N2 Million Christmas Allowance: Senators Angered
What could you do with a Christmas bonus of N2 million? The response is faster if you are a Nigerian senator: not much. In
fact, some senators have described the amount which is only a
fraction of a regular stream of benefits accrued to them as “a mere
drop” in the vast ocean of their Yuletide expenses. Others threatened to
cause the Senate leadership “some headache” upon resumption from their
Christmas-New Year recess later this month. It was not enough to
meet our Christmas needs,” one senator said. “In fact, some of us are
already coming together to formally complain to our president. The
lawmakers received the N2 million on December 18 from the Senate
overhead and operations account, according to bank transaction alerts of
two senators seen by PREMIUM TIMES. The purpose of the
transaction was not attached to the payments, but lawmakers had been
told a few days earlier to expect the funds as their Christmas
allowances, according to three senators who briefed news men on it.
The senators spoke under anonymity as of the time they interacted with
PREMIUM TIMES to avoid a potential backlash from their colleagues, but
one of them said they may eventually go public with their complaints if
their anger boils over. They said we should use the money to
take care of our families and constituents,” one senator said. “I was
just standing there without knowing what to say for many minutes.” The
senator decried “the failure” of Senate President Ahmed Lawan to
understand the scale of responsibility that usually confronts them
whenever they visit their constituency. There are many local
government areas under my district,” the senator said. “How do I tell
them that I only came back home with N2 million?” Even when I am traveling for an event or just to visit my constituency, I usually
hold at least N50 million,” the senator added.
Another senator
said lawmakers usually received far larger amount in Christmas
allowances, wondering why the current assembly that has maintained a
cordial relationship with the executive now finds itself receiving much
less. We have been struggling in poverty since we came on board
months ago,” the senator said. “I asked my distinguished colleagues why
we have to be the one suffering the excesses of past assemblies. We
have given this administration every support and people on social media
are angry and calling us a rubber stamp Senate,” the senator said. We
have started gathering ourselves and we will make our position known to
the leadership,” the senator said. “Otherwise, we may not have a choice
left but to publicly call out the leadership and give them some
headache when we resume plenary. Two former senators who served
in seventh and eight assemblies told PREMIUM TIMES they received
Christmas allowances well over N2 million, but could not recall the
specifics. We received allowances for Christmas and Sallah
holidays during our time in the Seventh Assembly,” a former senator from
Ogun State said. “I am struggling to remember how much we received
then, but I am very sure each one was far more than N2 million. The
second former senator confirmed that he received more than N2 million
in Christmas bonus, but warned that members of the current assembly
should concentrate on their activities rather than complaining over
payment. The N2 million may look small,” the senator said. “But I
will advise them to remember the millions of Nigerians who cannot even
earn a fraction of that amount throughout the year. The former
senators insisted on speaking off the background to avoid offending
their serving senators, many of whom they identified as friends and
political associates.
Trust issues
While the senators were
unable to categorically say how much they should have gotten as
Christmas bonus, they expressed deep suspicion that the share of each
member of the 109 body was more than N2 million. “I have been
struggling to reconcile the amount we received as National Assembly
budget with the small-small stipends we have been getting from the
leadership,” one senator said. “Unlike the Senate President, we are not
entitled to many official benefits like private jets and free fuel for
our vehicles. The National Assembly received N125 billion in
2019. Although down considerably from the N140 billion it received the
previous year, many Nigerians were still highly critical of government’s
priority in allocating such a vast amount to 469 people in a population
hovering around 200 million. About 90 million Nigerians still languish
in abject poverty, per official estimates. Their appropriated
budget aside, lawmakers are also seen as the primary beneficiaries of
the so-called constituency intervention projects whose allocation
usually surpasses N100 billion per year. Although the projects are
implemented by federal agencies, lawmakers are often accorded sufficient
deference in choosing contractors. The opaque atmosphere under
which contractors are nominated for constituency projects allows
lawmakers to push their own fronts who would then channel a large chunk
of released project funds back to them all done under the radar with
little or difficult-to-prove paper trail. But the lawmakers who
spoke with PREMIUM TIMES about the N2 million Christmas bonus said the
Nigerian parliament had seen better days.
Senators in the past left office as billionaires,” one senator said. “But things are no longer the way they used to be. Another
senator said the growing awareness of their expenses by everyday
Nigerians and civic groups has made it difficult to spend without any
sense of accountability. It is becoming more and more difficult
by every passing assembly,” the senator said. “I predict fewer people
would be interested in this office in the next few years.” As of
2018, senators were drawing N13.5 million per month in controversial
running cost, amongst a slew of other consistent allowances known and
unknown to the public.
‘Shameful sense of entitlement’
Ola
Awoniyi, a spokesperson for the Senate President, told PREMIUM TIMES he
was not aware of the complaints and could not immediately speak on
whether or not his principal was aware either. Godiya Akwashiki, the
chief spokesperson for the Senate, did not return calls and messages
seeking comments about the grumbling senators. While requesting
for additional pay may not be inherently objectionable under labor
principles, the manner with which the senators are going about their
complaints could cast them as shamefully entitled, a political analyst
said. It strikes me as a shameful sense of entitlement for
senators to be complaining of receiving N2 million at a time of economic
woes for the country,” Tola Adekoya, a former university lecturer, told the press. Mr Adekoya said it was provocative that senators
would be complaining about N2 million when a vast majority of the
population could barely feed. This is something that you hear
and your brain would respond like it was hit with a hammer,” he said.
“Do they have any idea how many Nigerians cannot even feed themselves
for once per day?” They are out of touch,” he said. “Let us hope
they desist from disrupting the activities of the Senate because of
their selfish interest. Yet, Mr Adekoya said the Senate
leadership should look into the complaints of the lawmakers in order to
avoid undue drama that could slow down the progress of critical national
assignments. They were elected to work for our collective
interest,” the analyst said. “Efforts should be made to minimize
complaints that they could use to sabotage the larger interest of
Nigerians.”