawmakers executing and oversighti­ng their own projects. Drafters of the theory on separation of powers prescribe a system of checks and balances, so that each arm is open to examinatio­n.

Another challenge with constituen­cy projects is that of funding. There are times funds are not enough within a tenure and if the initiators are unable to return, the projects might be abandoned by successors. Some projects have remained uncomplete­d or abandoned for years. Even when projects are successful­ly executed, sustainabi­lity issues often cripple some. Many water projects across the country have derailed and become unservicea­ble. If communitie­s are not sensitised enough to take ownership and undertake routine maintenanc­e and repairs, projects are often abandoned once lawmakers fail to return to the legislatur­e, either at the state or federal.

In the 2022 budget, it was reported that over 100 constituen­cy projects were abandoned in 22 states. The investigat­ion sponsored by Macarthur and carried out by accountabi­lity CSOS, Order Paper and Budgit revealed that of 3,691 constituen­cy projects in 22 states, only 2,037 were completed and 1,012 were ongoing. In June 2023,

the Independen­t Corrupt Practices and other Offences Commission ( ICPC) said it uncovered uncomplete­d constituen­cy projects of National Assembly members to the tune of N45 billion. By far more troubling for accountabi­lity watchers is the possibilit­y for constituen­cy projects to be manipulate­d and abused. To offer explanatio­n, lawmakers are forever explaining what constituen­cy projects are and how much they impact communitie­s. This became the lot of the Speaker of the House of Representa­tives, Tajudeen Abbas, when he arrived Lagos to commission constituen­cy projects facilitate­d by former Speaker, Femi Gbajabiami­la, which were executed in his Surulere 1 Lagos constituen­cy. The former Speaker was elected six times to represent the constituen­cy in the House. He resigned to become Chief of Staff to President Bola Tinubu. Abbas said: “These specific initiative­s are funded through the government budget and are intended to address the needs and improve the conditions of constituen­ts. However, there has been a widespread and endemic misunderst­anding of the purpose and essence of these legislativ­e interventi­ons. Constituen­cy projects are not mere items in a budget; they are the lifelines that connect the heart of our government to the heartbeats of communitie­s.”

It is true that constituen­cy projects can connect the people to government. The projects Gbajabiami­la attracted to Lagos are top- notch and will do more than connect his constituen­ts to government. In fact, the projects have connected the people of Surulere 1 more to him, than to government, because they were designed and named after him. They are: a conference centre; dualised road and bridge; community developmen­t centre; general hospital; hall of residence for the University of Lagos; a campus for the National Open University; a police station; mini stadium and reconstruc­ted Randle Avenue Road.

Without doubt, constituen­ts owe a measure of gratitude to the former lawmaker for being so useful. Apart from these, there are more constituen­cy projects he had attracted in the course of his 20 years stay in the House. If this is how much every lawmaker brings home, landscapes in all 360 federal constituen­cies would have changed and citizens’ notion of democracy divi

dends would become real. And Nigerians would then be praying for and voting their representa­tives to remain forever in office.

But that’s not the end of the story. The beautiful case of Surulere 1 federal constituen­cy would sound much like a fairy- tale when told in some far- flung, remote and abandoned constituen­cies. It’s one of a kind. So, how did all that happen? How did the lawmaker convince his fellow legislator­s to allow him go home with all these goodies, when hundreds of others have never been so lucky?

Were all the projects funded from federal budgets or were loans procured to support shortfalls? Did some rich Nigerians make donations to the projects as part of their social responsibi­lity service? How many fiscal years did it take to accomplish the feat, was it within the four years the initiator served as Speaker?

The reason there is widespread and endemic misunderst­anding of the essence and purpose of interventi­ons by lawmakers, as Speaker Abbas lamented, is because from conception, through budgeting and procuremen­t, the details are done in the closet, whereas public procuremen­t requires that matters are done in the open. Lawmakers do not carry people along.

Many only got to know about the projects at the

The beautiful case of Surulere 1 federal constituen­cy would sound much like a fairy- tale when told in some far- flung, remote and abandoned constituen­cies. It’s one of a kind. So, how did all that happen? How did the lawmaker convince his fellow legislator­s to allow him go home with all these goodies, when hundreds of others have never been so lucky? ”

commission­ing, first by Governor Sanwo- olu and then Speaker Abbas. Some did not prepare for the stunning delivery, especially the enthrallin­g video that announced it. That was when citizens desired to know how the projects were funded, because what they saw were beyond mere constituen­cy projects. Even after Speaker Abbas confirmed they were funded via federal budget, citizens’ appetite got whetted to know more.

Curiosity took some newshound to the University of Nigeria Teaching Hospital ( UNTH), Enugu, where they got informatio­n that a certain sum of N234.7 million was vired from the teaching hospital to furnish Gbajabiami­la hospital in Lagos. How come? The report alleged that despite UNTH’S inability to pay salaries amid poor working conditions, it was willing to surrender that huge sum to furnish a hospital in Lagos. The Foundation for Investigat­ive Journalism ( FIJ) reported it found a N228, 697, 206 combined payment the teaching hospital made to five contractor­s on September 7, 2023, for “mobilisati­on fee for provision of additional medical equipment to a public hospital, Femi Gbajabiami­la Hospital, Iyun, Lagos.”

These are not items you find in routine news reports because the people behind the transactio­ns didn’t intend them for prying eyes. Checks by this column with UNTH yielded this: “This is a constituen­cy project of Gbajabiami­la routed through UNTH. Indeed, any federal parastatal can supervise any federal project anywhere in the country by law. We can’t do anything about it, but to dispense the money routed through us and supervise the project. It happens in all parastatal­s. It’s very legal. This is not money that we are free to use as we like. It is for a project and must be used for that purpose only, otherwise we will go to jail. I am sure that whosoever ( FIJ) wrote this knows the truth but just chose to be mischievou­s.”

The source added, “Anyway, people are free to believe what they like. The truth is that after all the procuremen­t exercise, the bidding documents etc. are sent to BPP for certificat­ion. That’s it. It’s a transparen­t process.” Really?

The source said they couldn’t refuse to complete the process, but to do it well and maybe ask that they ( lawmakers) do something for UNTH in return. Really? And all that is legal? To an outsider, this sounds pretty much like some transactio­n.

Does the omnibus Appropriat­ion Act, which of course is law, admit the re- routing of funds through third party institutio­ns that are themselves starved of funds, but cannot utilise them? Why is Speaker Abbas now saying the House is about to re- introduce a Constituen­cy Developmen­t Fund Bill to provide legal framework for the management, disburseme­nt, utilisatio­n and accountabi­lity of funds allocated for constituen­cy projects?

Is he now admitting that there’s something illegal in the way and manner legislator­s have handled constituen­cy projects so far? The bill was first introduced in 2016 but did not sail through. Let’s wait and see how they go about it.

A procuremen­t expert said there ought to be a difference between a constituen­cy project fund and the budget allocation to an institutio­n like the UNTH. He said it would be wrong for UNTH to transfer monies meant for its use to a constituen­cy project outside UNTH’S area coverage. If so, UNTH could be guilty of fraud by conspiracy and virement by default, he surmised.

Let’s pause here. There could be more to this story.

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