Aminu Tambuwal, the Speaker of House of Representatives was severely
criticised by Nigeria’s presidency this morning over his criticisms of
President Goodluck Jonathan at the anti corruption conference organised
by the Nigeria Bar Association yesterday.
Tambuwal stated that Jonathan has not demonstrated seriousness in the fight against corruption.
In
a series of posts online, Reuben Abati, spokesperson for President
Jonathan said the Speaker should focus more on the efforts of the
administration to fight corruption and comment on what he knows.
The
Presidential spokesperson who said it is unfortunate that the Speaker
who is occupying such a high office is talking about body language
however said “the President is not going to fight corruption on the
basis of mere speculation or bad politics being played by some people.”
“He is certainly in a position to know the truth and defend both his party and government,” said Abati.
“He
should make efforts to know that government is investigating various
matters and working on them according to due process,” Abati said while
affirming that the President will not condone any act of corruption.
“The fight against corruption is ultimately a collective responsibility,” Abati concluded.
Tambuwal,
had on Monday said President Goodluck Jonathan cabinet well as
Nigeria’s leading anti graft agency, the Economic and Financial Crimes
Commission, EFCC are encouraging corruption.
“The President’s body
language’ seems to be encouraging corrupt practices in the country,”
the speaker who was the guest speaker at the 2013 International
anti-corruption day organised by the Nigerian Bar Association, NBA, in
Abuja said.
The Speaker cited the subsidy probe, the pension scam, the Securities
and Exchange Commission probe and the two bullet proof BMW cars
involving Stella Oduah, the Minister of Aviation as instances when the
executive arm of government and the EFCC have refused to act even when
clear cut cases of corruption have been established.“In some
cases, you have the government setting up new committees to duplicate
the job already done by the parliament. Take the bullet proof cars case,
the NSA, with all the security challenges confronting the country,
should not be burdened with a job that can best be handled by the
anti-corruption agencies,” said Tambuwal
According to him,
government has no business setting up any administrative committee in a
corruption case that is clear to all Nigerians, in obvious reference to
the committee set up by the President to probe the N255 million car
scandal involving the Minister of Aviation, Stella Oduah.
“What
the President should have done was to explicitly direct the EFCC to
probe the matter. With such directives coming from the President, I am
sure we still have good people in EFCC who can do a good job,” he said.
The
Speaker especially decried the usual resort of the presidency to the
setting up of committees to probe corrupt allegations involving highly
placed public officers.
“By the action of setting up different
committees for straightforward cases, the president’s body language
doesn’t tend to support the fight against corruption,” said Tambuwal.
He also the Federal Executive Council, FEC, should not be used as a forum for approving and clearing contracts.
“When
I raised this issue earlier, some people started attacking my
personality, accusing me of confronting the office of the President.
However, I still maintain that the provision of the law which requires
the Bureau of Public Procurement, BPP, to set up a council should be
respected. The process of award or review of contracts should not be a
one man affair. We know that Mr Eze cannot do it alone.
“On our
part, we have the desire to support the anti-corruption agencies in
terms of funding, but then, our friends from the other side of
government always feel that immediately they bring their budget we
should quickly rubber stamp it for them to go. Yet they do not implement
the budget even when it is passed. They have not even met up to 40/59%
implementation till this December.
“Fight against corruption
should be personalised by every Nigerian. All of us, individually and
collectively have a role to play.
“It is my opinion that it is
indeed needless for the Executive to constitute probe committees to look
into allegations of corruption, especially in the public sector,” said
Tambuwal.
The Speaker said it is ironic that EFCC never accounted for huge sums of money it received from donor agencies.
“
I am happy that EFCC is here because they are also corrupt. Let us
start by asking them what happens to grants they receive from donor
agencies which are neither budgeted nor accounted for? That is
corruption.
The Speaker also accused the anti graft agency of always
looking the other way when government officials are indicted for
corruption.
“EFCC said it has started implementing the report on
probe of the fuel subsidy regime. Let me say it here today that what
EFCC said it is implementing is not the House report which exposed the
enormous fraud in the system, but the one by Mr. Aigboje Aig-Imoukhuede.
We have done our job, go and do yours.
“What has happened to all
the exposed corruption cases? The Pension Scam, recent and obvious fraud
in the Aviation sector, that of the Security and Exchange Commission,
SEC, where trillions of Naira from private investors were suspected to
have been mismanaged.
“When we commenced investigation into the
matter, what became of paramount importance to the EFCC was allegation
that one of our members collected money as estacode to travel but failed
to do so.
“Our members were immediately rushed to court for
prosecution, meanwhile, the top government officer that was found
culpable in the main fraud for which the National Assembly called for
public hearing, nothing has happened to her till date.
“Coming to
what happened in the Aviation industry recently, do we need an angel to
report to EFCC that something happened there? No we don’t! We all
belong to this country so people should stop taking us for granted.
“I
cannot hear or read anywhere that she was invited by the EFCC or that
any member of SEC was even invited. We at the National Assembly, for the
sake of probity and accountability, agreed that budgetary allocation to
the Commission should be suspended, only for us to hear that the
Executive found a leeway of funding the agency. We are currently
investigating that.
“This is why we have asked the House Committee
of EFCC to look into some of these issues and report back to the
House,” Tambuwal added.
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