$29.9b Loans: Senators Set Another Hurdle For Buhari
Senators have put another hurdle in the way of the presidential request
for approval to obtain $29.9billion loans for infrastructure.
Last
week, the Senate threw out the request – on the grounds that it was not
accompanied with how the loan would be used and repaid.
President
Muhammadu Buhari, according to sources, has secured the understanding
of Senate President Bukola Saraki that the request will be reconsidered
when re-presented, with details, expectedly this week. But senators are
pressing that the request should be taken for public hearing before
approval, The Nation learnt.
The public hearing clause is one of the conditions most of the senators have given Saraki before approving the loans.
It was unclear yesterday whether the Senate President will accede to this condition.
A
source in the National Assembly said: “We are amenable to the
re-presentation of the request for the loans by the President. The law
or our Standing Rules allows it.
“Most of us have however told
the Senate President that we should subject the request to public
hearing because the debts will be paid back in 20 years by the next
generation.
“Also, if ex-President Olusegun Obasanjo could secure
debt relief of over $30billion, Nigerians need to be part of this
latest decision to incur $29.9billion.
“Some of us feel that if we throw the request open, we may get alternative ideas from Nigerians.”
A
first term Senator said: “We are pushing for public hearing to enable
Nigerians scrutinise what the loans will be used for. We want them to
buy into it.
“Some of us will also be able to sleep well that the decision to obtain the loans has the backing of all Nigerians.”
A
ranking Senator said: “We are not opposed to a fresh request from the
President but we prefer public hearing. I want a situation whereby I
will be able to tell my children why the Senate supported the taking of
the loans.
“We cannot take things for granted again. The
government said it will spend about N500billion on social investment but
up till now, Senators, members of the House of Representatives and even
governors are kept in the dark.
“We do not know the shape of the
programmes, how beneficiaries were drawn up and whether or not the
teachers to be recruited are relevant to the need of each of the 36
states and the FCT.
“If we are unsure of how N500billion will be spent, then we need to subject the $29.9billion loans to public hearing.”
Another
ranking Senator said: “Public hearing is not a must when the Executive
needs loans. All we have to do is to refer the request to the Committee
on Local and Foreign Debts, which is headed by Sen. Shehu Sani.
“Our
colleagues are demanding for public hearing but this will amount to
double standards. When we got requests for loans from Edo and Lagos
states, we did not conduct any hearing. We considered the applications
on merit.”
“We will leave the discretion to the President of the Senate.”
The
President had said the external borrowing plan would be used for
infrastructure, agriculture, health, education , water supply , growth
and employment generation , poverty reduction through social safety net
programmes and governance and financial management reforms etc.
He
said: “The total cost of the projects and programmes under the
borrowing (rolling) plan is $29.960billion made up of proposed projects
and programmes loan of $11.274billion, Special National Infrastructure
projects $10.686billion, Euro bonds of $4.5 billion and Federal
Government budget support of $3.5billion.”

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