Group kicks against removal of oil subsidy

 Executive Chairman, Coalition against Corrupt Leaders, CACOL, Mr. Debo Adeniran, has warned the government against from subsidy removal adding that government doesn’t have business in deregulating the petroleum sector; rather they should rather make petroleum products generally available.

In an interview with Sunday Mirror, Adeniran said it would be like supporting government’s inefficiency if deregulation is given a nod. He reminded government that diesel had been deregulated for years but that it had not led to any positive change in pricing.

“Government should produce enough fuel for local consumption; however, the private sector should be given the opportunity to partake in the oil business. They should be allowed to sell the products the way they want, even if they like they should be exporting refined products, but they should not be allowed to sell higher than the price government sells to Nigerians.

“Our argument has been that it should not be completely deregulated but partially regulated that is 75 per cent of the petroleum industry should not be deregulated; only 25 [per cent should be deregulated to the extent that all the by-products even from private and local industries would be received by government and the prices would be controlled”.

He said lack of transparency and accountability in our petroleum industry has grossly undermined the economy in recent years.

SOURCE: National Mirror.

Adeniran: Allowance retrogressive, insensitive

Comrade Debo Adeniran is a human rights activist and Executive Chairman of Coalition Against Corrupt Leaders (CACOL)
It is like this present National Assembly is starting on the same note that the old regime left behind. Our argument hitherto has been that the jumbo allowances being paid members of the National Assembly be reduced.
Their pay and allowances should reflect the mood of the time in the country and they should lead by example. If they are given N9 billion wardrobe allowance, each member would have access to an average of N17 million when an average Nigerian cannot boast of one square meal in a day.
It is going to be lopsided and unreasonable for those who are elected to represent us with a view to making our lives better. The N9 billion allowance would be a wrong way to represent an impoverished people because what the people thought before they elected these lawmakers is that their representatives are already rich enough to take care of their own wardrobe.
Who are they trying to impress by the expensive wardrobe that they are paid? If the wardrobe is that high, then what is it going to be when it comes to furniture, car and other allowances? It means Nigerians should expect a shocker for those ones because the cost would be too outrageous and insensitive.
It is apparent that our so-called representatives are not in tune with what the situation in the country is. Naira is daily depreciating, industries are folding up and majority of the youth do not have jobs.
It is high time the lawmakers realised that the youth look up to them as role models and as long as they (the youth) are not able to match the standard expected of them, they would feel inferior and inadequate and that sense of inadequacy would lead to them thinking of short-cut to success, which is the major reason for the high crime rate in our country.
It is very appalling and unfortunate that the present administration is starting on a note like this despite the promise of change before they got to power.
It is preposterous that the National Assembly of a country that has a preponderance of its citizens living below poverty line could set aside a whooping N9 billion as wardrobe allowance.
Earmarking such a humongous amount for such frivolous purpose is the highest height of insensitivity on the part of the lawmakers to the plight of the country as a whole.This is a government Nigerians are expecting to cut salaries and emoluments of its officers.
This makes one to wonder if this new administration is sincerely ready to live up to its promise of a better Nigeria for all and sundry. In essence, the action of the lawmakers is not only reprehensible, but retrogressive and must be condemned by every well meaning Nigerians.

SOURCE: New Telegraph.

Lawmakers’ Allowances, An Embarrassment – Nigerians

By Augustine Adah, Lagos

Reactions to the disclosure that members of the 8th National Assembly would get about N9 billion as wardrobe allowance were spontaneous.  Several Nigerians, including lawyers and civil society organisations, expressed disgust over the amount earmarked in view of present economic realities in the country.

Bruce Murray    Melaye

The Executive Chairman, Coalition Against Corrupt Leaders (CACOL), Comrade Debo Adeniran, described the development as very discouraging to the new government.

“It is very unfortunate that the present administration is starting on a note like this despite the promise of change before they got to power,” he said.

Adeniran  said that the National Assembly members have left nobody in doubt of the fact that they don’t have the interest of common Nigerians at heart by setting such a whooping amount as wardrobe allowance.

“It is preposterous that the National Assembly of a country that has a preponderance of its citizens living below poverty line could set aside a whooping N9 billion as wardrobe allowance.

Earmarking such an  amount for such frivolous purpose is the height of insensitivity to the plight of the country and the entire Nigerians.

This is a government Nigerians are expecting would cut salaries and emoluments of its officers.”

Speaking further on the matter, Adeniran said: “Therefore, the action of the lawmakers is not only reprehensible but retrogressive and must be condemned by every well-meaning Nigerians.”

Also, Director, Centre for Human Rights and Conflict Resolution (CHRCR), Comrade Idris Abdul, has described the N9 billion wardrobe allowance for National Assembly as outrageous and should be slashed.

According to Abdul, the country is going through a critical moment where the revenue  is falling which demands that everybody must be prepared to make sacrifice at this crucial time.

“In view with the economic reality of our country at the moment, the amount is too much and must be reduced,” he said.

Abdul further stated that though the job of National Assembly is crucial to the growth of the country, other groups and arms of government also contribute their own quota to the development of the country.

“It is not only National Assembly members, civil servants also work and generates revenue for the country; they too must be considered when it comes to allowances and increment of salaries.”

The human rights activist expressed fear over the current National Assembly under Bukola Saraki  as Senate President  to fight corruption based on his antecedent.

“I doubt if the Senate under Saraki would be able to fight corruption because of his previous cases with EFCC.”

He urged members to make sacrifice because the country is finding it difficult to pay staff salaries and other challenges.

Senator Dino Melaye, representing Kogi West senatorial zone, has also condemned the N8.64 billion the National Assembly has earmarked as wardrobe allowance for the 109 Senators and 360 members of the House of Representatives, while at the same time, defending the emergence of Senator Bukola Saraki as the President of the Nigerian Senate.

The senator said it was morally wrong to pay such money to legislatures when people are hungry and solicited for the downward review of the allowance.

In his view, a Senior Advocate of Nigeria (SAN), Dr. Joseph Nwobike said it was unconscionable that such was happening at this critical state in the nation’s history.

He said: “Well, to me, this is a sign post that the All Progressives Congress (APC) will fail. I mean, APC was hypocritical because this is a party that has been professing change. Look at what happened at the National Assembly leadership election last week. It is a sign that APC’s chances of success are doubtful.

“I mean APC appears to be disoriented and the change mantra on the basis of which they came into power may just be symbolic. It is unconscionable that we as a nation are witnessing proposal of N9 billion for wardrobe allowance for legislators under a party which said it would fight corruption and impunity.

“Well, I congratulate those that will be changing their wardrobe and I urge them that in doing so, they should patronize our local products, so that they can grow our economy,” Nwobike said sarcastically.

Miffed by the plight of civil servants who are being owed arrears of salaries, a members of National Assembly from Bayelsa East Senatorial District, Senator Ben Murray Bruce, has promised to donate part of his wardrobe allowance to the unpaid workers in Osun State.  He made this known via his Twitter handle. Daily Independent gathered that for about seven months now, workers in the Osun State civil service are yet to be paid their salaries.   Murray-Bruce promised that whenever the wardrobe allowance is paid, he would give half of the amount to Osun State Chairman of the Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC) who would use the money to settle part of salaries owed workers in the state, and the remaining half to widows in Akassa community of Bayelsa State.

The Senator said: “I, Ben Murray Bruce, will not sit down idly, while my fellow citizens die because salaries have not been paid. As a first step, I am immediately donating my wardrobe allowance to unpaid workers in Osun State and widows in my Constituency. We are starting in Osun, but we will not end there. I will do as much to help workers who have  not been paid in other states.”

He, however, called on his friends and followers to make contributions to alleviate the plight of the workers.

However, the move does not go down well with Osun State government.  In a swift reaction, the Osun State government lampooned the lawmaker, saying he was playing to the gallery just as he said he (Murray-Bruce) was trivialising the issue.

Reacting to the public condemnation, the Senate President, Dr. Bukola Saraki explained that the allowance of National Assembly members was fixed by Revenue Mobilisation Allocation and Fiscal Commission (RMFAC) in consonance with the economic reality of the country at the moment.

He further stated that a plan was in the offing to reduce salaries and allowances of members of the National Assembly.

SOURCE: Daily Independent.

New Nigerian leader faces monumental struggle

2015-06-22 22:13

Lagos – When Nigeria’s new first lady Aisha Buhari appeared at her husband’s inauguration wearing what looked like a $50 000 Cartier watch, scores took to the internet to voice their surprise.

Was it a gift or did she pay for it herself? Hadn’t President Muhammadu Buhari been elected for his frugal, clean image and promise to clean up Nigeria’s dirty politics?

Others were indifferent, countering that $50 000 was peanuts compared to the billions squandered every year by government mismanagement or simply stolen through rampant corruption.

“The question really is the scale of the greed, not the fact of corruption, which is everywhere,” Adewale Maja-Pearce, a Lagos-based writer, told AFP.

The money lost to corruption is mind-boggling in a country where the majority of the country’s 173 million people live on less than $2 a day, particularly in the notoriously murky oil sector.

In September 2011, Bukola Saraki, who is now Senate leader, publicly exposed what he called “wastage, lack of transparency, corruption and malpractice” in the fuel subsidy programme.

Nigeria is one of the world’s biggest producers of crude but a lack of working refineries means oil has to be exported and then its products imported at international market prices.

To keep prices low for consumers, the government sells fuel on the streets at subsidised prices and makes up for the high amounts spent by importers by paying them the difference.

The system is wide open to fraud: some importers rent empty vessels, pay officials to say they have fuel on board and pocket the subsidies.

How many government accounts?

“They also bring vessels filled with petrol, get the papers and then go to neighbouring countries to sell it there, so they have the double benefit of subsidies and sales,” says Debo Adeniran, head of the Coalition Against Corrupt Leaders lobby group.

Saraki said that by the end of August 2011, the hundreds of billions of naira spent on fuel subsidies was already 300 percent above what had initially been budgeted for the entire year.

Buhari believes graft has made Nigeria a global laughing stock but even he has admitted the scale of the problem is unknown in a country that last year ranked 136th out of 175 in Transparency International’s Corruption Perceptions Index.

“In Nigeria now the (state-run) NNPC (Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation), Ministry of Finance, FIRS (Federal Inland Revenue Service)… they do not know how many accounts the government has,” he told AFP in an interview this month.

One of Buhari’s biggest challenges will be to change mindsets, with Nigeria a country where money talks, particularly when it comes to politics, power and influence.

“Will he have the political will to actually deal with the people who are in the same party who contributed to getting him elected?” asked Idayat Hassan, from Nigeria’s Centre for Democracy and Development (CDD).

As if to answer the question, Buhari has yet to appoint a cabinet three weeks after coming to power.

Buhari said government departments were being audited to try to establish what state they were left in by the previous administration.

“I want to get ministers after at least I have seen this report, so that I don’t have to appoint a minister today and sack him next week,” Buhari added.

What about Buhari?

Who will get the sought-after petroleum portfolio is a source of constant, eager speculation, with claims Buhari himself may even take charge of the sector to root out corrupt practices.

The NNPC was at the centre of a row with the Central Bank of Nigeria last year when Governor Lamido Sanusi said $20bn in oil revenue it was owed had gone missing.

President Goodluck Jonathan, who disputed the amount, then sacked Sanusi.

With Buhari – a former military ruler known for his no-nonsense approach to corruption and “indiscipline” – awareness of the need to tackle graft is arguably at an all-time high.

The CDD has even set up a website – the “Buharimeter” – to monitor whether he fulfils his election promises.

So far, Buhari has only started to address one of them – to publicly declare his assets. But they have yet to be made public, even though he has submitted them to the Code of Conduct Bureau.

For Maja-Pearce, hope rests in Nigeria’s Internet-savvy youth.

“They know what’s happening and how much their country is failing,” he said.

“If the country doesn’t make space for their talents by providing the necessaries then they will bring the house down.”

SOURCE: News24.

Unpaid Salaries: Addressing The Crises In Osun And Other States

By admin   /   Saturday, 20 Jun 2015 08:03PM   /   1 Comment  /   Tags: , , ,   /

Rauf-Aregbesola1It is no longer news that the Nigeria’s economy has been on the down side in the past few months; the media is awash with the news that many state governments have not been paying their workers’ salaries, from one month to eight months in some of the states.  It is also a known fact that all these state governors have blamed their inabilities to meet up with their responsibilities on the bad economy and the dwindling revenue accruing to their respective states from the Federation Account.

Unfortunately, some of the state governors have not displayed strength and energy in facing the poverty monster ravaging their states. It is also not news that at the moment, some states civil servants are on strike.

Different incidences had shown the level of degradation ongoing in the states. In Osun State for instance, a suicide was attempted by a local government staff that could not meet up his responsibilities as a father due to unpaid salary.

Most of the private schools in the affected states have been closed down due to the inability of the parents to pay their children fees, which makes it difficult for the schools to keep up with the financial obligation of running the schools.

As reported in some sections of the media, pastors now urge members of the congregation to bring food stuffs and money for those who have not been paid their salaries. An example is a recent report in The PUNCH of June 10, 2015 titled “CAN urges churches to donate food to Osun workers”.  According to another online report, Ogun Senator, Buruji Kashamu also donated trailers of rice to Osun State workers. This and many more is a disheartening situation.

Group, parties, individuals have all protested and lay blames at the doorsteps of governors at the helms of affairs in the affected states. Most especially, the Governor of Osun State, Ogbeni Rauf Aregbesola had been vilified by many for what they termed financial recklessness and wasteful spending. The Governor, on his own part, has expressed his concern over unpaid salaries just like every other person has; he has demonstrated that he meant well for the state.

As much as we would not want to be seen to be holding brief for anyone, the case of Osun seems to be more of a misplaced priority. It is apparent that what the Osun workers want is different from what the government wanted, though the government had made an initial mistake of not carrying the workers’ union along in the execution of its capital projects despite its dwindling monthly hand outs from the Federation Account.

However, the Coalition Against Corrupt Leaders (CACOL) wants to emphasize that there is nothing anyone would gain if a state collapses. As things stand now in Osun State, what needs to be done  is for the Labour Unions to sit down with the governor and fashion out the most appropriate and acceptable means of resolving the crisis rocking the state. If the Osun people think that the governor’s projects and programmes are not in tandem with what their expectations, they should speak out.

Our Coalition is however against the removal of the one-meal-a-day for the primary school pupils in the state because many of the pupils that are not performing well academically are discovered to be lacking in adequate nutritious foods. As a matter of fact, it has been established that many of the pupils do not have access to balanced diet except from the meals they are served in the school. We would rather advise that the government, in order to reduce cost, look into the direction of the elitist projects e.g. the International Airport and roads.

In actual fact, there is nothing wrong with the government constructing multiple-lane Expressway but with the current financial reality, the roads could be done sections by sections, i.e. they may do two lanes that would be motorable for the people of the state. If the socket bridge could be completed, they should complete it to ease congestion and accidents at the junction where it is being constructed. They could also do double lanes in all the places where multiple lanes are still under construction so that this will reduce the hardship that people go through in transporting their goods.

States should also reduce the number of personal aides to public servants; every civil servant should earn pay by ensuring that most of them work in the productive sector where incomes are generated though income should not be generated indiscriminately at the expense of people’s peace of mind.

Government should also look into the area of Agriculture and get most of the civil servants engaged in the sector so that they would make the one-meal-a-day self-sustaining to the state. Any civil servant that is found to be unproductive, inefficient and superfluous should be sent to the training centers where they could be better engaged with a view to enhancing the state’s productivity and revenue generation.

More so, if the government has not yet established functional marketing boards, they should establish it now with a view to encouraging produce farmers to get busier with their occupation and enhance their sources of finance.

As a matter of urgency, we are joining other Nigerians, to appeal to President Muhammadu Buhari to also consider a bail-out plan for the states that owe salaries until they could get back to their feet.

SOURCE: Universal Reporters.

CACOL Condemns Rivers Government Over Unlawful Confiscation Of Former Commissioner’s Car

By admin   /   Saturday, 20 Jun 2015 07:59PM   /   Leave a Comment  /   Tags: , ,   /

Rivers-car The Coalition Against Corrupt Leaders (CACOL) has condemned the Rivers State Government for breaking into the residence of the former Commissioner for Information and Communications in the state, Ibim Semenitari.

The government officials had impounded a vehicle from the residence of the former Commissioner of Information and Communications in the state, Ibim Semenitari.

According to a statement by the state government signed by one Mr. Simeon Nwakaudu, in its efforts to recover government property from officials of the immediate past administration in the state, securities agents and government officials took possession of government’s vehicle from the home of the former spokesperson for the Rotimi Amechi administration.

In her reaction, the ex-commissioner said that 10 policemen with machine guns came to her residence without a search warrant and forced their way into her premises to cart away the said vehicle which rightfully belonged to her in line with the monetisation policy of the government.

Reacting to this on behalf of the Coalition, its Executive Chairman, Comrade Debo Adeniran, has described the action of the present government as official robbery, which should not be condoned in the state.

“If anybody steals or lays claims to government’s property, there should be a normal process to be followed for government to take over properties and not through forceful means.

Government should be more skilful in dealing with issues and should not be seen to be vindictive. If Ibim Semenitari or anybody has committed any crime, it is the court that should confiscate the proceeds of the crime; not the government engaging in brigandage.

We are not holding brief for the ex-commissioner neither are we saying government should not claim what belongs to it from anyone that takes it unlawfully, but she should be properly charged. We are not told that she is on the run; she still resides in the state. She should be properly briefed since she claimed that she was not given any notice and was not even around when the officials bombarded her house.

In essence, the action of the Rivers State government is uncalled for and highly reprehensible. As a matter of fact, such act of brigandage should not be seen to have been committed by a government of Rivers State which has a supposed law practitioner at the helm of affairs,” Adeniran said.

SOURCE: Universal Reporters.

CACOL Commends IG Arase’s Effort To Rid The Police Of Corruption

  Wednesday, 17 Jun 2015 07:13PM

IGP AraseThe Coalition Against Corrupt Leaders (CACOL) has described as a welcome development, the recent directive of the Inspector-General of Police, Solomon Arase to Nigerians to report corrupt Policemen.

The Inspector-General of Police (IG), Solomon Arase, urged Nigerians to assist the police to become better by reporting corruption, bribery and bad conduct in the force.

Arase said this in Abeokuta, the Ogun State capital, during a sensitization workshop on Reporting Corruption in the Police, using the Stop the bribes Platform; a forum created by the IG to instill discipline and professionalism in the force.

Arase, speaking through an Assistant Superintendent of Police, Mr. Toye Jolaoye, said not all policemen were corrupt, and added that he is committed to seeing a transformed, disciplined and professional police force in the country.

He appealed to members of the public to avail themselves of the use of smart phones and android phones to report any erring police officer or station or command to the

Stop the bribes Platform for action and said mechanisms have been put in place to ensure confidentiality of information and identity of complainants.

Reacting to this development, the Executive Chairman of the Coalition, Mr. Debo  Adeniran lauded the effort of the IG at ridding the Nigeria Police of bad eggs.

Adeniran said, “We must commend the effort of the IG at ridding the Nigeria Police of its bad eggs. This is a right step in right direction, though long overdue but it is better late than never.

It is a known fact that the Nigeria Police is one of the most corrupt institutions in this country. As a matter of fact, the lackluster performance of our police officers has eroded the confidence of majority of Nigerians in their ability to combat crimes.

Some of us are elated by the re-engineering going on in the police force. We appreciate the move for it is a positive one. Maybe if the complete overhaul is done, the force might win the hearts of Nigerians back to its side.”

Speaking further, the human rights activist called for more purging of the force.

“Arase should extend more of this action to every nook and cranny of the force as we have a lot of corrupt officials occupying high offices under his leadership. He should also put measures in place to ensure that the platform is not bastardized along the line and that the whistle blowers do not become the target of the crime offenders.”

SOURCE: Universal Reporters.

CACOL Kicks Against The N9bn Set Aside As Lawmakers Allowances

By admin   /   Wednesday, 17 Jun 2015 11:04AM   /   Leave a Comment  /   Tags: , ,   /

National-assembly-abuja-building-e1355850360376The Coalition Against Corrupt Leaders (CACOL) has kicked against the N9 billion set aside for the recently inaugurated lawmakers in both the upper and lower chambers of the federal parliament as allowances.

Investigations have revealed that the jumbo pay will cover the lawmaker’s accommodation, furniture and vehicle allowances.

Reacting to the news on behalf of the Coalition, its Executive Chairman, Mr. Debo Adeniran, described that “It is very appalling and unfortunate that the present administration is starting on a note like this despite the promise of change before they got to power.

It is preposterous that the National Assembly of a country that has a preponderance of its citizens living below poverty line could set aside a whooping N9bn as wardrobe allowance.

Earmarking such an humongous amount for such frivolous purpose is the highest height of insensitivity on the part of the lawmakers to the plight of the country as a whole.

This is a government Nigerians are expecting to cut salaries and emoluments of its officers.  This makes one to wonder if this new administration is sincerely ready to live up to its promise of a better Nigeria for all and sundry.

In essence, the action of the lawmakers is not only reprehensible, but retrogressive and must be condemned by every well-meaning Nigerians.”

SOURCE: Universal Reporters.

Adams, activists want National Stadium named after Abiola

   

 Some human rights activists and the National Coordinator of the Oodua Peoples Congress, Otunba Gani Adams, have urged President Muhammadu Buhari to name the National Stadium in Lagos after the late businessman, Chief Moshood Abiola.

The call was made on Friday at a programme organised by the group in Lagos to mark the 22nd anniversary of the controversial annulment of the June 12, 1993 presidential election believed to have been won by Abiola.

Adams and some activists, including the President of Women Arise for Change Initiative, Dr. Joe Okei-Odumakin, tasked Buhari to honour the late businessman.

Adams said, “I call on President Buhari to renovate and rename the National Stadium in Lagos after Bashorun Abiola.

“Apart from giving justice to a man to whom much is owed by Nigerians, the decision will also go a long way to encourage the young ones that whatever sacrifice they make for their country is not in vain.”

Okei-Odumaki, who described Abiola as a man who “paid the supreme price” also said the National Stadium in Lagos should be named after Abiola.

“Our Democracy Day should be June 12; government should make it the Democracy Day nationwide and the day should be declared a national public holiday,” she added.

The Chairman, Coalition Against Corrupt Leaders, Mr. Debo Adeniran, said, “But beyond renaming National Stadium after the late Abiola, June 12 should be named Abiola Day and it should be declared a national public holiday.”

One of Abiola’s sons, Aliyu, who was at the event, called for investigations into the deaths of all the people who lost their lives as a result of the annulment of the 1993 presidential election.

SOURCE: The Punch.

Group Commends ICPC, EFCC

efcc_nigeriaThe Coalition against Corrupt Leaders (CACOL) has commended the Independent Corrupt Practices and other related offences Commission (ICPC) and the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) on their effort so far in ensuring that corrupt public officials are grilled and quizzed.

This came on the heels of the quizzing of the former Inspector-General of Police, Mr. Mike Okiro and the former Governor of Borno State, Mr. Ali Modu Sherrif. Okiro was quizzed over his alleged involvement in a N275m fraud during his tenure as the Police Service Commission boss while the ex-governor of Borno was invited over an alleged mismanagement of N300bn during his tenure.

Speaking on behalf of the Coalition, its Executive Chairman, Comrade Debo Adeniran commended the ICPC and EFCC for their effort so far on the cases.

He said, “The effort of the anti-graft agencies though late, is worthy of commendation. It must be noted that public officers find it so easy to plummet the coffers of their respective states and nation because they are not made to publicly declare their assets. The cat would have been let out of the bag much earlier if their asset declaration had been on ground for people to be able to monitor the progress that he was making in administration.  By this no corrupt public officials would have been allowed to stay in office longer than necessary.

As for the Ex-governor of Borno State Ali Modu Sheriff accused of embezzling of funds of over N300bn and abuse of office while he was in power, though it is a good thing that he was the one who turned himself over to the EFCC, still the EFCC should ensure that proper investigation is carried and if he is found guilty by the court of law, he should be allowed to face the penalty. Also since he is on administrative bail, the EFCC should ensure that he doesn’t leave the country for any reason whatsoever, until proper investigation is done or until he is declared innocent by a competent court.

And for the former IG, if the need arises for him to be taken to court and persecuted after wards, the  ICPC should ensure that he goes through the judicial process and if found guilty he should be persecuted equally for it; because no corrupt culprit should be allow to go unpunished.   They should be used as an example for others who may want to indulge in any corruption act.”

The Coalition however urged the anti-agencies to keep up the good work and ensure that they make the process a diligent, open and a transparent one.

SOURCE: Universal Reporters.