Minister of Information, Labaran Maku
The
Federal Government and the opposition All Progressives Congress on
Tuesday continued their tirade against each other over the 2014
Appropriation Bill pending before the National Assembly.
While the government, through the
Minister of Information, Labaran Maku, said the APC, by asking its
members in the National Assembly not to pass the bill, was unwittingly
asking Nigerians to commit suicide, the opposition party argued that
there was nothing absolutely wrong with its directive to its
lawmakers.
While the budget passed second reading
in the Senate on Tuesday, in the House of Representatives, the debate on
it was stalled by the APC legislators.
Maku, in an interview with State House
correspondents at the Presidential Villa, Abuja, urged the leaders of
the APC to have a rethink on the directive because it was not the right
thing to do.
The minister, who described the budget
as the oxygen of the nation’s economy, said the APC should not block
the flow of oxygen merely because it had a disagreement with the
government.
He said, “I think if all of us agree
that if there is anything today that has worked, the economy of Nigeria
has worked under President Goodluck Jonathan and we need all the
cooperation we can to move the country forward. That doesn’t mean they
should not stand election against the President or challenge our
policies.
“Challenging our policies is different from blocking the oxygen from flowing because the budget is the oxygen of the economy.
“So are you asking people to commit
suicide because you have disagreement with the government? I think this
is not the right thing to do and I am urging APC leaders to think
again.”
Maku said the APC directive to its lawmakers surprised him because democracy was about service to the people.
He added, “I’m shocked that anybody will go to the National Assembly and urge people to block the budget of a country.
“When you block the budget of a country,
you are stopping the work of the market woman, you are stopping the
work of the farmer, you are threatening the survival of the teacher ,
you are threatening the survival of a patient in the hospital because a
lot of what happens to these people depends on the budget.
“We must separate narrow and negative
partisan politics from the survival of our people. So, we believe that
every budget needs to be robustly debated by the National Assembly but
not on the standpoint that my party asked me to stop passing the budget.
“If they do that, then Nigerians must
hold them accountable. They are not yet in power, but they are already
threatening the live wire of the country; so how can we then trust them
with power?
“So, if tomorrow they come to power what
are we to expect? It means the nation will not have a budget? This is
very serious, no argument is acceptable for anybody to go and ask people
to block a budget. These arguments pale into insignificance when you
look at the real danger that that kind of call places on the live wire
of Nigeria.”
But the APC defended its decision ,
saying that its members in the House of Representatives acted in
tandem with the provisions of the law when they stalled debate on
the budget on Tuesday.
The Interim National Publicity Secretary
of the party, Alhaji Lai Mohammed, said this in a telephone interview
with one of our correspondents in Abuja on Wednesday.
He explained that the APC members in
the House did the right thing by insisting that guidelines for budget
presentation as contained in the Fiscal Responsibility Act be followed.
Mohammed said, “All our members did with regard to the budget was to tell the Federal Government to do the proper thing.
“They cited a provision of the Fiscal
Responsibility Act which says that when you are tendering the budget
before the National Assembly, it should be accompanied by details of the
submissions by the various ministries – not the abridged version.
“What our members are saying is, give us the (budget) details ministry by ministry, parastatal by parastatal.
“Tell us what taxpayers’ money is going to be used for. Once this is not done, technically, the budget is not before the House.”






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