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I’ve never seen national assembly budget as senate president, says Akpabio


 Senate President Godswill Akpabio says he has never seen the national assembly’s budget despite presiding over the upper legislative chamber.

 

TheCable had reported that despite billions of naira spent refurbishing the chambers, lawmakers continue to grapple with malfunctioning microphones and faulty electronic voting devices, forcing both chambers to adopt manual voting on key constitutional amendments.

 

Akpabio spoke on Thursday during plenary after the senate stepped down a motion seeking to review the legislature’s internal procurement process and establish an internal tender’s board for contract awards.

 

The motion, sponsored by Sunday Karimi, senator representing Kogi west, came less than 24 hours after the senate president threatened to sanction the contractor responsible for renovating the national assembly chambers over persistent technical faults with the newly installed audio system.

 

 

Responding to the debate, Akpabio said lawmakers should first understand the national assembly’s budget and spending before considering procurement reforms.

 

“We can set up a small committee to work with the management of both chambers… because personally I’ve never seen the budget of the national assembly,” he said.

 

Akpabio then turned to Aminu Tambuwal, senator representing Sokoto south and former speaker of the house of representatives, asking whether the leadership of the green chamber had access to its budget.

 

 

“You were a speaker… maybe in the house of representatives, they show you?” he asked.

 

“Yes,” Tambuwal replied.

 

“You see. That’s the point. So, the fault lies here in the senate,” Akpabio said.

 

Akpabio said the senate president has little involvement in the management of the legislature’s finances.

 

 

“The way I do things, not that I’m nonchalant, it’s as if they make it a closed thing, and that the senate president doesn’t have anything to do with the management’s funds and all that,” he said.

 

He added that the senate and the house of representatives should jointly examine how the national assembly’s budget is allocated before debating procurement reforms.

 

“We should start with ourselves, and we should get the two chambers to know exactly what is going on,” he said.

 

“We should also debate and understand the budget. We should know how much is coming, what is going to where, and what is going to where.”

 

He said Karimi ought to have discussed the proposal with him, the clerk to the national assembly (CNA) and the management before bringing it to the floor.

 

“Talking about internal tenders board and all that, should it be in the public glare before we clean up our house?” he asked.

 

 

“We should start with ourselves, and we should get the two chambers to know exactly what is going on. We should also debate and understand the budget. We should know how much is coming, what is going to where and what is going to where. This motion is premature.”

 

Akpabio then asked Karimi to withdraw the motion, and the senator complied.

 

 

LAWMAKERS SEEK GREATER BUDGET TRANSPARENCY

Earlier, Karimi argued that creating an internal tender’s board would strengthen the constitutional autonomy of the national assembly by allowing it to evaluate and approve procurement matters within its approved budget.

 

 

He noted that the proposed board would oversee procurement and contract awards on behalf of the management of the national assembly in accordance with existing financial regulations. However, several senators opposed the motion.

 

Binos Yaroe, senator representing Adamawa south, questioned the oversight structure governing the national assembly’s budget.

 

“Who scrutinises that budget? To which committee does the National Assembly submit its budget? It is important for us to have clarity on these points,” Yaroe said.

 

Yahaya Abdullahi, senator representing Kebbi north, said the procurement process is not the legislature’s primary challenge, arguing that the absence of a budget and research office had weakened lawmakers’ oversight of the national assembly’s finances.

 

“The issue of the problems that we have in the national assembly regarding the management of finances, and the budget do not just solely lie in the process of procurement,” Abdullahi said.

 

“The problem had been that the national assembly has not set up a budget and research office, of which there have been legislations over several assemblies.

 

“What is happening today is that we don’t even know, and we don’t even see the budget of the national assembly being presented here so that we can interrogate and understand the lines of expenditure.

 

“My opinion is that the senator should step down on this motion. Let us get the house right first before we talk about the issues that Distinguished Senator Karimi is raising.”

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