President Buhari
The Presidency on Sunday said President
Muhammadu Buhari would not force those who will emerge as his ministers
and aides to cut their salaries.
Buhari and Vice President Yemi Osinbajo
had on Friday announced their decision to take only 50 per cent of the
salary approved for them by the Revenue Mobilisation Allocation and
Fiscal Commission.
The President’s current annual
remuneration as approved by RMAFC is put at N14,058,820.00 but he had
opted to be earning N7m per year throughout his four-year tenure.
The Vice President’s annual remuneration is N12,126, 290.00 but he had opted to be earning N6m per annum.
The development fuelled speculations that Buhari may force those he would appoint into his cabinet to take the same decision.
But Senior Special Assistant to the
President on Media and Publicity, Mallam Garba Shehu, told one of our
correspondents in an exclusive interview that the decision taken by
Buhari and Osinbajo on their salaries was personal to them.
Shehu said the fact that the President
and the Vice President decided to follow that path did not make their
decision a government policy.
He said if Buhari wanted to make it a
government policy for public office holders to cut their salaries, he
would issue a directive to that effect through the proper channel.
He said, “The decision taken by the President and Vice President was a voluntary thing.
“The decision is not a government policy, it is personal.
“You will observe that the President did not say they should issue a circular.
“If he wants it to become a government
policy, he will issue the directive through a proper channel. He won’t
make it compulsory, that is the position for now.”
The Senate President, Bukola Saraki,
also said on Sunday that it was under his leadership that the Senate
first initiated moves to review downward the total package accruable to
legislators in the upper chamber immediately after their inauguration.
Saraki, who spoke through his Special
Adviser on Media and Publicity, Mr. Yusuph Olaniyonu, in Abuja,
explained that the question of whether the Senate would follow the
footsteps of the Presidency by cutting own salaries, did not arise.
He said, “The question of whether the
Senate would also initiate moves to cut down the salaries and allowances
of senators in line with the decision of President Buhari and Vice
President, Prof. Yemi Osinbajo, does not arise at all.
“The Senate had in the first week of its
inauguration keyed into the current administration’s determination to
drastically reduced the cost of governance by inaugurating an ad-hoc
committee to review downward, the finances of the Senate in line with
current realities.”
Also, the Speaker of the House of
Representatives, Mr. Yakubu Dogara, avoided giving a direct answer on
whether he would follow the President and Vice-President’s example by
cutting his own salary by 50 per cent or advising members to do so.
source: Punch
source: Punch

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