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Outrageous Looting Clothed In Legality. - Politics - Nairaland

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Outrageous Looting Clothed In Legality. by Sibrah: 8:28am On May 15, 2015
As we learn more about the pension benefits state governors have legislated for themselves, one cannot help but wonder how a civilised people would have allowed themselves to be so blatantly robbed by a bunch of marauders. Leaders of the world’s
richest economies will be aghast at the
pension packages our governors have legislated for themselves. Even more incredible is how a civilised people would have allowed this to happen unchallenged, in a supposed democracy. There is nowhere
in the world where public officials retire on
the same salary as the incumbent when
they leave office, otherwise you could have
a situation where the government would be
paying up to five or six individuals full
salaries for a role that only one person is
performing. In the United Kingdom for
instance, former prime ministers are
entitled to just half their salaries when they
leave office.
Interestingly, Gordon Brown
waived his right to this pension package
when he left office, considering it to be too
generous compared to other public office
holders, opting instead for a much reduced
pension package. Even the United States,
the world’s richest economy, does not pay
its former presidents the full salaries of
their incumbents. It is not done anywhere
in the world. Even more staggering are the benefits some
of these governors have arrogated to themselves – a house in Abuja, another in Lagos, servants, gardeners, a fleet of cars that are changed every three years, a regiment of police and the Department of State Services officers to guard them and their families for life, free medical treatment abroad and a host of other monetised allowances for furniture, cars, utilities and many more allowances that far
exceed their salaries. There are no words to
describe this greed and banditry. The
wickedness of these people is unbelievable,
in a country where their fellow countrymen
sleep under bridges; where hospitals lack
vital equipment;where many pensioners
die waiting many years for their meagre
pensions to be paid; and civil servants are
owed many months in unpaid salaries.
It is foolhardy however to believe that the
president-elect, Muhammadu Buhari, can
change all of this on his own without the
help of the masses. The stakes are high and
corruption will fight back in the form of
threats of impeachment. Buhari will do well
to appeal over the heads of legislators direct
to the people and Nigerians on their part
must be ready to come out in peaceful demonstrations to force the legislators to change the laws that make this banditry possible.

This callous treatment of the people by a few cannot continue whether at national or
state level. It was puzzling reading the account of the embattled Speaker of the Ekiti State House of Assembly narrating how
he and his colleagues were each given N200, 000 of state money for transport by the governor when they paid him a visit.
This was narrated as if it was normal behaviour. In a sane country the Speaker, his colleagues and the governor will be in prison by now.
Like a pack of wolves to the prey, governors
have muscled their way into the Senate in
large numbers, no doub to continue
feeding their greed at the nation’s expense.
They will yet again collect as senators, all the allowances they will receive as ex-
governors. So, in effect, they will be paid double allowances for the same expense; furniture, domestic staff, car allowance and
so on, including allowances for accommodation even though they are entitled to free houses in Abuja as ex-governors. In addition, they will be paid as senators a package believed to be in excess of N30m a month, the highest remuneration of any lawmaker in the world.
Not even the world’s richest economy, with a GDP 35 times that of Nigeria, pays its legislators this much. Our legislators take home in a month more than twice what permanent secretaries and our army generals receive as gratuity after 35 years of
public service.
Being in public office in Nigeria is like winning the lottery. It is no wonder they kill to get into office. If you imagine for one moment a state with four surviving ex--governors, by the time the state finishes paying these individuals and the incumbent, there will be no money left for anyone else. Sadly, these stupendous benefits are believed to be widespread in the public sector and in hundreds of our parastatals, especially revenue generating agencies, where board members arrogate to themselves outrageous benefits and pensions packages. They do it because they can; sheer theft clothed in legality!
Although the searchlight is mainly on the Federal Government, state governments are believed to be the citadel of corruption in Nigeria. The president elect must resist any attempt by governor to impose ministerial nominees on him. He must use the best people for the job wherever he can find them. Apart from perhaps a few progressive governors, the majority of state governors have served Nigeria poorly. A state like Delta State, for instance, at the height of the oil boom was receiving revenue allocations in excess of $100m a month; revenue allocations that far exceeded the income of many African countries that have to maintain national armies. With the resources at the disposa of oil rich states like Delta, we should have a Dubai or a
Singapore in Nigeria. Instead, state funds
were squandered between the governors,
the state lawmakers, traditional rulers and
the so-called elder statesmen who pretend to mean well for Nigeria when all they really care about is their belly. Yet, these governors are feted ever day with meaningless awards by their cohorts in the private sector, when they should really be in the dock for the mismanagement of public funds. They build schools they don’t send their children, roads they don’t use and hospitals where people go to die because of lack of equipment.
The mantra of the Nigerian Army as they regained territories previously overrun by Boko Haram is so apt for the whole of Nigeria at this juncture in our history –
“NEVER AGAIN”!. This slogan should be embedded in our national flag to depict the change Nigerians expect from the incoming government. We cannot continue a system that exists primarily to serve the interest of the few at the expense of the masses. We cannot have a system of governance that is based on patronage where the best people cannot get access to jobs in the Civil Service because they do not have a ‘godfather’. We must look again at the governance structure and processes in both federal and state tiers of government that make it easy
for corruption to strive.
The harrowing plight of the hundreds of women and children that were rescued from the Sambisa Forest was distressing; children that will never know a father or a brother because of a government that was asleep on the wheel.

Nwachukwu, an international business
consultant, wrote in from London

5 Likes

Re: Outrageous Looting Clothed In Legality. by donodion(m): 6:11pm On May 15, 2015
Sibrah:
As we learn more about the pension benefits state governors have legislated for themselves, one cannot help but wonder how a civilised people would have allowed themselves to be so blatantly robbed by a bunch of marauders. Leaders of the world’s
richest economies will be aghast at the
pension packages our governors have legislated for themselves. Even more incredible is how a civilised people would have allowed this to happen unchallenged, in a supposed democracy. There is nowhere
in the world where public officials retire on
the same salary as the incumbent when
they leave office, otherwise you could have
a situation where the government would be
paying up to five or six individuals full
salaries for a role that only one person is
performing. In the United Kingdom for
instance, former prime ministers are
entitled to just half their salaries when they
leave office.

Interestingly, Gordon Brown
waived his right to this pension package
when he left office, considering it to be too
generous compared to other public office
holders, opting instead for a much reduced
pension package. Even the United States,
the world’s richest economy, does not pay
its former presidents the full salaries of
their incumbents. It is not done anywhere
in the world. Even more staggering are the benefits some
of these governors have arrogated to themselves – a house in Abuja, another in Lagos, servants, gardeners, a fleet of cars that are changed every three years, a regiment of police and the Department of State Services officers to guard them and their families for life, free medical treatment abroad and a host of other monetised allowances for furniture, cars, utilities and many more allowances that far
exceed their salaries. There are no words to
describe this greed and banditry. The
wickedness of these people is unbelievable,
in a country where their fellow countrymen
sleep under bridges; where hospitals lack
vital equipment;where many pensioners
die waiting many years for their meagre
pensions to be paid; and civil servants are
owed many months in unpaid salaries.
It is foolhardy however to believe that the
president-elect, Muhammadu Buhari, can
change all of this on his own without the
help of the masses. The stakes are high and
corruption will fight back in the form of
threats of impeachment. Buhari will do well
to appeal over the heads of legislators direct
to the people and Nigerians on their part
must be ready to come out in peaceful demonstrations to force the legislators to change the laws that make this banditry possible.

This callous treatment of the people by a few cannot continue whether at national or
state level. It was puzzling reading the account of the embattled Speaker of the Ekiti State House of Assembly narrating how
he and his colleagues were each given N200, 000 of state money for transport by the governor when they paid him a visit.
This was narrated as if it was normal behaviour. In a sane country the Speaker, his colleagues and the governor will be in prison by now.
Like a pack of wolves to the prey, governors
have muscled their way into the Senate in
large numbers, no doub to continue
feeding their greed at the nation’s expense.
They will yet again collect as senators, all the allowances they will receive as ex-
governors. So, in effect, they will be paid double allowances for the same expense; furniture, domestic staff, car allowance and
so on, including allowances for accommodation even though they are entitled to free houses in Abuja as ex-governors. In addition, they will be paid as senators a package believed to be in excess of N30m a month, the highest remuneration of any lawmaker in the world.
Not even the world’s richest economy, with a GDP 35 times that of Nigeria, pays its legislators this much. Our legislators take home in a month more than twice what permanent secretaries and our army generals receive as gratuity after 35 years of
public service.
Being in public office in Nigeria is like winning the lottery. It is no wonder they kill to get into office. If you imagine for one moment a state with four surviving ex--governors, by the time the state finishes paying these individuals and the incumbent, there will be no money left for anyone else. Sadly, these stupendous benefits are believed to be widespread in the public sector and in hundreds of our parastatals, especially revenue generating agencies, where board members arrogate to themselves outrageous benefits and pensions packages. They do it because they can; sheer theft clothed in legality!
Although the searchlight is mainly on the Federal Government, state governments are believed to be the citadel of corruption in Nigeria. The president elect must resist any attempt by governor to impose ministerial nominees on him. He must use the best people for the job wherever he can find them. Apart from perhaps a few progressive governors, the majority of state governors have served Nigeria poorly. A state like Delta State, for instance, at the height of the oil boom was receiving revenue allocations in excess of $100m a month; revenue allocations that far exceeded the income of many African countries that have to maintain national armies. With the resources at the disposa of oil rich states like Delta, we should have a Dubai or a
Singapore in Nigeria. Instead, state funds
were squandered between the governors,
the state lawmakers, traditional rulers and
the so-called elder statesmen who pretend to mean well for Nigeria when all they really care about is their belly. Yet, these governors are feted ever day with meaningless awards by their cohorts in the private sector, when they should really be in the dock for the mismanagement of public funds. They build schools they don’t send their children, roads they don’t use and hospitals where people go to die because of lack of equipment.
The mantra of the Nigerian Army as they regained territories previously overrun by Boko Haram is so apt for the whole of Nigeria at this juncture in our history –
“NEVER AGAIN”!. This slogan should be embedded in our national flag to depict the change Nigerians expect from the incoming government. We cannot continue a system that exists primarily to serve the interest of the few at the expense of the masses. We cannot have a system of governance that is based on patronage where the best people cannot get access to jobs in the Civil Service because they do not have a ‘godfather’. We must look again at the governance structure and processes in both federal and state tiers of government that make it easy
for corruption to strive.
The harrowing plight of the hundreds of women and children that were rescued from the Sambisa Forest was distressing; children that will never know a father or a brother because of a government that was asleep on the wheel.

Nwachukwu, an international business
consultant, wrote in from London

Seriously I wonder what needs to be done to move this article to front page.

Justwise please can you help?
Re: Outrageous Looting Clothed In Legality. by doctokwus: 6:32pm On May 15, 2015
Well said.
Its only hoped that when d stark reality of d full disclosure of d frightening economic situation we are in is revealed,after May 29,we all can see y GMB must be supported to take drastic action on these daylight robbery in d name of severance package for former governors and d further robbery in d name of salary to legislators.
In GMB, we have what we have lacked for several years, a man with the moral authority to look corruption in d face,because this is what all these pay are,and tackle it head on.
But he needs serious support from all Nigerians and civil society groups because some of d benefactors won't let go because they have no other job to fall unto than these humongous pension benefits.
Re: Outrageous Looting Clothed In Legality. by Code213: 7:35pm On May 15, 2015
doctokwus:
Well said.
Its only hoped that when d stark reality of d full disclosure of d frightening economic situation we are in is revealed,after May 29,we all can see y GMB must be supported to take drastic action on these daylight robbery in d name of severance package for former governors and d further robbery in d name of salary to legislators.
In GMB, we have what we have lacked for several years, a man with the moral authority to look corruption in d face,because this is what all these pay are,and tackle it head on.
But he needs serious support from all Nigerians and civil society groups because some of d benefactors won't let go because they have no other job to fall unto than these humongous pension benefits.

God bless you for this comment!!!!

Re: Outrageous Looting Clothed In Legality. by eazisky(m): 7:41pm On May 15, 2015
Wetin we go come do now? it has been happening and jona couldnt do anything against it, instead he joined them, that was why we chased him away and replaced him with buhari who can tackle the issue
Re: Outrageous Looting Clothed In Legality. by Volksfuhrer(m): 8:17pm On May 15, 2015
The op is spot on. It is truly sheer banditry and crass freeloading for legislators and governors to legislate for themselves obscene severance packages, in a society where the minimum wage is a measly 18,000 naira per month! It is plain wickedness.

Our civil rights activists have actually gone to bed!
Re: Outrageous Looting Clothed In Legality. by donodion(m): 8:20pm On May 15, 2015
We need this on FP not cleavages nonsense.
Re: Outrageous Looting Clothed In Legality. by sheymoni(m): 10:45pm On May 15, 2015
This is why we all have to support Buhari because he's a man who can not stand corruption





Do we have to visit okija before this article gets to front page?
Re: Outrageous Looting Clothed In Legality. by ISpiksDaTroof: 4:20am On May 16, 2015
Front page!!!
Re: Outrageous Looting Clothed In Legality. by TheOtherview: 4:30am On May 16, 2015
The Senate Leader, who described the report as “sensationalism, tokenism, scapegoatism and diversionary tactics”, noted that those who talk about jumbo pay for lawmakers forgot that the budget of the National Assembly is only N150 billion or three per cent of the country’s annual budget.

Source

^^^
Ndoma-Egba, do you see how the odds stack up? When you have a resource-rich but cash-poor country like Nigeria spending N150 billion on its bloated legislature, year on year; this is the exact opposite of prudence, is it not?

Cost of running Nigeria's "Federal" legislature = $934 million (N150 billion converted)
Cost of running British parliament (House of Commons/Lords) = $793 million (£498.4m converted)

GDP of Nigeria = $ 262 Billion (adjusted to $500 Billion last year)
GDP of Britain = $2.4 Trillion


Note: These are figures I provided back in 2013
Re: Outrageous Looting Clothed In Legality. by arewafederation: 7:33am On May 16, 2015
Interesting article. Let us all make it a point of duty to make sure GMB tackles these issues.

Nigerians should wake up from their deep slumber and not allow a few to "legally" bleed the country dry.



lalasticlala, ishilove my love, Good morning to you all.
Re: Outrageous Looting Clothed In Legality. by efilefun(m): 7:36am On May 16, 2015
Hmmm naija
Re: Outrageous Looting Clothed In Legality. by adconline(m): 7:49am On May 16, 2015
Life pensions and entitlement were first introduced by Tinubu
Re: Outrageous Looting Clothed In Legality. by Sibrah: 6:15pm On May 16, 2015
arewafederation:
Interesting article. Let us all make it a point of duty to make sure GMB tackles these issues.

Nigerians should wake up from their deep slumber and not allow a few to "legally" bleed the country dry.



lalasticlala, ishilove my love, Good morning to you all.

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