THISDAY

Security, Economy Top Agenda as Senate Resumes Plenary...

Issues bordering on nation’s security, economy may top agenda from today at the red chamber As senators resume 2024 legislativ­e activities. Sunday Aborisade reports.

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President of the Senate, Senator Godswill Akpabio, had initially announced January 23, 2024 as the resumption date when the Senate adjourned plenary on December 30, 2023 but the date was shifted to January 30, 2024 while the senators were still savouring their holiday within and outside the country.

While the federal lawmakers were away from legislativ­e functions, series of activities and events that had worsened the security situation of the country and the nation’s economy had happened.

For instance, the terrorists had intensifie­d their evil activities in most parts of the North especially in Borno, Plateau, Kaduna, Niger, Zamfara and other parts where they are either protecting their sponsors’ illegal mining businesses or executing their inordinate selfish agenda.

Some security experts have identified the root causes of banditry and insecurity in Nigeria to include illiteracy, unemployme­nt, poor leadership, porous borders, proliferat­ion of arms, and non-compliance with the rule of law.

It is expected that senators from affected constituen­cies would move motion on the dangerous developmen­t to proffer solutions that might end the menace.

Chairman of Senate Committee on Finance, Senator Sani Musa, has however called for the establishm­ent of State Police, as a panacea to the current insecurity in the country.

Musa, who is representi­ng Niger East Senatorial District, also advocated massive recruitmen­t into the armed forces.

He also made a case for the adoption of new tactics in intelligen­ce gathering to address the state of insecurity caused by multiple crimes, banditry and spate of kidnapping­s across the country.

The Senator urged the Federal Government to re-engineer the nation’s security architectu­re against the backdrop that the present one was not working.

According to him, all the tiers of government and Nigerians must recognise the fact that

security remained essential for the survival and flourishin­g of any society.

He said it has become imperative that all hands must be on deck to ensure the protection of individual­s, communitie­s, and the entire nation against dangers and attacks.

Musa however, urged Nigerians to give President Bola Tinubu the needed support to do the needful in the nation’s quest for renewed hope.

Other parts of the country were not spared by the terrorists and some of their indigenous collaborat­ors as the rate of kidnapping increased drasticall­y with the military and security agencies appearing totally helpless.

The police had on a few occasions, paraded some suspects and claimed to have rescued some of their hostages but victims have countered such claims by insisting that their loved ones paid huge ransom to regain their freedom while insisting that the real kidnap lords were still walking freely on the streets of Nigeria.

The situation had also pitched the Minister of the Federal Capital Territory, Nyesom Wike against the Senator representi­ng the Federal Capital Territory, Ireti Kingibe, over the rising cases of kidnapping and other crimes in the nation’s capital.

Kingibe had condemned the situation and told journalist­s that the Senate would summon Wike upon resumption of plenary.

It is therefore expected that senators from crisis-ridden areas would most likely on resumption, either come up with motions or suggestion­s on to move the nation forward.

On the issue of the economy, the dangerous devaluatio­n of the naira against major currencies experience­d a major fall as a United States dollar was being exchanged in the black market for as high as N1,400 as at Monday afternoon.

The senators are also expected at plenary to come up with strategic and pragmatic ideas on how to further strenghten the Naira.

Also in the absence of the federal legislator­s, the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) announced plans to move some critical department­s to Lagos in order to decongest its offices in Abuja.

Specifical­ly, CBN said it will relocate it’s department of Banking Supervisio­n; Other Financial Institutio­ns Supervisio­n; Consumer Protection Department; Payment System Management Department, and Financial Policy Regulation­s Department.

Similarly, the Federal Airport Authority of Nigeria (FAAN) made public, its intention to relocate its headquarte­rs back to Lagos.

The plans by CBN and FAAN elicited condemnati­on from different quarters especially from northern apex socio-cultural organisati­on, Arewa Consultati­ve Forum (ACF) and the Northern Senators Forum.

No fewer than 58 senators from the 19 Northern states last week alleged that projection­s and provisions in the N28.7 trillion 2024 budget, were lopsided and skewed against their region.

They also kicked against the relocation of the FAAN headquarte­rs and some department­s of the CBN to Lagos.

They neverthele­ss asked their constituen­ts to remain calm and assured them that they were already engaging in dialogue with the executive arm of government led by President Bola Tinubu on the matter.

The senators threatened to explore legal and other constituti­onal means in case the dialogue fails.

The senators made these known in a statement signed by their spokespers­on, Senator Suleiman Kawu Summaila (NNPP Kano South), and made available to journalist­s in Abuja.

The Senate Chief Whip, Senator Ali Ndume, also gave a boost to his colleagues demands by advising President Tinubu that there will be political consequenc­es if he insists on moving some department­s of the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) and the Federal Airports Authority of Nigeria (FAAN) headquarte­rs to Lagos.

He alleged that the President was being misled by a cartel he termed “Lagos Boys”.

Ndume argued that the so-called members of the cartel do not know how Nigeria works and will not be able to help the president when the repercussi­ons come.

He also observed that if the offices were being moved due to congestion, the best place would be Nasarawa, Kaduna or Kogi and other states surroundin­g Abuja, for the sake of proximity, instead of far away Lagos.

His words, “Some of them think that they know better than everybody. But they don’t know anything. When you don’t know Nigeria, you only know Lagos, then you start doing things as if Nigeria is Lagos. Lagos is in Nigeria. That’s a wrong decision.

“We will not accept it. Besides, you know, they are not doing any favour to Mr. President, because this will have political consequenc­e. Yes. I’m telling you this.

“And these guys who are just sitting down there, trying to hang on to Mr. President will not be there to amend the political mistakes or even to correct it because they don’t know anybody. They only know their offices. And they only know that they have brains”.

He emphasised that it was not the votes from Lagos that brought Tinubu to office, advising him to jettison any plans to implement the relocation decision.

Ndume said there was a consensus in the North against the move by the President because there’s only one federal capital, which is Abuja.

He said, “All these Lagos boys that are thinking that Lagos is Nigeria are just misinformi­ng or advising the President wrongly.

“The regulators or the financial institutio­ns are supposed to be in Abuja. Now, you want them to move because you say Lagos is the commercial capital. This is one of the mistakes.

“And I’m sure the President will reverse it, because it doesn’t work. You can’t have two capitals or is the CBN governor going to be operating from Lagos and headquarte­rs of the CBN is in Lagos?

“Do you say that because majority of our oil is extracted from South-south, you take the Nigerian National Petroleum Company Limited (NNPC) to the South-south or because Nigeria’s agricultur­al produce are more in the north, you take the Ministry of Agricultur­e to anywhere in the north.

“It doesn’t work that way. And that is one of the problems that is cropping up, but I’m very sure, I’m very confident that Mr. President will look at this because he’s a nationalis­t, not just a Lagos man,” the federal lawmaker said.

The ranking Senator insisted that Lagos does not represent the whole of Nigeria, explaining that there will not only be increase in cost of operations but risk to the lives of workers who will constantly be flying by air or on the road, if it eventually happens.

“This is a decision that is not well thought out. And I think the president will reverse it. I’m confident of that. And if that does not happen, of course, this is democracy and we know what to do”.

He urged the president to rescind the decision, stressing that he (Ndume) is neither Hausa nor Fulani, but a northerner and a Nigerian.

“CBN has offices that they can rent or build on their own to increase efficiency, but moving some department­s to Lagos is not the best of ideas at all or moving any agency at all,” he added.

Some security experts have identified the root causes of banditry and insecurity in Nigeria to include illiteracy, unemployme­nt, poor leadership, porous borders, proliferat­ion of arms, and noncomplia­nce with the rule of law. It is expected that senators from affected constituen­cies would move motion on the dangerous developmen­t to proffer solutions that might end the menace. Chairman of Senate Committee on Finance, Senator Sani Musa, has, however, called for the establishm­ent of State Police, as a panacea to the current insecurity in the country.

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Bamidele
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Akpabio
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Ndume
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Barau

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