Bukola
Saraki, Senate President says the present senate in his leadership will never
cover corruption except if the evidence did not come to them. Saraki said this
while talking with a team of editors of the London based "The
Economist" newspaper at the weekend.
"Under my watch, the Senate will never cover corruption except if the information didn't come to us" he said
"Under my watch, the Senate will never cover corruption except if the information didn't come to us" he said
According to a
statement by his Special Assistant on Public Affairs, Mohammed Isa, Saraki said
the Senate is ever ready to partner with President Muhammadu Buhari to ensure
the success of the anti-corruption war. The Senate, he said had already
demonstrated such commitment through its interventions on many alleged corrupt
transactions such as its swift investigation and adoption of a report on the
management of the Treasury Single Account (TSA) that saved the nation about
N7billion and the exposure of the inconsistencies in the 2016 budget.
The step, he said
was a departure from the past where such reports were either watered-down or
not presented for debate and adoption. He cited the report he presented to the
last Senate on the over N1trillion fuel subsidy scam that never saw the light
of the day.
In furtherance to
the commitment, the Senate President said Nigerians would in the next few weeks
be availed with the details of the National Assembly budget which will be a
departure from the tradition of having one line item budget.
"For the first
time we promised Nigerians to give out our budget breakdown. The committee will
make its report available by next week. We are resolved to break the tradition
of one line item," he said.
Saraki said though
party differences exist between the senators, citing example of the leadership
tussle, he, however said, national interest and the desire of each senator to
fulfil the promises made to Nigerians have become the guiding principle of the
senate in their team work.
On the economy, he
said the Senate has embarked on series of legislative interventions to create
conducive environment for the private sector, as he said, "it is only when
the private sector thrives that the issue of unemployment will be addressed and
the nation's GDP will increase."
"Few days ago,
we received a report on the laws that need to be amended in order of priority
importance to ease doing business and overall private sector participation in
the stimulation of Nigeria's economy. We will soon commence the implementation
of the recommendations in the report in addition to pushing for the amendment
of the Procurement Act to stimulate and protect our local industries," he
assured.
He blamed lack of
firmness and consistency in policy implementation by the past administrations
as the main obstacle for the growth of the private sector.
"If people
have confidence that these policies have come to stay, nothing will stop them
from coming to invest in the country," he stressed.
He allayed the
fears that the low prices of oil will have negative impact on the
implementation of the 2016 budget, saying that, "what we need to do is to
block leakages and show more transparency."
"If we can block leakages, stop the wastages and institute a
culture of transparency in governance, the revenue in-flow will not be
substantially affected. Without these, even if oil is sold at more than a $100
per barrel, we will continue to witness a decline in revenue in-flow as we
witnessed in the past," Saraki said.
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