Fashola raises the alarm over ministry’s 2017 budget
Fashola said it was unfair to the executive arm to include such projects after public hearings on the budget and defence of the fiscal estimates by the ministries.
“What I have in my budget now is primary healthcare centres, boreholes,’’ he said at an interactive session with editors, on Thursday.
“That was the meeting we had with the acting president and that was the reason the budget was not signed on time.
“We were asked to complete those abandoned projects; the budget of Lagos-Ibadan Expressway was reduced by the National Assembly from N31 billion to N10 billion.
“We are owing the contractors about N15 billion and they have written to us that they are going to shut down.
“Also, the budget of the second Niger bridge was reduced from N15 billion to N10 billion and about N3 billion or so was removed from the Okene-Lokoja-Abuja road budget.’’
Fashola added: “Everybody is complaining about power supply but they also cut the budget for Manbila power project and the Bodo Bridge that connects the Nigeria Liquefied Natural Gas Station.
“If after we had defended the budget and we had gone and the legislature unilaterally changed the budget, what is the purpose of deliberation?’’
According to Fashola, it is unfair to Nigerians after public hearings were conducted with tax payers’ money and consultations with the lawmakers only for the budget to be altered, cut or padded.
The minister said apart from the 200 uncompleted roads he inherited from the previous administration, the lawmakers added 100 roads.
“These roads are not federal roads and some of them do not have designs, how do we award roads that were not designed irrespective of the power you have?
“It is unconstitutional for the National Assembly (NASS) to legislate on state roads.
“A budget is an estimation plan that set in motion what is to be spent, how much will be borrowed and how much will be collected.
“I am not saying the legislature cannot contribute to the budget, but I hold the view that it cannot increase the budget because they do not collect the revenue with which to run or implement the budget,’’ the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) quoted the minister as saying.
Fashola, however, said the National Assembly “might mean well and not do the right.’’
He canvassed interdependence and collaboration among the three arms of government rather than independence to ensure a harmonious relationship.
The minister said without it, the country would not make progress and would be bogged down by the politics of total separation of power and what he called “power of example rather than example of power.’’
On the concept of interdependence, Fashola said the President and the Vice-President could not swear themselves into office but by the judicial arm, while the president also proclaims the National Assembly without which it could not start business.
In the same vein, he said the National Assembly confirmed ministerial nominees and justices of the courts who were in turn sworn-in by the executive.
He urged the intervention of the judicial arm of government to set the necessary parameters and set things right.
Fashola, however, blamed the electorate for putting pressure on the lawmakers and expecting them to do what was outside their constitutional duties of law-making, representation and oversight.
The post Fashola raises the alarm over ministry’s 2017 budget appeared first on Tribune.
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