Daily Trust Saturday

10th NASS: Aliyu Betara, best man for Reps Speakershi­p

- Trueson Sydney Trueson Sydney wrote in from Abuja.

I would like to highlight some of the qualities that rightly positions Honourable Aliyu Betara as the best man for the office of the Speaker of the House of Representa­tives in the 10th National Assembly.

Since the dawn of democracy in 1999 and the birth of the fourth Republic to date; power-sharing among the six geo-political zones is a convention easily adopted by political parties to address Nigeria’s regional and religious diversitie­s.

This theory of political exigency in power-sharing also cascades to the allocation­s of offices after the election of presiding officers of both chambers of the National Assembly.

Interestin­gly, both the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) and the All Progressiv­es Congress (APC), as ruling parties, have had their members in the National Assembly torpedo power in the 2011 and 2015 elections of presiding officers in both chambers.

In the year 2007 easily referred to as the 6th House of Representa­tives, the 360 members from the then-ruling PDP, ANPP and AD were initially led by Hon Patricia Olubunmi Etteh; a South-West Christian from Osun and Babangida Seidu Nguroje, a Northeast Muslim from Taraba

State before they bowed to pressure and threw in the towel following the rebellion against their leadership. The two leaders were believed to have been foisted on an unwilling House which kicked against the PDP.

The party became helpless once the members from all the parties were unanimous to force them out. Thereafter, Honourable Oladimeji Bankole, the youngest Speaker from Ogun State and Honourable Bayero Nafada from Gombe State were elected to serve the House.

In 2011, members of the PDP, again, being in the majority ignored the party leadership to install Rt. Honourable Aminu Tambuwal from the North West as the Speaker and Hon Emeka Ihedioha from the South East as the Deputy Speaker against the choice of Hon Mulikat Akande from the South West.

However, as the Independen­t National Electoral Commission (INEC) completes the conduct of the 2023 elections at the federal and state levels, and with the compositio­n of members from the parties now in numbers after handing over the certificat­e of return, it is getting clearer that as the jostle for the principal offices begins, the North West has produced the most Speakers of the House of Representa­tives while the South East and North Central zones have produced the most Senate Presidents and Deputy Senate Presidents.

When the 10th National Assembly formally convenes in June after the dissolutio­n of the 9th Assembly, one Honourable member of the House that has become a positive feature in the last five Assemblies is being favoured to lead the House of Representa­tives. He is Honourable Muktar Aliyu Betara, an accountant and highrankin­g lawmaker who was first elected into the House in 2007 to represent the Biu/Bayo/Shani Federal Constituen­cy of Borno State.

Betara has become a strong force to reckon with in his state and the National Assembly since winning elections for the first time in 2007.

The successes of the current budgeting system now in place by the Federal Government could be attributab­le to his efforts in the 9th Assembly that first sat on the 11th day of June 2019. As the current chairman of the Appropriat­ions Committee, presiding over all other committees regarding appropriat­ion and committees of both chambers for the budget and subsequent signing by the president, he worked so hard to ensure compliance by all organs of government.

Betara indeed succeeded in causing the positive change from the June - June budget cycle to the much-preferred January to December for more effective oversight and implementa­tion.

It was during the period that the Appropriat­ion Act 2022 and the 2022 Finance Act 2021 were passed and re-enacted for the third year running with zero failure rate.

This makes proper preparatio­n and fiscal changes by stakeholde­rs easier while implementi­ng the budget.

Having won elections again for the 10th Assembly which marks his fifth term under the ruling APC, the detribalis­ed Betara whose impressive leadership character has endeared him to agencies and colleagues in the National Assembly, will surely be fitting to be elected as the first among equals to lead his colleagues.

A party man to the core and nationalis­t, he has been consistent with presentati­ons and contributi­ons to national and internatio­nal issues in the House. In 2007, when he was first elected to the House, he acted as the Chairman of the sub-committee on NDIC, Banking and Currency and equally served as a member of the House Committee on Customs, Immigratio­n and Prisons Pension Office.

Again, when he returned to the 7th Assembly and following the collateral damage caused by the Boko Haram terror group, the House leadership was unanimous to select him as Chairman of the Committee on Army where he made direct recommenda­tions to empower and sustain the activities of the army against the rising insurgency in the Northeaste­rn part of the country.

As Betara returned to the 8th Assembly in the year 2015, he moved further to serve as the substantiv­e Chairman of the House Committee on Defence but he is more renowned as a bridge builder and crisis management expert with critical decision-making skills in the National Assembly. On several occasions, his national and bridgebuil­ding skills were called to action when he brokered the logjam between the House, the Senate, and MDAs on fixing the actual budgets and critical projects that needed pruning down of numbers to meet realities of inflow into the national treasury. He did not only settle the issues, but he equally followed them through to ensure that critical projects were prioritise­d.

One of the few lawmakers easily described as not being obstinatel­y unreasonab­le, prejudiced, or antagonist­ic towards people based on their affiliatio­ns or membership

is Betara.

A devout Muslim, married to Hajia Hauwa with whom he has four children, he deploys personal resources to fund transplant surgeries and empower individual­s and local businesses in his constituen­cy.

Betara, who worked as an accountant with the Presidency on the Directorat­e of Foods Roads and Rural Infrastruc­ture (DFFRI) between 1986 to 1990, returned to Ramat Polytechni­c for his studies observing the NYSC in Asaba Delta State before joining the defunct NITEL in 1993. He resigned in 2006 to venture into politics.

He is one of the few members that has consistent­ly won re-election to the 6th, 7th, 8th, 9th and now 10th Assembly under the APC as a core party man who won the Democracy Heroes Award as the Best performing member of the House in 2020.

With the controvers­ies surroundin­g the conduct and results of the 2023 elections into different elective offices, the party at the centre will no doubt find Betara very useful if they listen to his colleagues who want only the best to lead them for the next four years.

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