Civil society organisations, including
Socio-Economic Rights and Accountability Project, will on Thursday meet with
the Senate President, Dr. Bukola Saraki, to discuss the earning of lawmakers.
The Deputy Director of SERAP, Adewale Timothy, said
in a statement on Wednesday that the meeting is at the instance of the Senate
President, who had indicated his intention to clear the air on the perennial
controversy surrounding the lawmakers’ earnings.
The Chairman of the Presidential Advisory Committee
Against Corruption, Prof. Itse Sagay (SAN), had recently claimed that “a Nigerian
senator gets N29m in monthly pay, and over N3bn a year.”
Following this, SERAP had written to Saraki, asking
him to either confirm Sagay’s claim or give the true position of things.
In reaction to the development, the Special Adviser
to Saraki on New Media, Mr. Bamikole Omishore, had said on Sunday in Abuja that
the Senate wished to meet with SERAP and other CSOs to give the details of
lawmakers’ earning.
“The attention of the office of the President of
the Senate has been drawn to demand for more details regarding the earnings of
senators of the Federal Republic of Nigeria. Having released the breakdown of
the National Assembly budget, the most comprehensive in the history of Nigerian
Senate, it seems the release of pay slips is yet to clarify earnings of
Nigerian senators.
“The Senate President has agreed to a round-table
with SERAP and other CSOs to enlighten them and answer genuine questions
regarding the matter. I will make contact with SERAP and other CSOs for a date
convenient for all parties in the next few days,” Omishore was quoted to have
said.
Adewale said SERAP welcomed the invitation and
would send representatives to Abuja to meet with Saraki and “use the
opportunity of the face-to-face meeting to ask pertinent questions and seek
detailed information and clarifications on the exact salaries and allowances
that each senator receives monthly or yearly.”
SERAP had in its letter to Saraki said that “the
sky will not fall” if the true earnings of the lawmakers were disclosed.
It said,“It is by making transparency a guiding
principle of the National Assembly that the Senate can regain the support of
their constituents and public trust, and contribute to ending the country’s
damaging reputation for corruption.
“Transparency is a fundamental attribute of
democracy, a norm of human rights, a tool to promote political and economic
prosperity and to curb corruption. For the Senate, practising transparency
should start with the leadership being open to Nigerians on the salaries and
allowances of members.
“SERAP strongly believes that it is by knowing
exactly how much their lawmakers earn as salaries and allowances that members
of the National Assembly can remain accountable to Nigerians and our citizens
can be assured that neither fraud nor government waste is concealed.
Credit: Punch
Credit: Punch
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