Femi Falana counselled the
Federal Government on what to do with those undermining the anti-corruption
war.
Senior Advocate of Nigeria
(SAN), Femi Falana, in a lecture he delivered yesterday at the investiture of
Mr Dele Ojogbede as President of Rotary Club, Ikoyi in Lagos, said, it is
illegal for former governors, who have been placed on life pension in their
states, to also earn salaries in the National Assembly.
He also said that lawmakers
should not be paid their full salaries and allowances if they don’t sit for the
mandatory 181 days before going on a seven-month recess.
In regards to former
governors in the Senate, Falana said:
“It is high time the
Federal Government stopped the payment of salaries and allowances to former
governors who are in the senate. Since they are on pension for life, it is
illegal to continue to pay them salaries and allowances at the same time.”
He added that none of the
469 lawmakers in the National Assembly had justification for the entitlements
they collected in the first legislative year under the President Muhammadu
Buhari administration.
He said: “The APC-led
National Assembly has also engaged in collecting jumbo emoluments for services
not rendered to the nation.
“Whereas Section 63 of the
Constitution provides that the Senate and the House of Representatives shall
each sit for not less than 181 days in a year, Section 68 thereof states that
any legislator who fails to attend the proceedings of the Senate for less than
one third of the required number of days shall automatically lose his or her
seat.
“For the first legislative
year which ended on June 9, the Seventh session of the National Assembly did
not meet the constitutional requirement. Specifically, due to incessant
recesses, the House of Representatives sat for only 104 days while the Senate
sat for 96 days. This means that the Senate sat for barely 50 per cent of the
required sitting period.
“Indeed, some of the
senators who had to attend criminal courts where they are standing trial for
corrupt practices did not seat for up to 70 days throughout the legislative
year.
The Senate was actually
shut down on a number of occasions to enable the Senate President, Dr. Bukola
Saraki to attend the proceedings of the Code of Conduct Tribunal (CCT) where he
is standing trial for false declaration of assets.
And in solidarity with him,
a number of senators abandoned their duties to accompany him to the tribunal.
“Since the labour policy of
“no work no pay” is applicable to all public officers the legislators ought not
to have been paid when they did not perform any legislative duty.
“In other words, having
failed to sit for the mandatory period of 181 days the legislators were not
entitled to payment of and allowances for the whole legislative year.
“Having been paid full
emoluments when they failed to sit for the required number of days, the
legislators ought to refund some money to the treasury.
“In the circumstance, the
Accountant-General of the Federation should ensure that the legislators are
made to refund the money collected for the number of days they failed to sit in
the National Assembly.”
Source: The
Nation
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