According to Saraki, the
Red Chamber will make “tough” recommendations to President Muhammadu Buhari on
the matter.
President of the Senate, Dr
Abubakar Bukola Saraki, yesterday said that on resumption next week, the Senate
will investigate the cause of the country’s receding economy and also pass
emergency pieces of legislation to tackle it.
He said the time for identifying
the cause of the economic recession and those responsible for it was over and
that all political leaders should start working together to find a solution.
Saraki, according to a
statement by his special adviser on media and publicity, Mr Yusuph Olaniyonu,
dropped the hint at an interactive session with correspondents in Kwara State,
after observing the Eid-el-Kabir prayers in Ilorin on Monday.
The statement quoted Saraki
as saying that the Senate, on resumption, would respond to the economic crisis
with a number of measures which include getting managers of the economy to give
account to the people, making tough recommendations to the president on needed
changes, formulating necessary legislative framework for economic recovery and
wide consultations across the private sector.
The Senate president
further reiterated his call for a broader and bolder economic plan with input
from both the legislative and executive arms of government, the private sector
and professional groups, noting that the groups must work together to put in
place interventions that will create more jobs, strengthen the Naira, bring
more investment into the country and diversify the nation’s economy.
Saraki, who served as a
special assistant to the president on Budget Matters, during the Obasanjo
administration and chairman of Governors’ Forum, added that the economy will be
the focus of the Senate when it resumes plenary and throughout its remaining
session.
“We are going to have an
exhaustive and comprehensive debate on fixing the country’s economy when we
resume next week. We understand the pains that Nigerians are feeling and we do
not take this for granted.
“Additionally, the Senate
intends to invite everybody involved in the management of the economy to
address the Nigerian people, through the parliament, on the steps that are
being taken to get us out of this mess. We fully intend to hold all those
involved in the economic management of the country accountable. However, we
will do so in a manner that is transparent and there will be no cover-up. We
will make tough recommendations as necessary,” he added.
The Senate president said
it was equally important to begin to interrogate what happened to the measures
aimed at cushioning the effect of the recession built into the 2016 budget and
why they had not been implemented.
“We need to know why the
promises of external borrowing have not materialised, why devaluation has not
helped to strengthen the Naira, why the inflow of foreign currency has
continued to dry up and interest rate is still very high. Doing this will help
us to understand where we are, so that we can determine where exactly we want
to go from here.
“In every crisis, there is
always an opportunity for positive reforms, in this regard, in order to solve
this crisis, all hands must be on deck. Ideas should be sourced from all
quarters: all arms of government, people of different political beliefs, from
all socio-economic backgrounds and every part of Nigeria must work together at
this time,” Saraki added.
According to him, the
Senate will meet with stakeholders in the private sector to ensure it collates
a broad spectrum of opinions while formulating ideas to stimulate the economy.
While calling on the people
to exercise patience and know that political leaders are genuinely concerned
about their plight, Saraki said: “The positive attitude demonstrated by our
people during the Eid-el Kabir festival gave me hope that we in the leadership
of the country should move swiftly to tackle this economic crisis. We have no
option and this we must do without delay,” he said.
Saraki also appealed
journalists around the country to play a more positive role in reporting on
issues that are important to the development of the country, highlighting that
the fourth estate has to work harder to inform the public based on facts.
“I want to use this
opportunity to advise those politicians who specialise in causing division
between the executive and legislature for their personal benefit to know that
this is not the right time for them to ply their trade. We need all arms and
levels of government to work together with the people because we are in an
economic emergency and all hands must be on deck,” he added.

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