Members of the House of Representatives
on Wednesday launched an agitation for a N7m increase in their quarterly
allowances, barely 24 hours after resuming from a two-month recess.
Each member of the House currently enjoys N27m per quarter as allowances but the lawmakers want the sum jerked up to N35m, The PUNCH learnt.
Speaker of the House, Aminu Tambuwal, reportedly had a hectic time calming frayed nerves at an executive session on Wednesday.
Some of the lawmakers, in seeking an
increased allowance, at the closed door session, reportedly raised
questions of financial impropriety against the leadership of the House.
They reportedly questioned how the “N5m” budgeted for each member’s medical expenses and insurance was utilised by the House.
One of the lawmakers at the session told
our correspondent that “transparency and accountability were the main
issues discussed at the executive session.”
“There are 360 members; we have funds budgeted for medical allowances and insurance.
“If you put aside some funds for these sub-heads, which is about N5m, we have to know how this money is being utilised.”
Tambuwal was said to have used the
session, which lasted for over two hours, to explain to his aggrieved
colleagues that the leadership was transparent in the running of House
accounts.
A source said he explained that the delay in the payment of pending allowances was caused by paucity of funds.
The speaker reportedly tried to convince members that there was the need to prudently manage resources.
He reportedly called for the account
books of the House in a bid to convince his colleagues that no
lawmaker’s funds had been taken for any unofficial purposes.
The PUNCH had stumbled on a
text message circulated to members before Wednesday’s session by some
lawmakers, who said they were launching a project to clean up the
House.
The text message had invited members to a
meeting originally scheduled for the Transcorp Hilton Hotel, Abuja on
Thursday (today).
Investigations revealed that the House
quickly went into an executive session on Wednesday in a bid to stop the
meeting and use the opportunity to clear the air on any misgivings.
The text reads, “This is inviting all
first term members of the House of Representatives to an urgent meeting
and launching of the Project “OPERATION CLEAN.” Date; 20th Sept. 2012.
Venue-Transcorp Hilton, Abuja Time: 11am prompt.”
However, following what a member
described as “the elaborate explanations by the Speaker”, the conveners
of the meeting were reportedly “satisfied and saw reason to call off the
meeting.”
The Chairman, House Committee on Media
and Public Affairs, Mr. Zakari Mohammed, however denied that issues of
increased allowances and use of the House funds were mentioned at the
executive session.
“It is not true; there was nothing like that as far as I am concerned,” Mohammed said in a reply to The PUNCH enquiries.
He said the executive session
deliberated on a meeting held between President Goodluck Jonathan, the
President of the Senate, David Mark, and Tambuwal on Tuesday night.
Mohammed claimed that the Speaker used
the session to inform members on what transpired between the three
leaders at the Aso Rock Villa.
According to him, Jonathan raised the
opposition by the National Assembly to the planned introduction of the
N5000 note by the Central Bank of Nigeria with Mark and Tambuwal.
“He (Speaker) told members that the
President was under the impression that the National Assembly queried
the Executive on the policy”, Mohammed stated.
But, he said Mark and Tambuwal took time to explain to Jonathan why the proposed N5000 note was not necessary.
He added that the two leaders of the
National Assembly told Jonathan that they had a constitutional
responsibility to protect the wishes of Nigerians, whose suffering would
be worsened by the N5000 denomination.
However, a separate source, who attended the meeting, confided in The PUNCH
that Jonathan hinted that he would direct the Governor of the CBN, Mr.
Lamido Sanusi, to stop the proposed policy, having heard the position of
the National Assembly.
“It is a good thing that Mr. President has promised to ask Sanusi to stop this N5000 issue.
“He gave Mark and Tambuwal the assurance”, the source disclosed.
The Chairman of a major committee of the House, also said, “take it from me; Mr. President has said he would stop the policy.”
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