January 13, 2016
Distinguished Senator Bukola Saraki,
President of the Senate,
Federal Republic of Nigeria,
Senate Chambers,
Abuja.
Honourable Yakubu Dogara,
Speaker, House of Representatives,
National Assembly Complex,
Abuja.
It
is appropriate to begin this letter, which I am sending to all members
of the Senate and the House of Representatives through both of you at
this auspicious and critical time, with wishes of Happy New Year to you
all.
On a few occasions in the past, both in and out of office as the
President of Nigeria, I have agonised on certain issues within the arms
of government at the national level and among the tiers of government
as well. Not least, I have reflected and expressed, outspokenly at
times, my views on the practice in the National Assembly which detracts
from distinguishness and honourability because it is shrouded in
opaqueness and absolute lack of transparency and could not be regarded
as normal, good and decent practice in a democracy that is supposed to
be exemplary. I am, of course, referring to the issue of budgets and
finances of the National Assembly.
The present economic situation
that the country has found itself in is the climax of the steady erosion
of good financial and economic management which grew from bad to worse
in the last six years or so. The executive and the legislative arms of
government must accept and share responsibility in this regard. And if
there will be a redress of the situation as early as possible, the two
arms must also bear the responsibility proportionally. The two arms ran
the affairs of the country unmindful of the rainy day. The rainy day is
now here. It would not work that the two arms should stand side by side
with one arm pulling and without the support of the other one for good
and efficient management of the economy.
The purpose of election into
the Legislative Assembly particularly at the national level is to give
service to the nation and not for the personal
service and interest
of members at the expense of the nation which seemed to have been the
mentality, psychology, mindset and practice within
the National
Assembly since the beginning of this present democratic dispensation.
Where is patriotism? Where is commitment? Where is service?
The
beginning of good governance which is the responsibility of all arms and
all the tiers of government is openness and transparency. It does
not
matter what else we try to do, as long as one arm of government shrouds
its financial administration and management in opaqueness and
practices
rife with corruption, only very little, if anything at all, can be
achieved in putting Nigeria on the path of sustainable and enduring
democratic system, development and progress. Governance without transparency will be a mockery of democracy.
Let
us be more direct and specific so that action can be taken where it is
urgently necessary. A situation where our national budget was predicated
on $38 per barrel of oil with estimated 2 million barrels per day and
before the budget was presented, the price of oil had gone down to $34
per barrel and now hovering around $30 and we have no assurance of
producing 2 million barrels and if we can, we have no assurance of
finding market for it, definitely calls for caution. If production and
price projected in the budget stand, we would have to borrow almost one
third
of the 6 trillion naira budget. Now beginning with the reality
of the budget, there is need for sober reflection and sacrifice with
innovation at the level of executive and legislative arms of government.
The
soberness, the sacrifice and seriousness must be patient and apparent.
It must not be seen and said that those who, as leaders, call for
sacrifice from the citizenry are living in obscene opulence. It will not
only be insensitive but callously so. It would seem that it is becoming
a culture that election into the legislative arm of government at the
national level in particular is a licence for financial misconduct and
that should not be. The National Assembly now has a unique opportunity
of presenting a new image of itself. It will help to strengthen, deepen,
widen and sustain our democracy.
By our Constitution, the Revenue
Mobilisation, Allocation and Fiscal Commission is charged with the
responsibility of fixing emoluments of the
three arms of government:
executive, legislature and judiciary. The Commission did its job but by
different disingenuous ways and devices, the
legislature had
overturned the recommendation of the Commission and hiked up for
themselves that which they are unwilling to spell out in detail,
though they would want to defend it by force of arm if necessary. What is that?
Mr.
President of the Senate and Hon. Speaker of the House, you know that
your emolument which the Commission had recommended for you takes care
of all your legitimate requirements: basic salary, car, housing, staff,
constituency allowance.
Although the constituency allowance is paid
to all members of the National Assembly, many of them have no
constituency offices which the allowance is partly meant to cater for.
And yet other allowances and payments have been added by the National
Assembly for the National Assembly members’ emoluments. Surely, strictly
speaking, it is unconstitutional. There is no valid argument for this
except to see it for what it is – law-breaking and impunity by
lawmakers. The lawmakers can return to the path of honour,
distinguishness, sensitivity and responsibility. The National Assembly
should have the courage to publish its recurrent budgets for the years
2000, 2005, 2010 and 2015. That is what transparency demands. With the
number of legislators not changing, comparison can be made. Comparisons
in emoluments can also be made with countries like Ghana, Kenya, Senegal
and even Malaysia and Indonesia who are richer and more developed than
we are.
The budget is a proposal and only an estimate of income and
expenditure. Where income is inadequate, expenditure will not be made.
While in government, I was threatened with impeachment by the members of
the National Assembly for not releasing some money they had
appropriated for themselves which were odious and for which there were
no incomes to support. The recent issue of cars for legislators would
fall into the same category. Whatever name it is disguised as, it is
unnecessary and insensitive. A pool of a few cars for each Chamber will
suffice for any Committee Chairman or members for any specific duty. The
waste that has gone into cars, furniture, housing renovation in the
past was mind-boggling and these were veritable sources of waste and
corruption. That was why they were abolished. Bringing them back is
inimical to the interest of Nigeria and Nigerians.
The way of
proposing budget should be for the executive to discuss every detail of
the budget, in preparation, with different Committees and sub-Committees
of the National Assembly and the National Assembly to discuss its
budget with the Ministry of Finance. Then, the budget should be brought
together as consolidated budget and formally presented to the National
Assembly, to be deliberated and debated upon and passed into law. It
would then be implemented as revenues are available. Where budget
proposals are extremely ambitious like the current budget and revenue
sources are so uncertain, more borrowing may have to be embarked upon,
almost up to 50% of the budget or the budget may be grossly
unimplementable and unimplemented. Neither is a choice as both are bad.
Management of the economy is one of the key responsibilities of the
President as prescribed in the Constitution. He cannot do so if he does
not have his hands on the budget. Management of the economy is shared
responsibility where the Presidency has the lion share of the
responsibility. But if the National Assembly becomes a cog in the wheel,
the executive efforts will not yield much reward or progress. The two
have to work synchronisingly together to provide the impetus and the
conducive environment for the private sector to play its active vanguard
role. Management of the budget is the first step to manage the economy.
It will be interesting if the National Assembly will be honourable
enough and begin the process of transparency, responsibility and realism
by publishing its recurrent budgets for 2016 as it should normally be
done.
Hopefully, the National Assembly will take a step back and do
what is right not only in making its own budget transparent but in all
matters of financial administration and management including audit of
its accounts by external outside auditor from 1999 to date. This, if it
is done, will bring a new dawn to democracy in Nigeria and a new and
better image for the National Assembly and it will surely avoid the
Presidency and the National Assembly going into face-off all the time on
budgets and financial matters.
While I thank you for your patience
and understanding, please accept, Dear Senate President and Honourable
Speaker of the House, the assurances of my highest consideration.
OLUSEGUN OBASANJO
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