Your Utterances And Choice Of Words Unparliamentary - Fashola Attacks Goje
The Minister of Power, Works and
Housing, Babatunde Fashola, on Thursday hit back at Senator Danjuma
Goje, stressing that the legislator’s utterances and choice of words
were “unparliamentary and therefore not deserving of a reply.”
The Minister of Power, Works and
Housing, Babatunde Fashola
The minister also said it was
regrettable that Goje, the Chairman, Committee Chairman on
Appropriation, would seek to trivialise the issues he (Fashola) raised
about the unilateral slashing of the budgetary allocation to key
national infrastructure by the National Assembly.
In a statement he personally signed and
sent in from Zimbabwe where he was attending the 35th Annual General
Meeting of the Shelter Afrique, Fashola said he was responding only for
the purpose of refocusing attention to the issues at stake.
He said the senator’s reference to the
patriotism of legislators should not be spoken but demonstrated as
regards his calls for a more developmental budgeting approach.
The minister said, “In this context, it
is left for Nigerians to then decide whether budgeting for constituency
roads is more patriotic than budgeting to complete the Kano-Maiduguri
Road that connects five states, the Lagos-Ibadan Road that connects
three states and helps to move food, imported goods and fuel across the
country; or the second Niger Bridge that connects the South-East and the
South-West geopolitical zones of at least 11 states together.
“I will also leave Nigerians to judge
whether it is more patriotic to budget for the Mambilla Power Project
that will contribute to more power supply across Nigeria or reduce the
budget to build street lights in legislative constituencies.”
The minister noted that the response to
the issues he raised certainly should not have been accusations of his
blackmailing the legislature or referring to those who shared his views
as his “surrogates.”
Reiterating his respect for the
parliament as a House where very vigorous debates about development
should take place, Fashola advised Goje to acquire the temperament for
such debate and disagreement.
He said, “Let me reiterate that I see
parliament as a house where very vigorous debates about development
should take place and it is important for Goje to acquire the
temperament of debate and disagreement.”
Decrying the senator’s admonition that
he (Fashola) should learn how to “behave” like a “minister” and the
reference to the Senate awaiting how he would be “handled” by the House
of Representatives, the power minister declared, “I think first that the
language is unparliamentary and therefore not deserving of a reply.”
The minister urged those who had just transited from the executive arm to the legislative arm to be cautious.
“It seems that it is such people who need a behavioural prescription about legislative function,” Fashola said.
According to the minister, a good budget
remains a necessary tool for the executive to do its work because when
services are inadequate, the members of the public often look to the
executive arm for answers.
“I need a better budget as a tool to do my work and that is why l am speaking out,” he said.
Last week, Fashola tongue-lashed
lawmakers for cutting down the budgets of some infrastructural projects
under his ministry, saying that the legislators had stark and worrisome
understanding of budgetary process.
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