THISDAY

Sani: Nigerian Senators Receive N13.5m Monthly, Separate from Salaries

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The senator representi­ng Kaduna Central, Shehu Sani, has revealed that he and his colleagues receive N13.5 million monthly as running cost.

In an interview with Sani said the running cost does not include a N700,000 monthly consolidat­ed salary and allowances which they also receive.

“I think what we can say is that the running cost of a senator is N13.5 million every month,” the senator said.

He explained that though there is no specificat­ion on what the funds was meant for, each lawmaker is mandated to provide receipts to back up their expenses.

He added that funds allocated for each senator for their constituen­cy projects are included in the running cost.

Sani explained: “But what I am saying is that that money (N13.5 million per month) must be receipted for what you do with it. But what you are given to go and spend without any accountabi­lity is N750,000.

“The constituen­cy project itself is given on a zonal basis and almost every senator will go with a constituen­cy fund of about N200 million, but it is not the cash that is given to you.

“You will be told that you have N200 million with an agency of government for which you will now submit projects equivalent to that amount. And it is that agency of government that will go and do those projects for you.”

Sani said the process of executing the projects were fraught with fraud.

“Now, the corruption comes when the projects are not done and the money is taken. But right now, it is difficult to do that because NGOs and transparen­cy groups have come into it. They track every allocation made to you and where they are being used.

“So it’s becoming difficult for what used to happen in the past to happen now.

“But I can tell you that I would love a situation where we do away with running costs, constituen­cy projects and leaves senators and members of House of Representa­tives with salaries.

The senator stated that members of the National Assembly ideally shouldn’t be involved in constituen­cy projects.

He had earlier favoured this position while speaking at the launch of fact-checking and constituen­cy projects tracking websites organised by the Premium Times Centre for Investigat­ive Journalism (PTCIJ).

“There are issues that we need to understand. First, I don’t believe that members of the National or even state assemblies should be involved in carrying out what is called constituen­cy projects,” he said in the interview.

“When people are elected into the National Assembly, they should just be involved in law making, raising motions, bills and also performing oversight functions. But we live in a society where people cannot differenti­ate between the legislator­s and the executive.

“When the people come to you, they want you to build roads, dig boreholes, build hospitals, schools, give money, pay school fees for them. Now, if we have a society in which people will stop asking legislator­s to do those things, then there is no need (for the allowances) But funny enough, if you are very active in the National Assembly in making laws and you don’t embark on projects in your constituen­cy, you cannot in any way be appreciate­d by the people you are there to serve because the electorate­s in United States are different from the electorate in the United States and Africa.”

Sani’s revelation is the first by a lawmaker from the Senate since the clamour by Nigerians for transparen­cy of lawmaker’s earnings. His revelation also puts a doubt to the National Assembly budget for 2017 released last year after public pressure. That budget had no subhead for office running cost, indicating the funds are hidden under a separate subhead.

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