Nigeria’s landscape recently chronicled
yet another episode involving a member of the House of Representatives from All
Progressives Congress (APC ) representing
Surulere-1 Federal Constituency in Lagos, Femi Gbajabiamila.
The society was consequently
charged with diverse interpretations, commendations and condemnations. The crux
was a purchase of a brand new Mercedes Benz G-Wagon for his wife as a 50th
birthday gift which was adduced to a long-time savings on account of supports,
encouragements and love he has enjoyed from his spouse.
To a number of people, the lawmaker splendidly
deserved commendations for openly expressing love to his helpmeet of nearly
three decades putting into consideration how numerous marriages are winding up
every now and then. Provincially, Gbajabiamila deserved encomium if he had become
functus officio vis-à-vis his elective position as a legislator or remained a
legal practitioner. However, a holistic evaluation of the gesture will likely
frown at him especially for the open show as a public officeholder. The
foremost reason is that a public officeholder must be moderate, sensitive and
prudent at least while in office rather than getting involved in ostentatious
displays. Had Gbajabiamila quietly bought the glitzy Mercedes Benz brand
without public show, certainly, the public would have allowed it to go as one
of the excesses they get from those elected in governments. The public would
have also taken it amongst myriad of betrayals they get from public
officeholders especially at the National Assembly.
The blow only jogged the memory on the
recently exposed unaccountable monthly running cost of N13.5million and annual allocation
of N200million for constituency projects the lawmakers hostilely allocated to themselves
merely for siphoning public funds since 1999 while their respective
constituencies remained in miserable conditions with nothing on ground. These
are indeed the height of economic sabotage. The bitter truth is that no Nigerian
lawmaker at the moment needs any long-time savings to buy a G-wagon as the
system unconsciously, porously favoured them at the detriment of the masses.
Though, the lawmaker committed no crimes by the action, however, it is ethically
wide of the mark for a public servant in a nation that succeeded through
President Muhammadu Buhari’s prudent policies to exit economic recession to
embark on such frivolity particularly while in office. Aside it alongside the
jumbo allowances, nothing is too prized for a supportive spouse.
Recently, a private businessman and
renowned philanthropist, Alhaji Aliko Dangote remarkably, generously lined up a
total of 150 new brand salon cars with built-in security gadgets as contribution
to the Nigerian Police Force to aid operations over the prevalent security
challenges. Such patriotic gestures to the government and the society at large
deserved accolades. Dangote’s action epitomized sensitivity, leadership and
selflessness. Unfortunately, materialism has become a common lifestyles amongst
government officials especially senators and their counterparts in the lower
chamber.
It therefore calls for sober reflections.
Had the lawmaker invested the purported ‘saved money’ in realty or even
silently added the car to his fleet, nobody would notice let alone complain.
Thus, the matter goes beyond G-wagon but ensuring that public funds are
allocated and spent judiciously and accordingly. The dirge would rather sensibly
concentrate on the jumbo allowances the lawmakers allocated to themselves which
have continued to drain the economy.
For example, the National Assembly’s 2018
budget was recently, craftily jerked up to N139.5 billion from N125 billion it
was in 2017 under the cloak of ‘added constituency
projects’ despite public outcries to slash allocations of the legislative arm, above
all, when no such constituency projects had existed anywhere in reality. Overall,
the appropriation bill was increased from N8.6trillion presented by President Buhari
to N9.12trillion by the lawmakers. By the way, why did the lawmakers get the
powers to be awarding and executing capital projects under Nigerian laws, particularly
without bidding rather than legislative duties and oversight functions which do
not in any way go beyond supervisory roles on executive’s activities? Aptly,
lawmakers could endorse a project in their respective constituencies to the
executive and also supervise when awarded but to execute; an aberration.
Thus, the financial rascality goes
beyond party affiliation and may never cease except more stringent mechanisms
are put in place. How do we justify a judge of the High court earning almost peanuts
despite the onerous tasks the profession entails? A critical evaluation of
volume of cases filed to the courts on daily basis for the judges to meticulously
read and adjudicate will inevitably draw great sympathy over their plights.
Meanwhile, those in the legislative arm with no clearly defined qualifications
or tasks liberally earn as monthly allowances what some judges do not earn per
annum. Hence, the rumble or grumble over the G-wagon is misplaced but ensuring
that public funds are judiciously allocated.
By and large, the anti-graft battle may
have to be deepened, and toughened as the increment in the budget on
constituency projects must be substantiated this time despite the howling. The
agency, possibly may have to adopt ‘operation-show-your-constituency-projects’
as it owes the populace a duty to trace where the constituency projects are sited
or positioned alongside substantiating the monthly running costs as
accountability characterizes and accompanies all public funds.
Umegboro is a public
affairs analyst and an associate of The Chartered Institute of Arbitrators (United
Kingdom).
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