The Conference of Nigerian Political Parties (CNPP)
yesterday said the Senate report on the purportedly missing $49.8 billion crude
oil revenue, which recommended that President Goodluck Jonathan should submit a
supplementary budget, is unconstitutional.
Last week, the Senate Committee on Finance chaired
by Senator Ahmed Makarfi (PDP, Kaduna) said President Jonathan should “prepare
and present to the National Assembly, a supplementary budget to cover the sum
of N90.693 billion for PMS subsidy for 2012 and the sum of N685.919 billion for
kerosene subsidy expended without appropriation by the National Assembly”.
CNPP, which was reacting to part of the report of
the committee’s investigation of the NNPC on the alleged missing oil revenue,
said the above aspect of the committee’s report is retroactive.
CNPP spokesman, Osita Okechukwu said yesterday in
Abuja that the Senate should not have missed the point that less than
transparent as the expenditure of any amount without appropriation is an
impeachable offense.
CNPP said it had gone through the Nigerian
Constitution and could not see any section that mandated the Senate to make
such unconstitutional and fraudulent recommendation.
“It is our candid opinion that the sanctity of the
Appropriation Act must at all times be guarded jealously by the National
Assembly, for the intendment of the appropriation process is for transparency,
hierarchy of needs measurement and prioritization of items”, Okechukwu said.
The CNPP spokesman said the Senate in disregard of
the rule of law, covertly issued a compromised report “that even forgot that
the Minister of Finance and Coordinator of the Economy, Dr Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala,
who had acknowledged after the inter-agency and ministerial reconciliation that
$12.8 billion was not remitted to the Federation Account and hence missing”.
He then asked: “Has our Distinguished Senators also
easily forgotten that the subsidy on kerosene was removed by late President
Umaru Musa Yaradua when he discovered that it only benefits the oil cabal?”
“CNPP still contends that the Senate report is
spurious, jaundiced and compromised and consequently the $20 billion dollars is
still missing given available records”.
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