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ICPC asks National Assembly to make its finances transparent, open

The chairman of the Independent Corrupt Practices and Other Related Offences Commission (ICPC), Professor Bolaji Owasanoye, has urged the National Assembly to remove the secrecy surrounding its budget to improve accountability and transparency.

A statement on Monday from the spokesperson of ICPC, Rasheedat Okoduwa, said Owasanoye disclosed this during a lecture at the 9th National Assembly Induction Programme for new legislators held in Abuja recently.

She said in a lecture titled ‘The Legislature and Fight against Graft and Corruption,’ the ICPC boss spoke on the alleged outlandish allowances of members of National Assembly and the controversial issue of constituency projects.

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He said that the public perception of legislators as being corrupt would not go away until the National Assembly throws open its yearly budget to the public.

He stressed that the execution of the National Assembly budget which has grown exponentially from N6.9 billion in 1999 to about N139 billion in 2018 for the same number of legislators has remained shrouded in secrecy thereby giving room for allegations of abuse and misappropriation of the funds.

“It is believed that we have the highest paid legislators representing the poorest people in the world. Since 1999, NASS budget has increased without defensible legal or moral justification.

“Without an increase in membership and addition of only one or two agencies, NASS budget grew from N6.9 billion 1999 to N139 billion in 2018,” Okoduwa quoted Owasanoye as saying.

“The problem is that it is just a single line item. The public is hardly told the breakdown and how it is used. The criticisms will disappear if we are told how it is spent,” he said.

Owasanoye described corruption as the enemy of development and good governance and the biggest challenge to Nigeria’s development, adding that the Legislature must wake up to its role of oversight over Ministries, Departments and Agencies (MDAs) to curb the menace.

He said, “Corruption in the Executive is far more than the legislature and judiciary combined. This is because the Executive spends a far bigger chunk of the money appropriated.”

Owasanoye also took exception to the way the National Assembly conducts its statutory oversight on MDAs, noting that asking government departments and agencies to fund the oversight was inappropriate.

According to him, “The power of oversight is largely impotent because it has been commercialized. The Legislature is accused of passing the cost to MDAs and of accepting other forms of gratification e.g. foreign travels, phoney seminars, etc. to look the other way.”

He enjoined the 9th National Assembly to move away from the presumed norm and chart a new course which will, in the long run, aid the fight against corruption, as he reiterated the readiness of ICPC to work with the in-coming legislators.

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