A Senior Advocate of Nigeria and human
rights activist, Femi Falana, said any attempt by the ruling All
Progressives Congress to cover up the budget crisis in the House of
Representatives can be dangerous to the nation’s democracy.
Last week the APC leadership held a
meeting with former Chairman, House of Representatives Committee on
Appropriation, Abdulmumin Jibrin and urged him to desist from making any
public statement on the issue.
Jibrin had last month accused the House
of Representatives Speaker, Yakubu Dogara, and other principal officers
in the House of altering 2016 budget to favour them and their
constituencies. Dogara had since refuted the claim.
Falana told Sunday Punch
on Saturday
that Dogara should be given the benefit of the doubt, adding
that the issue of prosecution does not arise at the moment.
“Abdulmumin Jibrin has submitted a
petition to the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission and the
Independent Corrupt Practices and Other Related Offences. Until an
investigation into the allegations is concluded the issue of prosecution
does not arise. The allegations are grave. Apart from budget padding,
there are other allegations of corrupt practices.
“It is however doubtful if the
anti-graft agencies will be allowed to inquire into Jibrin’s
allegations, since there are dangerous moves to resolve the matter as a
family affair by the APC. But unfortunately for the party, the cat has
been let out of the bag. A cover-up is no longer possible at this
stage,” Falana said.
He noted that President Muhammadu Buhari signed the 2016 budget believing that it was properly passed by the National Assembly.
“But it has now emerged that 10
legislators led by the Speaker allegedly altered the budget by inserting
2,000 items worth N100bn, otherwise called constituency projects. When
it emerged that Jibrin alone allocated N4bn to his constituency the
House resolved to remove him. The other members kicked against Jibrin on
the ground that 359 members were left to share the remaining N96bn.
“On his own part, Jibrin had alleged
that the Speaker and nine others inserted projects worth about N40bn in
their own constituencies. If it is established that the alterations were
elected after the passing of the budget by both houses, the issue at
hand goes beyond padding. A clear case of conspiracy, fraud and forgery
can be established against the suspects. Padding takes place when
legislators resolve to rewrite the budget by introducing new items
outside the estimates prepared and presented to them by the President,”
the lawyer said.
He explained that the controversy over
padding of budget was laid to rest with the enactment of the Fiscal
Responsibility Act 2007, which allowed the finance minister to source
input from certain institutions including the National Assembly during
the course of preparing the budget.
“That is when negotiations and
horse-trading with the executive by the legislators is allowed. But
neither the Act nor the Nigerian Constitution has empowered the National
assembly members to rewrite the national budget by including
constituency projects whose costs are fixed by the legislators. Under
section 81 of the Constitution, the President is given the exclusive
power to cause the budget to be prepared,” Falana stated.
Credit: Signal
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