Hameed Ali’s uniform controversy is a mere distraction, not the main issue – Dogara

The Speaker of the House of Representatives, Yakubu Dogara, on Tuesday described the face-off between the Comptroller General of Customs, Hameed Ali, and the Senate as a “mere distraction.”

Mr. Dogara, who stated this when he hosted newspaper editors in his office in Abuja, said the uniform is not supposed to be the main issue.

“The main issue is delivery,” he said, suggesting that Mr. Ali’s performance in office should be the focus.

The senate last week called for the resignation of Mr. Ali, saying he was unfit to hold any public office.

The senate’s decision followed Mr. Ali’s refusal to appear before the lawmakers in full customs uniform. A week before then, the lawmakers had turned Mr. Ali back after he appeared before them, but without the Customs uniform.

Mr. Ali’s problem with the senate started with a controversial customs policy on retroactive payment of duties on imported cars. Following the senate’s condemnation of the policy, the customs reversed it. But the lawmakers insisted Mr. Ali, a retired army colonel, appear before them.

The customs chief refused saying the matter was in court – filed by a private citizen – and there was a directive by the attorney general that both parties maintain the current status.

In its resolution last week, the Senate said it would ask the House of Representatives to concur with its decision.

On Tuesday, Mr. Dogara said the decision of the House of Representatives on the matter can only be decided at the plenary.

“I can’t speak for the House; the House will have to speak for itself through a resolution of the House.

“I cannot pre-judge what the outcome of the debate will be,” he said.

Mr. Dogara, however, said the Senate and House work closely as is necessary in a bicameral legislature.

He said Nigerians and the media should focus more on what the law states on the uniform controversy rather than on the stance of the Senate or Mr. Ali.

 

Source: Premium Times

“President Buhari Is Healthy And In Good Spirit”, Says Saraki. [Pictures]

Senate President Bukola Saraki has said that President Muhammadu Buhari, who is still on vacation in London is healthy and good spirit.

Saraki, in a statement personally signed by him stated this after a meeting with the president at the Abuja House in London.

He visited the president in company of the Speaker of the House of Representatives, Yakubu Dogara and other members of the leadership of the National Assembly including Senate Leader, Ahmed Lawan.

“Delighted to see that President Buhari is doing well, was cheerful and in good spirits”, Saraki said.

“The president I saw today is healthy, witty and himself.”

“The president’s absence and imminent return shows that there is no vacuum in government and our system of democracy is working with all organs of government fulfilling their mandate. And let me use the time tested cliché, there is no cause for alarm!”, Saraki added.

 

BREAKING: Nigerian lawmaker, Bello Sani is dead.

Speaker Yakubu Dogara on Wednesday mourned the passing of a lawmaker from Katsina State, Bello Sani.

Mr. Sani, who until his death represented Mashi/Dvisi Federal Constituency on the platform of the All Progressives Congress, died Wednesday morning.

He was 51.

“Our late colleague was humane, principled and a cosmopolitan who interacted freely with all members,” the Speaker said in a statement while condoling with his family.

Mr. Sani is the second lawmaker to die in office within the last one year, coming months after Adewale Oluwatayo from Lagos State died in Abuja.

Abubakar Adamu, an aide to the late lawmaker, told PREMIUM TIMES his principal had suffered protracted illness for several months leading to his death.

Mr. Adamu said Mr. Bello’s illness became worse two weeks ago and he was rushed to the Federal Medical Centre in Kaduna.

After spending days there without much improvement, he was moved to Aminu Kano Teaching Hospital on Saturday evening where he remained until his death around 11:00 a.m. on Wednesday. His remains were on the way to his hometown in Katsina State for burial, his aide said.

“He died this morning few minutes after 11:00 and we’re now taking his body to Katsina,” Mr. Adamu told PREMIUM TIMES by telephone Wednesday afternoon.

Mr. Bello’s death came six months after he was kidnapped along Kaduna-Abuja Highway.

Mr. Adamu said the deceased had barely returned to the country after spending weeks abroad for medical care when he was abducted.

“He was kidnapped in August 2016 which was just a few days after he returned from foreign trip to get medical attention,” Mr. Adamu said. “He had not been able to recover since then.”

Mr. Bello was first elected to the House in 2011 on the platform of Congress for Democratic Change. He switched to the All Progressives Congress in the run up to the 2015 elections and was re-elected for a second term in office.

Mr. Bello, whom Mr. Dogara described as a “hardworking, committed and patriotic legislator,” was survived by his wife and children.

 

Source: Premium Times

Reps move to impose time limit on appointment of Ministers

The House of Representatives on Thursday passed for second reading a bill proposing that nomination for appointment of ministers should not be later than 30 days from when the president takes oath of office.

The bill also seeks to provide that nomination of commissioners shall be made not later than 30 days from the date a governor is sworn in.

Presenting the bill, Solomon Adaelu (PDP-Abia), said that the need to ensure improved efficiency in governance prompted the amendment bill which sought to alter sections 147 and 192.

According him, sections 147 and 192 of the Constitution are not explicit as to when the president or governors are to make the nominations for appointment of ministers and commissioners.

“Consequently, it is feasible and practically necessary to impose a constitutional time limit for a president to present nominated ministers and their portfolios to the Senate.

“Preferably, 30 days’ time limit after swearing in will be ideal as it provides sufficient time for the president to settle down into governance and carry out final vetting of his nominations.

“And also ensure that the running of governance is not necessarily delayed or held up by the absence of ministers to run the various government departments,’’ Mr. Adaelu said.

He emphasised that experience from other developed countries show that the president already had clear nomination list prior to swearing-in.

“And this is forwarded to the parliament within a short time of inauguration.

“This practice should be constitutionally mandated in Nigeria to improve the efficiency of governance upon a change in government.

“The experience of 2015 whereby it took almost four months after swearing in for the president to forward nominated names to the legislature resulted in a serious setback for governance.

“This adversely affected the serious handling of pressing national issues in the country; this must be prevented by constitutionally imposing time limit,’’ Mr. Adaelu said.

He said that attaching portfolios would facilitate effective screening and deliberation by the legislature on the competence of the nominated person for the particular role he would play in government.

“This will greatly reduce the fixing of round pegs in square holes which is the bane of governance in Nigeria.

“The discretion of the president to assign people to whatever department he deems fit after screening by the legislature is unhealthy as the legislature will not be able to adequately assess his suitability for that role,” Mr. Adaelu said.

The Speaker, House of Representatives, Yakubu Dogara, referred the bill to special ad hoc Committee on Constitution Review.

Poor Leadership Under Developing Africa – Dogara

The Speaker, House of Representatives, Yakubu Dogara, on Tuesday, said poor leadership was one of the causes of underdevelopment in Africa.

 

He made this known when he received the Ambassador of Sudan, Mr Ibrahim Busha in Abuja.

 

He added that the reliance on aids from the western world had left Africans more impoverished than before.

 

Dogara said that unless African leaders begun to practice governance which put Africans first, the development the continent needed would take a little longer to be realised.

 

He added that “I sincerely believe that for us to make progress, leadership in Africa must be for the people. If we do that, there is no limit to the potential of an African.

 

“Unfortunately, we have been locked in a situation whereby leadership and governance as it is practised has only tied us to aids from the western world.

“Instead of looking inwards, we always look outwards to aids that come to Africa and most of these aids have some strings
attached.

“The aids tend to imprison and impoverish our people more than liberating them and putting them on the ladder of economic prosperity.”

 

The speaker said Africa needed to provide quality leadership to the people to eradicate poverty and for economic growth and prosperity.

 

“That is something we can do when we further our cooperation and deepen our relationship with countries that occupy leading positions in Africa,” he noted.

 

?Dogara said this was one of the ways through which the continent could achieve its goals of development, stressing that “going forward, there are many things we can do to provide quality leadership that Africa needs for its progress.”

 

He assured the ambassador that the House of Representatives would work on agreements and treaties between the two countries that would benefit Nigerians.

 

“I am aware of the diverse agreements ?that we have signed. From your own side of the divide, you have even gone further to establish a special implementation committee with regards to agreements signed with Nigeria.

 

“Unfortunately, it has not been done here but we are doing everything possible to ensure that we get it off the ground so that we can work hard toward implementing those agreements.”

 

Responding, Busha assured the Federal Government of the Sudanese government’s support.

 

 

(NAN)

Stop Blaming APC For Nigeria’s Economic Challenges – Dogara

Yakubu Dogara, Speaker, House of Representatives, has called on the critics of the All Progressives Congress-led administration to stop blaming the government for the current economic challenges facing Nigeria.

 

Dogara made the call in a statement signed by Mr Turaki Hassan, his Special Adviser, Media and Public Affairs and issued to newsmen on Tuesday in Abuja.

 

The statement said Dogara made the statement when he received unemployed Aeronautic Engineers and Pilots from Bauchi State who paid him a courtesy visit.

 

He said that instead of the blaming the APC-led government, the people who brought Nigeria to its current state should be blamed.

 

Dogara said that the Buhari-led government was working hard to sanitise the system, adding that it would take some time to achieve the objective.

“You know that we are facing challenges in the country at the moment. Even though people do not want to talk about on the ground that we campaigned that we are going to fix the country,’’ he said.

 

“We have sowed in the wind and we are now reaping whirlwind and as long as the earth abides, there will be seed time and harvest time. We do not want to dwell in the past, we are facing the future,’’ he said.

 

The speaker urged unemployed youths in the country not to despair and assured them that government was doing everything possible to create job opportunities.

 

“Investment in education, skills and knowledge is never a wasted investment,’’ he said and expressed optimism in the ability of the government to reduce unemployment in the country. Don’t despair because no training is wasted; but it is our responsibility to open the private sector for job opportunities,’’ he said.

 

He urged Nigerians to join hands with the government to sanitise the system to enable it create job opportunities, especially for the youth.

 

“If youths are not employed, it will be a disservice to the society as well as discouragement to the graduates, ’’ he said.

 

Speaking earlier, the leader of the team, Capt. Bala Jibrin, said that the pilots and Aeronautic Engineers, who were sponsored by Bauchi State Government to acquire knowledge in the United States, graduated in 2011.

 

Jibrin, who said that the pilots and Aeronautic Engineers had been unemployed since their arrival in the country, requested the speaker to facilitate their employment.

 

He said that Bauchi government spent N1 billion to train the 20 youths drawn from the 20 Local government areas of the state.

 

 

(NAN)

Be Committed To Buhari’s Anti-Corruption Campaign, Dogara Tells Reps

Speaker of the House of Representatives, Yakubu Dogara, on Monday urged members of the house’s standing committees to be committed to the anti-corruption fight of the present administration.

Dogara gave the charge while the inauguration the committees in the green chamber in Abuja.

He said that each committee was expected to lead the fight through their legislative actions.

“The Constitution has specifically reposed in the National Assembly, not the Executive, the duty and responsibility to “expose corruption, inefficiency or waste in the execution or administration of laws within its legislative competence.

“This also includes the disbursement or administration of funds appropriated by it and the committees remain the most important mechanism for carrying out this solemn constitutional mandate,” he said.

He said that the leadership of the house would be “very sensitive to any report of wrongdoing or corrupt practices by any member or leadership of a committee”.

“By choice we have declared in our Legislative Agenda that ours is a people-centred house,” he said, adding that, the implication was that “in this season of change, our people must be at the centre of our committees’ oversight assignment”.

He added that “in this season of change, members have lost the liberty to engage in the pursuit of self. The unbridled pursuit of self may justly be pronounced the very definition of poverty.”

Dogara, expressed the hope that the committee would afford members the opportunity to serve and empower the people and not themselves, reminded all of the need to work together as a team.

He said that a committee that worked together had better chance of executing its mandate successfully and urged of leadership of committees to involve every member in their activities.

He also said that related committees should hold “joint policy oversight and investigative hearings,” where convenient.

“Effort should be made to involve your counterparts in the Senate where the same issues are being investigated, to avoid dissipation of parliamentary energy.

“Committees should be guided by the relevant Standing Orders, the Constitution, existing Laws, judicial precedents and our Legislative Agenda document in the discharge of their duties.

“Finally, I congratulate you all for your appointment into these committees both as members and as leaders and wish you all a successful tenure.

“The leadership of the house will continue to monitor the performance of the leadership of the various committees and will conduct a mid-term review,” he said.

The speaker told those not appointed as leaders of committees that it was not a reflection of their capacity or competence, assuring that there would be other avenues for them to render service to the house and the nation.

“In any case, if any member in a leadership position fails to justify the confidence reposed in him or her, other persons will be given the responsibility.

“May I, therefore, formally inaugurate all the special and standing committees of the house to begin the great task of working with the executive in bringing ‘change’ to Nigeria,” he said.

NAN reports that Chairman of the National Assembly and President of the Senate, Bukola Saraki, was at the event as well as some former principal officers of the house.

Dogara mourns Olu of Warri

The Speaker of the House of Representatives, Yakubu Dogara, has extended his condolences to the government and people of Delta State over the death of the Olu of Warri, Godwin Edomi.

A statement issued by Dogara’s Special Adviser on Media and Public Affairs, Mr Turaki Hassan, on Monday stated that the speaker said the country had lost one of its revered traditional rulers.

“The late monarch was a father for all and consummate lawyer whose 28 year reign brought peace and tranquility amongst his people.

“I am deeply touched by the news of the demise of the Olu of Warri. I pray God gives his family, his subjects and the people of Delta State the fortitude to bear the irreparable loss,’’ it stated.

 

The statement, which said the late monarch lived an exemplary life worth of emulation, urged the people of Warri to honor him by living in peace and harmony.

“The late Olu’s demise was a big loss not just to the Itsekiri nation, but Nigeria at large.

“As people of faith, we know that he has gone to rest as all mortals must die,’’ the statement stated.

Ortom escapes losing seat as Benue Governor after Buhari’s intervention

The crisis rocking the Benue State chapter of the All Progressives Congress (APC) has finally come to an end owing to the timely intervention of President Muhammadu Buhari.

 

The development has saved Governor Samuel Ortom from losing his seat.

 

Announcing the outcome of a Reconciliation Committee constituted at the instance of Buhari, the Speaker of the House of Representatives, Hon. Yakubu Dogara, who read Buhari’s message yesterday, announced that Hon. Emmanuel Jime and Senator Joseph Waku had agreed to withdraw their suit, challenging the eligibility of Ortom as the duly nominated APC governorship candidate in the April 11, 2015 poll.

 

 

The peace committee, after a three-hour meeting behind closed-doors at the APC national secretariat in Abuja, stated that no sacrifice was too much to achieve the desired peace in Benue State.

 

Dogara said, “On behalf of Mr. President and Commander-in-Chief of the Federal Republic of Nigeria, President Muhammadu Buhari, I wish to announce to you our leaders, gentlemen of the press and the whole world that Hon. Jime and Senator Waku have graciously agreed to withdraw or discontinue with the case in court.”

 

Other members of the committee, who attended the meeting include state Governors: Aminu Tambuwal (Sokoto); Simon Lalong (Plateau) and Tanko Al-Makura (Nasarawa). Other stakeholders from Benue like Ortom, Jime, Waku, Senators George Akume and Barnabas Gemade were also in attendance.

 

Source : Daily Post