By Sunny Anderson Osiebe...
As President Muhammadu Buhari presents the 2017 Budget to the Joint
Session of the National Assembly on Wednesday, the Senate has said that
it would not be a rubber stamp in consideration of the Medium Term
Expenditure Framework (MTEF) which is due to be discussed on Thursday.
The position of the Senate was made known yesterday by its Leader,
Senator Mohammed Ali Ndume, who represented the Senate President, Dr.
Abubakar Bukola Saraki, when a civil society group, Centre for Social
Justice (CSJ) led by Barrister Eze Onyekpere submitted a report on MTEF
to the Senate.
The Senate Leader who justified his earlier comments that the MTEF was
empty said gone are the days when the National Assembly would rubber
stamp any document, insisting that the legislature will always analyze
all documents to ensure that the interest of the citizens are protected.
According to the Senate Leader, "We are Nigerians, we represent
Nigerians, this is Medium Terms Expenditure Framework for Nigerians and
not for the World Bank. And in the Senate, we have experts. So, when
they brought the MTEF, we said that we will subject it to critical
analyses and not rubber stamp it and then it was in the media that
National Assembly should be blamed for not passing the budget in time, I
responded by telling them they brought empty documents.
"We are professionals here. We are grateful to centres like you that
are non-governmental. You are independent. This is what we need, not
bringing reports from World Bank or from any expert from diaspora that
come to play on the intelligence of Nigerians. We want to thank you and
assure you on behalf of the Senate that we are not only going to
consider your submission, we are going to act on it because I have a
personal interest on the MTEF this year.
"We want to prove to those outside the executive that we are Nigerians
that have constitutional responsibility to look at what affects
Nigerians with inputs from centres like you that will address the
challenges that we have in this country and proffer solutions to them by
experts who are Nigerians. Not people from outside that will be working
with the economic theories that are alien and not minding what they
send to us, not even minding whether the weather in Nigeria and the
weather in Europe and America are not the same.
"So, even if you bring any important economic policy and put it in
Nigeria, even the weather can tell you that it won't and can't work
because they are not the same. So, the Senate will not rubber stamp the
MTEF but will subject it to critical analyses. So, we appreciate your
contributions and we are going to look into it. Our doors are open, the
Eighth Senate is a different Senate," he told the group.
Earlier, Onyekpere called on the National Assembly to ensure that the
MTEF documents are submitted on time in future as it contains reports
and statistics on the micro economics and how to grow the economy. He
said that his group, the CSJ, reviewed the MTEF documents submitted by
the Buhari administration and deliberated on its strengths and
weaknesses.
The leader of the delegation said the MTEF is a
constitutionally-prescibed exercise as the legislature is mandated to
ensure that the framework is policy driven and that the revenue
projections are realistic and realizable while also helping the
National Assembly to be more proactive in its oversight duties to make
the executive become more accountable.
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