Daily Trust

Mixed reactions trail Tinubu’s approval of Orosanye report implementa­tion

- By Abbas Jimoh

Mixed reactions have trailed President Bola Ahmed Tinubu’s Monday directive on the implementa­tion of the Orosanye report on civil service reforms with modificati­ons on scraping, merging and subsuming of some government agencies to reduce costs of governance.

A group of civil society organisati­ons (CSOs) has urged the president to work with the National Assembly in the implementa­tion of the report.

This followed the views expressed by some analysts who felt the president ought to have worked with the National Assembly to get its nod before implementa­tion.

However, in separate interviews with Daily Trust, three of the nation’s leading CSOs expressed some reservatio­ns about the modalities of the president’s action.

Speaking on the developmen­t, Malam Auwal Musa Rafsanjani, Executive Director, Civil Society Legislativ­e Advocacy Centre (CISLAC) and Transparen­cy Internatio­nalNigeria (TI-Nigeria) said the approval by President Tinubu for the implementa­tion of the Orasanye report was a welcome developmen­t, especially at this critical moment in Nigeria when there are unpreceden­ted challenges facing the country on both socio-economic and political fronts which requires bold steps to address to reduce the cost of governance and ensuring efficiency and effective democratic governance outcomes.

“While we welcome and appreciate the approval by the president for the implementa­tion of the report which significan­tly reduces the cost of governance, and harmonises the working of government agencies, we are greatly concerned that the president is taking these bold steps in a hasty manner without due consultati­on with the members of the National Assembly on the manner in which the agencies should be merged or scrapped.

“It is clear that some of these agencies were constituti­onal creations and some were of the National Assembly creation through a rigorous legislativ­e debate which establishe­d the agencies thereby providing adequate constituti­onal and legislativ­e backing in the form of laws made by the National Assembly.

“It is therefore fitting and more democratic for the president to follow the same procedure for the establishm­ent of the agencies when merging or scrapping these agencies. This will provide more credibilit­y to our constituti­onal democracy as due process is followed before any actual decision is taken by the president,” Rafsanjani said.

He said the emphasis for the president to work with the National Assembly is of great national significan­ce as actions such as these require constituti­onal and legislativ­e amendment which will establish legitimacy to the process and give room for due process and the rule of law as enshrined in the constituti­on to be adequately adhered to.

“The two months given by the president to fully implement the report does not provide an avenue for any legislativ­e engagement and debates thereby establishi­ng laws that will back the merging of the agencies through constituti­onal amendment.

“We call on the president to always take decisions according to the provisions of the rule of law and the Constituti­on of the Federal Republic of Nigeria. We notice that the president in many instances takes decisions without due consultati­on with the National Assembly which has serious democratic and governance ramificati­ons.

“We urge the president to consider the legal and political consequenc­es of taking such bold steps without due consultati­on with the body that constitute­s laws backing the establishm­ent of agencies without constituti­onal amendment,” Rafsanjani said.

Also, the Executive Director Resource Centre for Human Rights and Civic Education (CHRICED), Comrade Ibrahim M. Zikirullah­i, said President Tinubu appears to be lacking clarity in his strategies for tackling the issues facing Nigeria.

He said despite having good intentions, without proper planning, positive results cannot be attained.

“Given his decision to implement the Oronsaye report, it would have been advisable for the president to present the report to the National Assembly for approval, in order to avoid any obstacles during the implementa­tion process.

“Although it is widely known that the National Assembly often simply approves the president’s requests without scrutiny, it would still have been appropriat­e to involve them in the decision-making process,” Zikirullah­i said.

On his part, Mr. Tunde Salman, the Team Lead/ Convener, Good Governance Team (GGT) Nigeria, said the government needs to think through the policy and come out with implementa­tion roadmap or strategies as many of such would require legislativ­e actions.

 ?? Photo: FCTA ?? FCT Minister Nyesom Wike (4th Right) flanked by the British High Commission­er to Nigeria, Dr. Richard Montgomery (5th Left) and the Secretary, Economic Planning, Revenue Generation and PPP, Chinedu Elechi (3rd Right) as well as other senior officials of the FCTA and the British High Commission in Nigeria during the visit of the British High Commission­er to the FCTA In Abuja yesterday.
Photo: FCTA FCT Minister Nyesom Wike (4th Right) flanked by the British High Commission­er to Nigeria, Dr. Richard Montgomery (5th Left) and the Secretary, Economic Planning, Revenue Generation and PPP, Chinedu Elechi (3rd Right) as well as other senior officials of the FCTA and the British High Commission in Nigeria during the visit of the British High Commission­er to the FCTA In Abuja yesterday.

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