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Quote (Elombah Perspectives):
“President Barack Obama's salary
is $400,000 per annum. A Nigeria Senator
collects ₦48 million per quarter. At the
end of the year, each senator's haul
will be in the neighbourhood of $1.7
million. Each of the 360 members of the
House of Representatives will receive
₦35 million, that's $300,000 per member
per quarter. At the end of the year,
each member of the House would have
collected a cool $1.2 million”.
Past surveys of salaries and benefits of
public office holders from the Baltic to
the Bahamas, the Americas and the Far
East and everywhere else, has showed
that Ministers and Federal Legislators
in Nigeria are the highest paid in the
world, despite the country being among
the poorest in terms of per capita
income, security, social provision and
living standards. On the other hand,
Nigerian workers are one of the lowest
paid in the world.
The Nigerian Minister earns more than
his American, British or German
counterpart, and of course enjoys pecks
of office those ones cannot even dare
dream of - for doing next to NOTHING!!! This
is a wasteful, reckless, licentious and
decadent system of governance.
Due to space, I will not highlight the
data and facts associated with the
earnings of both our leaders and
lawmakers, but suffice it to say that
this democracy that we practice in
Nigeria is really a form of fraud and
scam committed against the Nigeria
people. No wonder then that, as
ex-president Obasanjo put it in 2007,
politics is a “do-or-die” affair for
many potential politicians in Nigeria.
It is obvious that the reason why most
people decide to go into politics is
motivated by greed and personal
aggrandisement; not to serve the country
and the people, but really to serve
their pockets, and to be served by the
people of Nigeria.
A large chunk of the annual budget ends
up as salaries and allowances in the
pocket of this small percentage of
Nigerians. For example, out of the 2009
annual budget of N3.1 trillion, N1.3
trillion or 42% ended up as remuneration
for 17,500 individuals in a country of
150 million people. If this is the case,
what is left for social and economic
development? What is left for
constructing roads, improving education
and healthcare, providing water and
electricity, regards to the health of
the economy and welfare of the people,
etc?
And don’t omit various other incomes
accruing to these shameless, jobless
individuals, law breakers, the 419s,
paedophiles, murderers and election
riggers. If we add constituency projects
(in the US, it’s called PORK BARRELS),
add the inflated contracts plus the
wheeling and dealings over
appropriations, rubber stamps of the
executives and junket jamborees.
Compatriots, we're looking at almost 90%
of GNP.
According to reports, “each
Senator will pocket 720 million Naira in
four years, while each House of
Representative member will get 540
million Naira. These sums do not include
the approved pay by RMAFC which they
also collect. Apart from being illegal,
it is obscene, in a country where a huge
chunk of the population lives on less
than 1 US dollar per day. Senate
President David Mark gets 250 million
Naira per quarter; Deputy Senate
President Ekweremadu 150 million Naira;
and each of the eight remaining
principal officers 78 million Naira. It
is no wonder that Nigerians are yet to
see the dividends of democracy, over 10
years later! Ours must be the most
expensive democracy on earth, and if
nothing is done quickly to stem this
looting tide, it may come to a time that
there will be no money to run the
government beyond paying the bloated
salaries and allowances of our public
office holders,'' rightly said
the Action Congress party.
Okey Ndibe called it “A Feeding Frenzy”.
NEXT's Musikilu Mojeed and Elor
Nkereuwem christened it “An Assembly for
Looting” saying “Considering that
Nigeria's minimum wage stands at ₦5, 500
a month, each senator's quarterly
allowance "will pay for 2,909 workers
earning the minimum wage." The reporters
offered other tantalizing projections.
If Nigerians were to fire the entire
membership of the National Assembly, the
savings would be more than enough to
"fund the N88.5billion" Mr. Umaru
Yar'Adua budgeted this year for building
power plants. Alternatively,
we could "fund hospitals and clinics"
all over Nigeria, "fix the Benin-Ore
Expressway, which has collapsed, or make
a significant down payment on the Lagos-Kano
railway line”. The Tribune
editorialised this perilous trend as
“Poverty Inflicted by Profligacy”.
Whatever it is, Nigeria cannot sustain
or afford this waste.
According to Wikipedia, in ecology,
a feeding
frenzy is
a situation where oversaturation of a
supply of food leads to rapid feeding by
predatory animals. For example, a large
school of fish can cause nearby sharks to
enter a feeding frenzy. This can cause
the sharks to go wild, biting anything
that moves, including each other or
anything else within biting range. This
term is most often used when referring
to sharks or piranhas,
due to these being some of the most
feared predators. Feeding frenzy is
also a metaphor often
used in a non-biological sense to
describe excited involvement by a group
over some focal point of attention. I
will take the example of our
politicians, especially the so-called
lawmakers or legislators (read – “legislooters”).
Their feeding frenzy is a result of
their excited involvement over the
unregulated wealth and resources of
Nigeria. There is nobody to control the
wealth; it is there for all (actually a
very miniscule percentage of the
population – less than 0.5%) to take and
put in their pockets.
The fact is Nigerian politicians have
turned themselves into instant
millionaires just for being members of
the National Assembly, paying themselves
huge, obscene and unjustified salaries
and allowances not commensurate with
their very low productivity and without
doing anything worthwhile for the
country, for you and me, or for
humanity. They are “Legis-looters”,
“Dis-Honourables” and “Execu-thieves”.
Sooner than later Nigerians should march
to the National Assembly Complex for a
show down with them. I will gladly lead
it.
The members of this NASS are of the same
ilk...greedy looters of our treasury who
are insensitive to the economic
situation of the country, and the plight
of the general masses.
What visible difference has their
representations made in the lives of the
represented Nigerians to give them the
false idea that they deserve their
present salary talk less of a pay rise?
Please, someone tell me: how many bills
have these odious, greedy and lazy
thieves passed into law since 1999? Do
we actually know what they are doing
except some of them using big
vocabularies? What are we getting in
return for their large obnoxious
salaries and expenses? Why are Nigerians
funding their expensive lifestyles, and
getting zero in return?
And to top it all, look at their
shameless behaviour in the House while
trying to remove their Speaker, who is
also accused of gross corruption. These
are common thugs, mediocre and thieves,
men and women, and even the reason for
their behaviour was based on the loot.
Are these lawmakers we should be proud
of? Do we really need these types to
make laws for us? No, and this is why
Nigeria is going backwards everyday. We
have vagabonds in power. We have
mediocre in power. And when that
happens, no country like that will ever
progress.
Reuben Abati in his write-up “Nigerian
Legislators!” wrote “I believe
that they over-paid and underworked. It
is members of the Lower House that are
in the news this week, but the Senators
are no different. N27.2 million per
quarter, and now they want more! And
what do they do? The only time Nigerian
MPs suddenly become vocal and creative
is when they are hustling for jumbo pay
and allowances. This is the case not
only in Abuja but also in the states,
where the members of the Houses of
Assembly are perpetually fighting the
Governor to give them more money. They
insist that no one should blame them
because they can see the Governor and
other members of the Executive taking
“their own share,” so why should they be
excluded? In states where there is peace
between the House and the Executive, it
is usually the case that the Governor,
to put it in their language, “knows how
to settle.” This is the sad Nigerian
story. And
yet, so much money for what? What kind
of legitimate work can anybody do in
Nigeria that will fetch a salary, the
type the MPs are asking for in three
months? These are the same lawmakers who
are mostly absent. Their standard lie is
that they are busy with committee
meetings, but in reality most of them
are busy chasing contracts in government
departments or peddling influence around
town, or busy harassing companies and
MDAs over which they exercise oversight
functions”.
“The statistics can be easily worked out
with the result that the amount of
public funds that has been guzzled by
Abuja MPs alone in the last three years,
not to talk of since 1999, is enough to
fix Nigeria’s comatose railway lines,
the federal universities and a number of
hospitals (assuming the money does not
also get stolen by inefficient
contractors!). Nigeria is in a financial
mess. The foreign reserve account,
according to one report quoting the
Minister of State for Finance, which
used to be as high as $62 billion in
2008 is down to $38 billion, while the
excess crude account which in 2007 stood
at $20 billion is down to zero. But our
MPs do not care”
There is an unwritten consensus that
politicians are only interested in
looting the treasury. But Nigeria cannot
make progress that way. There must be
sanctions for this kind of conduct,
particularly from voters in the next
election. Where lies Nigeria’s future?
Whence cometh the change that we seek?
Nigeria is paying a price continuously
for the hijack of the political space by
hungry men and women. I align myself
with the old suggestion that
parliamentary work in Nigeria should be
a part-time engagement. Only persons
with a visible means of livelihood
should be allowed to become lawmakers,
and the various legislatures do not have
to sit so often. In the alternative,
legislative work should attract very
minimal remuneration in form of sitting
allowances only, with a proper accent on
service. That
should shut the “legis-looters” out.
This has got to stop. One way it can
stop is to reduce very drastically the
remuneration of lawmakers and other
political offices such that it will be
unattractive to potential thieves and
looters and that only people who
sincerely want to serve will see such
small remuneration as enough motivation
to contest elections to these office and
be committed to good governance and
delivering desired results. Right now,
we have only self-serving politicians –
executives or lawmakers. The obscene
salaries and perks are what is
attracting thieves to the serious
business of governance and lawmaking,
and this is why these thieves will
always rig elections, commit murder and
assassinations to position themselves
where they will steal, shutting out
genuine and sincere democrats who want
to do well for the welfare of their
people.
This phenomenon is replicated in the
States’ Houses of assembly down to the
Local Government Council Chambers.
Secondly, Nigeria does not need a full
time bicameral legislature (In
government, the
practice of having two legislative or
parliamentary chambers. Thus, a bicameral
parliament or
bicameral legislature is
a parliament or legislature which
consists of two Chambers or Houses);
in other words, we do not need full time
lawmakers or two assemblies – Senate and
House of Representatives. What is needed
is a unicameral legislature (the
practice of having only one legislative
or parliamentary chamber) that
will meet for a maximum of 30 days a
year and afterwards, they would go back
to whatever their various professions
are, if they have any at all. Lawmaking
should NOT be a full time career, as we
have it in Nigeria.
I am
proffering a solution which is a part
-time National Assembly that sits for no
more than 30 days a year. There’s no
reason why a country half the size of
the State of Texas will have as many
legislatures as big as the whole of the
United States. Ideally,
legislators should be paid sitting
allowances and work on a part-time
basis. This is what obtains in several
states in the U.S, whose system of
government we claim to be copying. If
the attraction of effortless money is
removed, we're certainly to see an
enhancement in the quality of lawmakers.
The leeches who are in it for the cash
will take their game elsewhere.
I will admit that this latter solution
is a bit tough because many countries
with unicameral legislatures are often
small and homogeneous unitary states and
consider an upper house or second
chamber unnecessary. Nevertheless, we
should not make either bicameral or
unicameral legislature a full time
activity for our politicians.
Those leaders in transient, political
power, who had tried to usurp God’s
authority on earth, have often faced
occasional deprivation. Their regimes
were either overthrown or their term of
office would eventually end anyway. They
become expired politicians, with
wrinkles and gray hairs to show for it.
Jetting from one political event to
another, they pontificate on what should
be done; now that they have become
“wiser and humbler” (Babangida is an
example)
Nigerian politicians do not seem to know
that they owe their people economic
well-being and good life on earth.
Unfortunately, many of our politicians
actively and openly corruptly enrich
themselves at the expense of the state
and the people they are supposed to lead
and rule. Through administrative fiats
and legislative props, they racket the
economy.
A new, strict regime against political,
economic and cultural corruption must be
put in place: otherwise the “small
people” will rise up and overthrow their
fake and small kingdoms of evil.
In my article “In A Lighter Mood: The
Way We Seriously Feel About Our Leaders”
29th August 2007
(http://www.nigeriavillagesquare.com/articles/akintokunbo-a-adejumo/in-a-lighter-mood-the-way-we-seriously-feel-about-our-leaders.html),
I wrote “Therefore,
any new political reform should address
this. Legislators must be paid expenses
only for their service to the country.
The current system is very profligate,
expensive and attracts thieves and
mediocre. Expenses must be for
attendances, cost of keeping
constituency offices open, and if they
have to be give car, housing and
transport allowances, these must be
properly allocated, scrutinized,
monitored and commensurate with the
service provided by these people.
Judging from recent revelations on the
wastefulness and profligacy of the
Speaker of the House of Representatives,
Senators, etc, the cost of running
Nigeria’s democracy is too high, and
especially given our penchant for lack
of accountability and corruption, this
has to be brought under rigid and strict
control. Our unscrupulous political
class should be discouraged and deterred
from going into government to make
money. Hence make it unattractive to
them.
THIS WASTE AND ILLEGAL DRAINING OF OUR
RESOURCES BY A FEW NEED TO STOP NOW.
Let the Truth be
told always
Why Nigeria Does Not Need Babangida-By
Akintokunbo A. Adejumo |