Govs Must Pay Minimum
Wage- Gebi
Leadership Newspaper dated 29 Aug,2011
Leadership Newspaper dated 29 Aug,2011
Honourable Aliyu Ibrahim Gebi represents Bauchi Federal
Constituency of Bauchi State in the House of Representatives. In this interview
with Chibuzo Ukaibe, he shares perspectives on the legislative agenda six-year
tenure proposal and several topical issues
What is your take on
the 6-year single term proposal by President Goodluck Jonathan for his office
and governors?
As legislator of the federal republic of Nigeria, unfortunately
you would not get the right answer that you want as I cannot discuss it. It has
not been presented to the House. As far as we are concerned, it is mere
conjuncture and speculation because it has not been brought to us. But as a
citizen of the Federal Republic of Nigeria, I personally feel that this epitomizes
the chaos our polity. If an individual has been given the opportunity to spend
4 years at the helm of affairs of the highest office in the nation and you have
not achieved one goal out of your agenda, what makes you feel that when it is
elongated to, say one term of 2 years not even 6 years, you will achieve what
you are expected to achieve? It is nonsense as far as I am concerned.
Enough is enough, we have too many issues that you will take
ten years, if you are a serious person in one year we will see your direction
and say yes this person is good, he must continue, he has our mandate. We need
people that will work. That breathe of fresh air that has been promised; we
want to see it because we believed in it. But we are yet to see it. So please
let us see the breath of fresh air, let us breathe the fresh air so that we can
say continue for 10 years. We want to see somebody that will come and fix our
country- address the issue of social injustice which is paramount, the decay in
infrastructure, in the society, the comatose education system as enshrined in our
legislative agenda which is a path that any rational government should follow.
We need somebody to come and fix all that. We are not all born to be president,
I must concede to that.
Do you see the House
compromising on this issue?
We will not compromise, we dare not compromise. The
emergence of the national assembly is an act of God. It is as simple as that
and God in his infinite mercy and wisdom has put Nigeria on the path to
redemption so who are we to say we will go against God? We will not compromise,
even if a few do, I assure you that the majority will not. Having said that,
whenever it is presented to us, we discharge our responsibility without fear or
favour. We will do it to the best of our ability to protect our various
constituents, to defend our greater constituency, the Federal Republic of
Nigeria. So whatever we do, will be, and must be for the federal republic of
Nigeria and will not compromise that.
What is your
legislative agenda?
I keep getting the same question over and over again. My
agenda is the same that our leader, Rt Hon. Aminu Tambuwal declared formally to
the nation. It is the same agenda that every legislator has, though it will be
on a lower level. My is to rebuild a fragmented society; to give confidence to
the disenfranchised people and to restore the dignity of our people because
collectively our psyche has been eroded
by years of misrule and misrepresentation by a few people. We must give power
back to the people. We are a parliament representing the people. I am
representing the people of the Federal Republic of bauchi. So I must represent
them.
What is the way forward to ensure timely passage and
implementation of the budget?
Like I told you, whatever we are going to talk about now has
already been talked about. Our legislative agenda clear, whatever you don’t
understand talk to our leaders, contact me, come to the house visit our
website. We supported and passed the FOI Bill, and we are the first to
implement it to the full. The legislative agenda is clear. Whatever is good for the nation, to
move the nation forward we must adhere to. The problem we have with budget
implementation, is that it is not presented in time; so I will appeal to the
executive, let us do this on time so that we don’t slow down the processes of
infrastructural development in Nigeria.
Let us be on time, now that you are interviewing me, am I
not on recess? But we are here working: this building is full of legislators
working. But this is not what people expect. But as I like to say to everyone
that cares to listen it is no longer business as usual, it is business unsual.
The speaker is upstairs working; we must turn this country around. And I am
glad that if the president wants to partner with us, he will find us willing
partners. In fact we will so work with him that at the end of the day, he will
have our picture s, all 360 of us pasted in his office corridor, saying this
are my brothers and sisters, this are the people that helped turn Nigeria
around. If you want to work for Nigeria, we are willing partners.
But if you don’t want to work for Nigeria, you will find us
very difficult to work with. But as for the budget we will restructure it, we
will bring it back to the way it is suppose to be. It is suppose to follow a
calendar process, meaning from month to month, this is what has been prepared
, from this month to that month – this
is what obtains, and forth. We must do that for the sake of our people, we
cannot hold people ransom and the country cannot move forward because the
budget has not been passed. No! We cannot hold 140 million Nigerians ransom.
Things must be done as and when due. This is why our leadership
we believe in, otherwise we will not have elected’ them, because we believe
this people have what it takes to make sure the House discharges the mandate
given to them by our various constituents have made budget passage a top
priority. So back to the budget, we will rectify it, to the way it is supposed
to be.
On corruption, do you
feel the EFCC and ICPC should be merged?
Whether you merge them or not, we know for a fact that the
EFCC has done a very good job, nobody can dispute that. ICPC has done a very
good job; now the people that are, clamoring for a merger. I don’t support it.
Don’t rock the boat there is too much corruption. Maybe need more
anti corruption agencies, maybe the
agencies are too few and over burdened. And the police should also be
strengthened and empowered. It is all based on investigation and
forensic
analysis.
We need to create more agencies until the last corrupt
person is languishing in jail. The merger is not about merging a company so as
to create more wealth for stakeholder, No! we are trying to tackle corruption, which is a
pandemic, it has eaten at the core of the Federal republic of Nigeria. So I,
personally as an individual, do not believe in the merger and I will fight it
also as an individual. But collectively as a parliament we will look at it
holistically and see how to strengthen and fortify the war against corruption.
But on the whole, the EFCC has done very well. For the first time we have seen
highly placed individuals in handcuffs. They must be encouraged to continue
their commendable work.
On the minimum wage
controversy, why do you feel some states don’t want to pay? What is the way
forward?
You see we are back to what I said before social injustice.
This is something we have debated on the floor of the House. We said
government, should pay. We have discharged our own obligation as
representatives of even the people in labor, FG, States please pay. These
peoples demands are not crazy, they are not outrageous. N18,000 minimum wage is
not too much, yet some banks are saying minimum deposit is N25,000; this amount
is insignificant. I participated in the debate and said our governors are very
intelligent, creative people. if they really want to pay, they can find some
creative way of doing some magic. Or is it because elections seem so far away.
Four years is not along time, my brother, if we are alive 4 years will come and
pass right.
I emphasize and sympathize with labour, N18,000
is not a lot of money. And these people, their demands were initially N50,000
but they dropped it to N18,000, pay them for the love of God, for the love of
the Nigerian nation. If they cannot truly pay, let them reach out to their
elder brother, the federal government to
help them. Labour are very humane people, very patriotic people; without them
there can be no nation. If they see that these governors are really sincere
about paying, labour are not unreasonable people, they can make adjustments but
you cannot renege on agreements. It is a blemish on our nation. Let them pay.
Let those who too much money loan to their poorer brothers in the other parts.
They have a governors forum; let them come with a creative solution. By the
Grace of God they will pay
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