Opinion
Public Offices For Personal Gains
Does anyone still wonder why some people will do anything possible to occupy political positions in Nigeria? During elections, millions of naira are spent by contestants, security agencies are deployed to interfere with the electoral process not minding that there are legal limits to their involvement in an election, thugs are engaged to kill and maim among other atrocities being committed by political office seekers.And you think their desperation to win elections stems from their love for the country and the citizens?
Well, two recent incidents, just like numerous others, can be used to ascertain the genuineness or otherwise of the usual profession of politicians and some other public officer holders that “I want to serve my people and the nation.”
The Enugu State House of Assembly last week introduced a bill for a law to provide life pension for the former governors and deputy governors of the state. The bill which already scaled the first reading sought to make former governors and deputy governors entitled to receive gratuity as well as pension for life at the expense of the state government. It also provides for medical allowance not exceeding N12 million per annum for one surviving spouse, provided that such spouse was married to the governor while in office; free medical services for both ex-governor and ex-first lady until death.
Other provisions of the bill include: adequate security for the former governors for their lifetime; three vehicles to an ex-governor to be replaced every four years as well as a personal assistant on salary Grade level 14; a house maintenance allowance, an annual salary for five domestic staff and a vehicle allowance, each valued at 300 per cent of the ABS.
There are also similar provisions for former deputy governors who would get 200 per cent of their ABS each for house allowance, vehicle allowance and annual salary for three domestic staff; two vehicles, to be replaced every four years, free medical services for himself and his wife as well as N6 million medical allowance for the latter.
Also outrageous is that “When a former governor or former deputy governor dies, the state government should make adequate arrangements and bear the financial responsibility for his burial. “The state government should pay a condolence allowance of a sum equivalent to the annual basic salary of the incumbent to his next of kin.
All these because the ex-governors and their deputies “served” the state for four years or eight years as the case may be. Meanwhile, in that same state and across the nation, civil servants labour for 35 years and can hardly afford shelters over their heads not to talk of functional vehicles. Payment of N30, 000.00 minimum wage to workers, pension and gratuity to pensioners is still a big issue.
Let’s not talk about the national and global economic realities that have skyrocketed poverty rate everywhere and some lawmakers in a state like Enugu that is struggling financially want to continue to enrich a few privileged persons who have benefitted so much from the state through a sleazy pension?
Incidentally, before the dust raised by the widely condemned bill could settle, a member of the House of Representatives Committee on House Services, Hon Yunusa Abubakar, took to a national television to make a case for what he called grossly inadequate allocation for the management of the National Assembly. According to him, the N16 billion allocated for the running of the National Assembly in the current national budget is very insufficient. Asked what will be adequate for the job he boldly said that the amount should be doubled. That is raising it to N32 billion.
He listed what consumes the allocation to include: N40 million monthly for the maintenance of the chambers; about N10million monthly impress for each lawmaker; day to day business of the parliament among others. This is outside their monthly earnings which in 2018 an ex-senator, Shehu Sani, was gracious to disclose runs in millions. According to him, senators received N13.5 million monthly outside their N700, 000 monthly consolidated salary and allowances.
To think that a tiny fraction of the population enjoys all this largess and is demanding for a 100% increase even when millions of the citizens are unemployed, many people are dying of hunger and starvation smacks of the lawmakers’ insensitivity to the plight of the people they represent.
With great endowments in human and natural resources, in addition to vast agricultural potentials, the nation should have been Africa’s undisputed economic giant, a dream country where at least the basic needs of the citizens are adequately catered for. But the ceaseless plundering of the national and state treasuries by public office holders has made living in the land hellish – no food, epileptic power supply, insecurity everywhere, no good roads, no water and all that. The other day’s news had it that four litres of water is now being sold for N100.00 in Gwagwalada and some parts of the Federal Capital Territory. A bag of sachet water previously sold for N60. 00 now goes for between N120.00 and N150.00 due to acute water shortage in those areas.
So, as Hon. Abubakar suggested, it is high time the legislators and members of other arms of government came down from their high horses and begin to conduct their affairs in accordance with the current economic realities of the country. Now, more than ever before, there is a need to cut down the cost of governance and block all the conduit pipes of wastage that are draining the nation’s economy and put the money into useful ventures. Scrapping or merging of the chambers of NASS as has been severally suggested must be given due consideration.
In the case of Enugu, it is hoped that having taken a laudable decision to harken to the peoples’ demand and step down the controversial bill, the lawmakers should take a step further to institute a bill that will repeal the already existing Enugu State Gubernatorial Pensions Law and free the state from the looting hands of former public office holders just as their colleagues in Zamfara and some other states did.
Such a huge sum can be channelled to tackling the perennial water problem in the state and other infrastructural deficits that will make life more meaningful for the generality of the people or invested in the manufacturing sector that will create jobs for the large number of unemployed youths in the state? Until common good becomes the ultimate goal of public leadership instead of personal gains, the nation cannot move forward.
By: Calista Ezeaku
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