Senate confirms 18 nominees
AS the Senate yesterday continued the screening of the ministerial
nominees submitted by President Muhammadu Buhari, two of the 18
candidates, screened and confirmed, immediate past governor of Lagos
State, Babatunde Raji Fashola and Group Managing Director (GMD), Nigeria
National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC), Emmanuel Ibe Kachikwu (Delta)
may have emerged ‘the stars to watch.’
Both nominees had Senators listening with rapt attention due to their
knowledgeable, incisive and comprehensive analyses of issues close to
their hearts. The other 16 nominees who were also screened and confirmed
include: Aisha Alhassan, Lai Mohammed, Ogbonnaya Onu, Kemi Adeosun,
Kayode Fayemi and Amina Ibrahim.
Others are, Audu Ogbe, Chris Ngige, Hadi Sirika, Udoh Udoma, Solomon
Dalong, Ibrahim Usman, Suleiman Adamu,an engineer, Abubakar Malami,
Abdulrahman Dambazzau and
Osagie Ehamere.
Fashola, the first nominee , spoke for an hour, passionately espousing his belief that the Nigerian police for effectiveness.
According to him: “There is a necessity first to decentralise the
police. The number available to me is that we have probably a police
force of about 500, 000 for a population that is heading towards 180
million. We are under-policed and even if the Federal Government decided
to take on the responsibility on its own, can it really do so on the
micro level that is necessary for the state, the local government and
all other levels?”
He recommended a compelling urgency for decentralisation, saying: “I
have made those recommendations to some of the committees of
Constitutional Amendments where I was privileged to make
representations. But the arguments about why we should not decentralise
the police, with due respect distinguished senators, do not go far. They
did not address the fundamental responsibilities that the government
has. Such argument that government will abuse state police for political
purposes pales before the fact that the abuse of political power is not
as important as the loss of life.”
On security, the former governor said: “The purpose for which
government exists, to protect the citizens and their property. This is
the toughest job that any government can have. It is the challenge that
leaders across the world are facing, terrorism, crime and others.”
He likened the matter of security to a competition between an
administrator and criminals saying: “My attitude was to see criminals as
my competitors and in a competition my desire is to win. I will use my
resources to win and steal the competition and outmanouvre my
competition.
“In this type of competition, my job as a governor is to ensure that
nobody died; my job is to ensure that nobody is robbeded so I have no
magic to do the job because for every citizen that is robbed I have
failed. So I have to be right every time and the criminal have to be
wrong.
“But even when the criminals were right, what is important is to
demonstrate to our citizens that weren’t without solutions and when
there is an incident and we are able to resolve it means we can now put a
lot of confidence in the citizens.
“This is a pattern that we didn’t follow. It was Federal Government
architecture, a federal police arrangement. There was time the police
operated without enough equipment including arms and ammunition. In my
interaction with them this was the kind of complaints I got from the
officers and it was clear to me that this is not what the state
government alone could do so we have to involve the stakeholders in the
banks and other institutions. I made some of the stakeholders,
particularly those in the bank to realize is that if you can bulletproof
your banks and care about your workers and customers can you
bulletproof every home? If you bring some of these monies and put it in
the security trust fund it will help.”
“I will never attempt to personally take credit for the works that
you have mentioned that happened in Lagos. It was a collective effort
including that of my predecessors in office and it is a continuing
effort. And so it would be extremely inappropriate and immodest of me,
and they would even allowed it if I attempted to take personal
responsibility for all of what happened.”
The former governor also cleared allegations of corruption leveled
against him, saying: “As governor of Lagos, I didn’t sign cheques. None
of my commissioners signed cheques. I didn’t sit in awards of contracts.
There is a Tender Board that handles contracts
The unfortunate thing about money is that it always raises suspicion,
even among brothers. In all, nobody has said I have personally enriched
myself.”
On the issue of taxation, he said: “Before we decided to increase
taxes, we must first optimize the capacity to harness what is
increased.”
On the concept of loyalty, he posited: “Loyalty is a very strange
concept. May our loyalty never be tested. If your loyalty is tested, you
might end up taking a bullet for your own children.
In public life, I have remained loyal to causes I have signed on to. Nobody can accuse me of going back on my words.”
While he tendered apology over the deportation of some destitute
Nigerians during his period as governor, he explained: “In a federation,
the right to free movement is not absolute; it carries with a
responsibility not to be a nuisance. Those moved to their states of
origin were those who asked to be taken home.
I have tendered public apology and I still tender it today in the interest of national cohesion.”
The other ‘star’, the GMD of NNPC Emmanuel Kachikwu, spoke on reforms
in the corporation, the subsidy regime, petroleum assets management and
the unbundling of the state oil corporation, which he heads.
On subsidy, he said: “If you ask anybody from the private sector
whether subsidy should remain, I think you would get a categorical no.
So, you can’t embellish that. But having said that and in my
conversations with His Excellency, the president, he understands that;
he gets it. He has been petroleum minister before. But what I think he
is very deeply worried about is if we take away this subsidy without
adequate plans on the palliatives, like we have just mentioned, what is
going to be the impact on the populace. So, we are having a continuing
dialogue on this. I think we are both determined that at some point in
time, given the sheer effect on the national economy of subsidy today,
something would have to happen on subsidy.
We are doing a number of things. First, we are doing an analysis of
subsidy at what number? Do we consume 40 million litters like the data
says? Or do we consume 25? My six weeks there shows me that we are
closer to 30 million litres than we are to 40. To that extent, that is
already a 25 per cent drop in the subsidy number. We have the cost in
terms of demurrage; can we be more efficient and wipe that out? That is
about 25 per cent factor again. Then we have the bank interest. If we
can have financing mechanism that enables us to fund as and when due
interventions by independent marketers in this stuff, there would also
be a reduction.
But, at the end of the day, the problem with subsidy is that if you
don’t handle it well without the palliatives what would happen. What are
some of the palliatives? The National Health Scheme touches every
Nigerian. Railway development all over the country touches every
Nigerian, so does power. Subsidy at transportation points, in things
like motor tickets. My understanding is that the president is a lot more
minded in attacking subsidy once he is able to deal with the palliative
issues rather than simply yanking it out. My duty, in the short term,
is first to continue with that dialogue and get him comfortable with it.
Two and, more important, is to also help him to develop a comfort
factor on those palliatives.
Three, get subsidy to a level to a level where we can say this is the
actual cost of subsidy. There is a lot of fraud that went into the
subsidy scheme. If you strip it of the fraud, what really is the
subsidy. If we carry out an analysis for example and find out that the
subsidy element is not more than N10, the question anybody would ask you
is, if N10 is too much an amount to give to your citizens. And can you
fund that subsidy through other mechanisms.
But if it now turns out, as the data are indicating currently before
the research, that you are subsidizing the product at about N40, clearly
the ability of state governments to do their work becomes unbearable.
There is a research that needs to happen; a dialogue that needs to
happen and we are going to get to the end of the subsidy issue.”
The spellbinding performance of Fashola and Kachikwu , notwithstanding the others also had their day .
Malami, in his remarks, said he was making an undertaking to be true
to his God, Federal Republic of Nigeria (FRN) and the President,
Muhammadu Buhari in whatever responsibility given to him.
Ngige, who received a rousing welcome highlighted what he said he
achieved as governor and senator including the committees he worked with
in the 7th Senate. Ngige said he was instrumental to the founding of
the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) in 1998 and that when the Action
Congress of Nigeria(ACN) was to be formed, he also participated actvely
until it merged with others to become the All Progressives Congress
(APC).
Ngige who described the PDP as ‘a former vehicle’ took a bow and was cheered out of the chambers by numerous admirers.
Dalong, the nominee from Plateau State, on judicial reform, said he
would push for corrective reform of the prison system, adding that to
move Nigeria forward, the nation must insist on adhering to laid down
rules and regulations.
He said Nigeria must examine the history of the crisis in , as
insecurity is caused by unemployment and poverty. He said an inclusive
master plan is necessary to rescue the situation.
When speaking on the issue of corruption, Mr Dalong said corruption
is a generic term and to find the root of corruption, we must examine
the existing legal order, noting, “if we do not determine what
corruption is, we may smuggle morality into law,”
On the social media, Mr. Dalong said regulation is a very serious aspect of our law that needs to be considered.
Adeosun from Ogun State, on her part, noted that there was need for
creative-innovative solutions to add value to Nigeria, emphaisisng on
blockage of leakages and urgent need to invest in infrastructure.
“Everywhere that people transact in cash, there are leakages”, She said.
She said the country needed to seek out other forms of cash transfer that faces out physical cash.
Mrs. Adeosun said that there is need to invest primarily in
infrastructure, adding that banks are not in business to sit on
government money, it’s bad economics.
While speaking about Foreign Investment, she said that the major challenge of is infrastructure.
“We need to establish public-private-partnerships to develop
Nigeria’s infrastructure. If we get our infrastructure right, there are
opportunities”, She said.
She added that Nigeria has to increase its revenues and improve on
things like audits, adding, “Increase revenues, better cost efficiency
and seek out other sources of funding to avert recession.”
Senator Alhassan, from Taraba State, debunks the claims that her
ministerial appointment is compensation for her failed gubernatorial
bid.
She addressed the supposed rumor that she was voted based on sentiment.
Mrs. Alhasasn talked about judicial corruption and cited various
forms of corruption that can come about. “The key players of corruption
in the judiciary are the bar and the bench”, she said.
Source: ngrguadiannews.com
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