National coordinator of the Forum for Justice and
Human Rights Defence, FJHD, Oghenjabor Ikimi, weekend, lamented the cost of
governance in Nigeria was too high, saying,
he could not comprehend why a Senator earns as much as N15 million and
member of the House of Representatives – about N12 monthly.
Responding to the recent statement in Abuja by the
Federal Government through the Minister of Information and Orientation, Mr.
Labaran Maku to the effect that the
nation’s economy would collapse if the deregulation of the downstream sector
was not implemented, he said, “I volcanically disagree with the Federal
Government.”
Continue after the cut...
His words, “I make bold to say that it is the
prohibitive cost of governance that would eventually truncate the Nigerian
economy, rather than its petroleum subsidy regime.
“I am yet to come to terms with the prohibitive cost
of running both the Federal Government and the National Assembly and if I may
ask, why is a Nigerian Senator earning as much as N15million per month
“Or better still, why should a member of the
Nigerian lower house earn as much as N12million per month in terms of salaries
and allowances, outside their constituency allowances”, he asserted.
Ikimi said, “The numerous senseless overseas trips
by the President with huge government delegations often transcend into billions
of naira in terms of estacode and otherwise. Why on earth is the Federal
Government bent on hiking the pump price of petrol when, as a matter of fact , an Abuja High Court has
since declared illegal the deregulation of the down- stream sector.”
“In order words, why is the Federal Government still
trying to market or promote an illegal policy to Nigerians in the face of the
above court verdict, which it is yet to appeal against.
“The above, no doubt, is provocative and Nigerians
would resist same. I, therefore, call on the Federal Government to reduce its
cost of governance by half, while the jumbo salaries and allowances should be
jettisoned in the interest of our ailing economy,” he added.
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