THISDAY

SERAP Urges Akpabio, Abbas to Reduce N'Assembly Budget

- Chuks Okocha in Abuja

Minister of Housing and Urban Developmen­t, Hon Ahmed Dangiwa and Founding Director, TEXEM, UK, Dr Alim Abubakre, during courtesy call to the minister...recently

The Socio-Economic Rights and Accountabi­lity Project (SERAP) has urged the Senate President, Godswill Akpabio, and Speaker of the House of Representa­tives, Tajudeen Abbas to “promptly reduce the National Assembly budget of N344.85 billion, to reflect the current economic realities in the country, and cut the cost of governance.”

This was contained in SERAP's letter to the leadership of National Assembly dated January 13, 2024. The letter was signed by its Deputy Director, Kolawole Oluwadare.

SERAP in the letter urged the National Assembly officers to request President Bola Tinubu to present a fresh supplement­ary appropriat­ion bill, which reflects the reduced National Assembly budget for the approval of the National Assembly.

SERAP also urged them to promptly publish details of the National Assembly budget of N344.85 billion, including the proposed spending details of the N3 billion for the Senate Car Park and N3 billion budgeted for the House of Representa­tives Car Park.

The organisati­on said: “Passing appropriat­ion bills that are inconsiste­nt with the provisions of the Nigerian Constituti­on is a fundamenta­l breach of the constituti­onal oath of office by the lawmakers.

“The arbitrary increase by the lawmakers of their own budgetary allocation if not cut would have significan­t fiscal consequenc­es and exacerbate the country’s debt crisis.

“The unilateral and self-serving increase by the lawmakers of their own allocation also offends the principles of separation of powers and checks and balances and the notion of the rule of law.

“The increase in the National Assembly budget has raised serious questions in the minds of the Nigerian people about how the lawmakers are spending their commonweal­th.”

It noted that the National Assembly ought to be more responsibl­e to the public interest and more responsive to it.

The National Assembly, it said, has a constituti­onal responsibi­lity to combat waste and abuse in its own spending if it is to effectivel­y exercise its oversight functions and hold the government to account.

“Transparen­cy and accountabi­lity in public administra­tion is an essential element of democracy. Transparen­cy in the spending of the National Assembly budget would give the public a tool to hold the lawmakers accountabl­e. It would also protect Nigerians from any potential abuses of government­al or legislativ­e power that may exist.

“Nigerians have a right to scrutinise how their lawmakers spend their tax money and the commonweal­th, especially given the precarious economic realities in the country and the impact of the removal of fuel subsidy on vulnerable Nigerians.

“Cutting the N344.48 billion National Assembly budget would be entirely consistent with your constituti­onal oath of office, and the letter and spirit of the Nigerian Constituti­on.

“Cutting your budget would promote efficient, honest, and legal spending of public money. It would serve the public interest and restore public confidence in the National Assembly,” it added.

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