NIGERIANS ARE OUTRAGED AT THE ALLOWANCES GIVEN TO POLITICIANS
Lets talk about the allowances of senators in Nigeria, these
politicians earn a lot of money, and to top it off, the allowances they are
given are exorbitant and outrageous.
The allowances rumoured to be earned by legislators has
raised a lot of uproar from Nigerians, it was reported in the media that
Nigerian senators will earn around N8.6billion for wardrobe allowance. This has
however been refuted by the chairman of the Revenue Mobilisation, Allocation
and Fiscal Commission(RMAFC), Elias Mbamannual who said a senator will get the
sum of N506,600 per annum, which is 25 percent of their basic salary.
Nigerians are clearly outraged by the revelation that each
senator in the National Assembly takes home the sum of N13.5 million monthly as
running cost and they are not holding back in condemning the bogus payment to
lawmakers.
Senator Shehu Sani, representing Kaduna Central Senatorial
District had in an interview with TheNEWS magazine revealed that each Nigerian
senator gets N13.5 million monthly for unspecified expenses in addition to the
N750, 000. 00 official consolidated salaries and allowances of the lawmakers as
approved by the Revenue Mobilisation Allocation and Fiscal Allocations
Commission, RMFAC.
A Senior Advocate of Nigeria, Mr. Yusuf Ali, said the
allowance is insensitive and inconsiderate, especially when Nigeria’s minimum
wage is considered.
SenatePREMIUM TIMES
Mr. Ali said: “Even if there were no mass unemployment and
if the economy were buoyant, such allowance is totally unrelated to our
circumstances; it is very insensitive.”
Mr. Femi Falana (SAN), a Lagos based human right lawyer,
said the revelation has shown that the Nigerian Senate is the highest paid in
the world and blamed the RMAFC and Budget Office for failing in their
responsibilities.
He also said: “Apart from the monthly package of N13.5m,
each senator is given the opportunity to execute constituency projects to the
tune of N200m per annum. However, the disclosure made by Senator Sani does not
cover the allowances for cars, housing, wardrobe and furniture running to
several millions of naira approved for each senator.”
Prof. Itse Sagay, the chairman of the Presidential Advisory
Committee on Anti- Corruption (PACAC) said: “I’ve always said they earn too
much. This figure by Sanni does not include constituency allowances, which is
in billions of naira.
“We still have budget padding from which millions are made
by them. By the time you put all that together, you can see that these people
are collecting a huge chunk of the Nigerian budget.”
Similarly, the president for Campaign for Democracy group,
Usman Abdul, told The Punch in an interview that the Senator's monthly
allowance would conveniently pay the tuition of 100 undergraduates.
He said, “You can take good care of over 100 graduates from
a senator’s salary. The legislature should deliberate on the abject poverty and
unemployment in the country.”
In addition, Mr. Jiti Ogunye, a Lagos-based lawyer, Mr. Jiti
Ogunye, said: “What Senator Shehu Sani said has confirmed the long-held fears
of Nigerians that Nigerian legislators, both at the state and national levels,
have been short-changing Nigerians.
“They are not expected to use that elevated position to
serve their own interest at the expense of public interest. They are not
expected to allow their self-consideration to override their commitment to
abiding by the law.”
The Executive Chairman, Centre for Anti-Corruption and Open
Leadership, Mr. Debo Adeniran, said Nigerians had a right to be displeased
because they had not been getting a fair deal from the lawmakers.
Adeniran said, “The outcry wouldn’t have been if the
legislators have been living up to the expectation of their constituents.
Nigerians don’t see the lawmakers as people who are representing their
interest.”
He added that Nigerians had a right to be displeased because
they had not been getting a fair deal from the lawmakers.
Mr. Adeniran said, “The outcry wouldn’t have been if the
legislators have been living up to the expectation of their constituents.
Nigerians don’t see the lawmakers as people who are representing their
interest.”
The Vice-President of the Nigerian Bar Association, Mr.
Monday Ubani, said Nigerians must demand a review of the lawmakers’ earnings.
Mr. Ubani said: “It means that Nigerians have not been
getting a fair deal from our legislators. If a single person will be earning
that kind of money in a country where the minimum wage is N18,000; something
has to be done. We need to insist on a review of these jumbo allowances.”
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